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Example sentences for "next letter"

  • My next letter will be from Hamburg--and after that I will tell all I have seen and done, which will be much easier than writing.

  • My next letter will be from Warsaw, where we should arrive at 4 to-morrow afternoon.

  • I must stop now as it is nearly eleven--my next letter will be from Maison Klein, Malaia Dimitrofska, Moscow.

  • My next letter will be from Copenhagen--then Hamburg and home.

  • By the Duke's next letter, dated August 12th, I presume I had referred to his time being so much occupied as he in reply writes 'It is true that I am very much occupied, and cannot tell when I shall be less so.

  • I presume from the Duke's next letter that I had given him a description of my interview and acquaintance with Major and Mrs. P.

  • In the Duke's next letter of the 22nd of August he writes--'I shall expect to hear from you when you will arrive and will be settled in London and I will pay you a visit as soon afterwards as it will be in my power.

  • I conclude my next letter must be directed there.

  • On this subject I mean to tell you more in my next letter, when I speak more particularly of my artistic impressions and opinions, which I have not yet done.

  • In my next letter I will tell you about Italy.

  • I will address myself therefore in my next letter to the statement of some of these necessary laws.

  • Of which laws (preliminary to all others, and necessary above all others), having now somewhat got my raveled threads together again, I will begin talk in my next letter.

  • This will form the subject of my next Letter.

  • But watches and clocks usually keep mean time, and therefore, in order to set our timepiece by the transit instrument, we must apply to the apparent time of noon the equation of time, as will be explained in my next Letter.

  • In my next letter I will describe my visit to it.

  • In my next letter I will describe my arrival and debarking at the terrace of the City of the Sun, and my gratifying reception by the Prince Remeses.

  • My next letter, without doubt, will convey to you the victory of the Lord God over Pharaoh and his gods, and the deliverance of the Hebrews from their bondage.

  • My next letter will, no doubt, convey to you startling tidings.

  • All description of the pass between that resting-place and Senafe I must postpone to my next letter, and only write to say that there is no particular news here.

  • My next letter will be from Attegrat, where I expect to stay for a few days.

  • In my next letter I shall describe the organisation of the Transport Corps; but at present we must continue our ride, which is now nearly over, for we have almost completed our circle, and are again approaching the sea-shore.

  • In my next letter I hope to be able to speak of at least a probability of a forward movement.

  • I meant to have told you of that to-night, but I've left it too late, and must wait for my next letter.

  • But if we can make the arrangement we want to make with the gunners, we'll bring off a nice little bombing raid to-night, and I'll let you know all about it in my next letter.

  • That will have to wait for my next letter.

  • Borrow’s next letter to Bowring that has been preserved is dated 1835 and was written from Portugal.

  • Borrow’s next letter to his wife is more chastened: TO MRS.

  • My next letter, I hope, will be from Marseilles, and I hope to be there in a very few days.

  • Lamb either did not return to the subject with Coleridge, or his "next letter" has been lost.

  • Lamb's next letter to Manning, which is not available for this edition, contained the promised copy of the "Conceit of Diabolical Possession.

  • I shall enter more particularly into the subject in my next letter.

  • I shall proceed in my next letter to examine these virtues, and to prove to you that they are contrary to the ideas we ought to form of God, useless to ourselves, and often dangerous to others.

  • I hope to be able to give you good news in my next letter.

  • I can write no more to-day, for my disappointment is still too recent; in my next letter I will describe the Salzkammergut, and all the beauties of my journey yesterday.

  • I intend to leave this in a few days, and my next letter (D.

  • In my next letter I'll tell you how we measure the pull which batteries can give to electrons, and then we shall be ready to go on with more about the audion.

  • Write me your questions and I'll answer and then go on in my next letter to tell how the audion works.

  • In my next letter I'll tell you what happens when we have a coil and a condenser together in a circuit.

  • That's what I shall tell you in my next letter.

  • To-morrow, weather permitting, I set off for a ride of 100 miles, and my next letter will be my last from the Rocky Mountains.

  • The upshot of the whole you shall have in my next letter.

  • I am forming a plan for getting farther into the mountains, and hope that my next letter will be more lively.

  • In my next letter I will write you more about our old lady.

  • In my next letter I will write you all my tribulations and struggles in getting used to the new life when we moved into our own house.

  • In my next letter I'll tell you about the engagement and marriage of my friend who is only fifteen years old.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "next letter" 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:
    black oxide; brewed beer; consider that; distinguished member; far more; finished work; lord king; malarial fever; next after; next door; next election; next issue; next letter; next month; next mornin; next proceeded; next summer; next week; next went; next winter; next year; secret agent; suppose they; the state; thousand dollars; world empire