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Example sentences for "true sense"

  • In a true sense, it is my belief that I am free that makes me free.

  • In a true sense, the doctrines of Confucius were but the elaborated and succinctly stated implications of their primitive faith.

  • The evolution of society in India is to a large degree compulsory; in a true sense it is an artificial evolution.

  • A "person" is in a true sense a universal, an infinite being.

  • Addison was not before Steele in appreciation of Milton and diffusion of a true sense of his genius.

  • This put me into a Fit of Crying: And I immediately, in a true Sense of my Condition, threw myself on the Floor, deploring my Fate, calling upon all that was good and sacred to succour me.

  • Jesus had a true sense of the value of a life, and no life was too humble or too unpromising for him to lavish upon it all the wealth of his interest and all the power of his sympathy and helpfulness.

  • But, Secondly, A true sense of the divine excellency of the things of God's word doth more directly and immediately convince of the truth of them; and that because the excellency of these things is so superlative.

  • And it may be thus described: a true sense of the divine excellency of the things revealed in the word of God, and a conviction of the truth and reality of them thence arising.

  • A true sense of the divine and superlative excellency of the things of religion; a real sense of the excellency of God and Jesus Christ, and of the work of redemption, and the ways and works of God revealed in the gospel.

  • But to plead the fewness of thy sins, or the comparative harmlessness of their quantity before God, argueth no sound knowledge of the nature of thy sin, and so no true sense of the nature or need of mercy.

  • When a true sense of misery urges, neither men nor devils can stop the cry for mercy, till Jesus has compassion and heals their spiritual maladies.

  • A true sense of the falsity of material joys and sorrows, pleasures and pains, takes them away, and teaches Life's lessons aright.

  • A true sense of the divine and superlative excellency of the things of religion; a real sense of the excellency of God and Jesus Christ, and of the work of redemption, and the ways and works of God revealed in the gospel.

  • And it may be thus described: a true sense of the divine excellency of the things revealed in the Word of God, and a conviction of the truth and reality of them thence arising.

  • A true sense of the divine excellency of these things is so superlative as more directly and immediately to convince of the truth of them; and that because the excellency of these things is so superlative.

  • In still another way, to one who is convinced of the supremacy of moral and spiritual worths and of the ethical aim of all true religion, is the lamentable failure to develop a true sense of values manifest.

  • Its spirit is in a true sense that of religion.

  • Here, again, we meet with a melancholy failure in the development of a true sense of values.

  • Let us develop a true sense of values in religion that will place emphasis on the voluntaristic or ethical element rather than on either the intellectual, pietistic and symbolical or aesthetic.

  • On the other hand, a soul that has a true sense of sin, understands that sin has cast it into so many miseries and calamities, and therefore murmurs not against God, but abhors itself and its own iniquities (Lam.

  • The first may be to bring us to a true sense of the strength of sin, which is the sting of death (1 Cor.

  • Such a man wouldn't seem to have a true sense of values.

  • It failed in giving a true sense of the values of life.

  • Well, dinner or no dinner, the man I have in mind has a true sense of values.

  • He has a true sense of values because he knows Katherine Wayneworth Jones for the most desirable thing in all the world.

  • There is a true sense in this, but the true sense is not the generally accepted one.

  • And, though he neither judges the past life as without failure, nor expects the future to be without failure, he approves the child, as in a true sense obedient.

  • The father may be said here in a true sense to propitiate himself; and his own fixed purpose has become a partial substitute for the wavering purpose of the child.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "true sense" 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:
    good memory; heavily dependent; high chief; minute before; said another; said lightly; small orifice; supernatural power; true account; true being; true believer; true conception; true copy; true genius; true humility; true indeed; true love; true lovers; true only; true porcelain; true repentance; true taste; true unity; true virtue; true wisdom; true word