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Example sentences for "later days"

  • There are several indications that this number was used instead of the three times three of later days.

  • Coming down to later days, Chardin says of the steel of Persia: "They combine it with Indian steel, which is more tractable .

  • In later days a missionary gives in the Lettres Edifiantes an unfavourable account of the action of these public granaries, and of the rascality that occurred in connection with them.

  • The philosophy which was then in vogue at Erfurt, and which found its most vigorous champion in Trutvetter, was that of the Scholasticism of later days.

  • But it is applicable, at any rate, to the Scholasticism of later days.

  • We cannot doubt in most instances the sincerity of these men and women, and in later days, when confessions of rash and hasty charges of action were made, their repentance was apparently just as sincere.

  • Note the fervor of this famous eulogy by the "coldly logical" Edwards; can it be excelled in genuine warmth by the love letters of famous men in later days?

  • This spirit of brotherhood and hospitality, was, of course, very necessary in the first days of colonization, and the sudden increase of wealth prevented its becoming irksome in later days.

  • He had early shown that as a pathologist alone he was worthy of a niche in the temple of fame; and in later days he was urged to apply for the vacant chair of Physic in his own University; while Professor A.

  • Prince of Wales, and his brother the Duke of Edinburgh, each matriculated in later days.

  • The emotional part of Sir James Simpson's nature found some small expression in versifying both, as we have seen, in early years and in later days.

  • It was the Philistine wars which first created the Judah of later days.

  • Joab and his veterans gained victory after victory, and the Hebrew army became what the Assyrian army was in later days, the most highly disciplined and irresistible force in western Asia.

  • But they had been treated as the Canaanites were treated by the Israelites in later days; their cities were captured by the invading Ammonites, and they themselves massacred or absorbed into the conquerors.

  • The Israelitish forces were disastrously defeated at Zephath, the Hormah of later days, and the invasion of the Promised Land was postponed.

  • He might therefore have safely trusted to the judgment of later days and of wiser and truer-sighted men, growing in number and influence every year.

  • Captain de Parseval had only one officer left (Kerjegu, who in later days was my colleague in the National Assembly) and one cadet, to help him to get his frigate away.

  • His movements were rigorously concealed from us, and I never learnt what they really were even in later days.

  • Defn: A small oval porcelain or glass cup, having a rim curved to fit the orbit of the eye.

  • Familiar spirit, a demon or evil spirit supposed to attend at call.

  • There is thus nothing like sufficient evidence to show that the laws of the Pentateuch were not known in later days, but merely that they were often not obeyed.

  • And that conversations on such subjects should have been composed in later days, or even thought worth recording, is most unlikely.

  • Or else we must assume that their works were replaced in later days by other and less reliable accounts, which were universally mistaken for the originals, and this seems equally improbable.

  • The feudal barons of medieval times had, indeed, few of the qualities that made the courtiers of later days, and Henry, violent as he was, could bear much rough counsel and plain reproof.

  • But in Babylonia it tended at an early period to be absorbed by the mercantile and priestly classes, and in later days it is difficult to find traces even of its existence.

  • The Babylonia of later days was, in fact, a country whose inhabitants and language were as composite as the inhabitants and language of modern England.

  • Its religion, therefore, was equally mixed; the religious conceptions of the Sumerian and the Semite differed widely, and it was the absorption of the Sumerian element by the Semitic which created the religion of later days.

  • Have we less to contend for, less faith to exhibit, or less self-sacrifice to offer than they, because we live in later days?

  • But it may be doubted whether Ahaz, in spite of his frightful position, or, in later days, the less excusable Manasseh, really destroyed the lives of their young sons.

  • This admiration for the great king remained so lively in his mind, that even Bonaparte in his gestures seemed to him, in later days, a plagiarist.

  • In later days, she allowed herself sometimes to dwell sadly on the resistances which she called her fate, and remarked, that 'all life that has been or could be natural to me, is invariably denied.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "later days" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    also gives; ammonium nitrate; billion dollars; class interests; elderly lady; first battle; houses were; later ages; later chapter; later chapters; later days; later development; later editions; later lecture; later life; later periods; later time; later work; later works; lateral view; left alive; pursue them; sent out; several times; thou bring; young miss