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Example sentences for "what goes"

  • It is really a description of a great deal of what goes by the name of religion amongst us.

  • An instance which we furnished in detail in a former article,(768) may be conveniently appealed to in illustration of what goes before.

  • On a review of what goes before, I submit that one who has taken so much pains with the subject does not deserve to be flouted as I find myself flouted by the Bp.

  • In the same way children will develop ideals in imitation of what goes on around them.

  • This is the significance of modern educational movements that seek to leave the child untrammelled in his responses to what goes on around him.

  • This poor mother is a typical example of a large class of mothers who fail to understand their children because they have no idea of what goes on in the child's mind.

  • Although parents have not always understood what goes on in the child's mind when he is so busy with his play, our poets and lovers of children have had a deeper insight.

  • In opposition to what goes before, then, he throws out a suggestion, that "nothing would be more likely to restore a natural feeling on this subject than a History of the Interpretation of Scripture.

  • Of course, it is implied by what goes before, that you will read no work of Divinity just at present.

  • But to men of Mr. Deane's stamp, what goes on among the young people is as extraneous to the real business of life as what goes on among the birds and butterflies, until it can be shown to have a malign bearing on monetary affairs.

  • For it's all the harder when you know what goes before; for then you've got to say what definition 3 is, and what axiom V.

  • And pray, what has this packman got to do wi' what goes on in our family?

  • How applicable is the lesson it teaches to what goes on in our daily lives, where, ever in search of one form of wealth, our labors lead us to discover some other of which we knew nothing!

  • Such men as these are great people in that dingy old house, whose frail props without are more than emblems of what goes on within.

  • What goes on in a man's heart is a main sight harder reading than salts and sediments.

  • Such a story has importance, because there is no group of persons anywhere but has some relation near or remote to what goes on in prisons.

  • He was in the best sense a natural historian, an observer and recorder of what is seen and of what goes on, and not less of what has been seen and what has gone on, in this wonderful historic earth of ours, with all its fulness.

  • Between an antecedent and a consequent, or what goes before, and immediately follows.

  • Between an antecedent and a consequent, or what goes before, and what immediately follows.

  • Every thing that happens, is both a cause and an effect; being the effect of what goes before, and the cause of what follows.

  • It is doubtful whether the object introduced by way of simile, relate to what goes before, or to what follows.

  • If 'impenetrable' means that another soul cannot know what goes on in my soul, I do not assert that the soul is impenetrable.

  • It is only by the analogy of our own immediate experience that we can come to know anything at all of what goes on in other people's minds.

  • That the laboratory, of its own accord and initiative, will ever open its doors and give to the world a complete knowledge of what goes on within its sacred precincts, is more than we can expect.

  • What can he learn with certainty of what goes on within?


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "what goes" 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:
    what appeared; what are; what becomes; what cannot; what class; what dost; what goes; what had; what has brought thee; what have you been; what importance; what light; what matter; what need; what principle; what reason; what remained; what say; what seemed; what shall; what were; what you; what you have said; whatever cost; who are; your presence