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Example sentences for "what remains"

  • What remains of smallness is as far from his thoughts as when he first began; and therefore he never comes at all to have a clear and positive idea of that smallness which is consequent to infinite divisibility.

  • The instinct of animals in general gives us the best illustration of what remains of teleology in nature.

  • What remains for me now, is to communicate some Remarks to you which I have made upon the Austrians in general.

  • What remains for me is to mention some things to you, which are worth your seeing, if ever you live to come hither.

  • Thus, Sir, have I given you a very particular Account of the City of Saltzbourg: What remains for me is to speak of the Archbishop's Houshold, which will give you an Idea of his Wealth and Grandeur.

  • What remains for me to tell you of Bologna is, that 'tis one of the Cities in Italy where a Foreigner finds most Amusement.

  • Whatever portion is inference, is amenable to the rules of induction already treated of, and requires no further notice here: the question for us in this place is, when all which is inference is taken away, what remains.

  • Besides these general theorems of formulae, what remains in the algebraical calculus is the resolution of equations.

  • As long as the five minutes are not expired, what remains of them may be divided by ten, and again by ten, as often as we like, which is perfectly compatible with their being only five minutes altogether.

  • To reach Selsey and its old church of Our Lady, what remains of it, from Pagham is not an easy matter, the footpaths across the fields being sometimes a little vague.

  • Of this building we still see the tower, the transepts and the lower part of what remains of the nave, and the arcade to the south.

  • What remains of the Priory, not much more than a gateway, for most of it was destroyed in 1780, stands to the north of the church.

  • After this, what remains is the Undecaying and the Immutable.

  • Do thou support thy life on what remains of food after feeding gods and guests.

  • What remains, O son, is the mind with the senses, O Bharata.

  • The possibility of deriving the idea of God from scientific and philosophic thought being ruled out, what remains?

  • What remains to be traced here, in order to understand the other factor that is common to religions, is the belief in a continued state of existence after death, or at least of a soul.

  • In the absence of the material organism, to which the mind unquestionably stands in the relation of function to organ, what remains is a mere blank.

  • What remains to be related of Antoniello, is reserved for the history of the Venetian school, to which by residence and practice he properly belongs, and which alone carried his new discovered method to the height it was capable of.

  • On the sides he painted the Sciences, with their most eminent professors under each, no unfair specimen of poetic conception; here is what remains of vivacity and brightness in his tints.

  • Possessed of a dextrous hand and florid colour, Cardisco spread his labours over Napoli and the State: of what remains, the most praised is the Dispute of Saint Augustine at Aversa.

  • As to what remains, the monasteries of the Bonzas were daily thinned, and grew insensibly to be dispeopled by the desertion of young men, who had some remainders of modesty and morality.

  • As to what remains, Xavier, when he took leave of the old steward, whom he constituted superior of the rest, left him a discipline, which himself had used formerly.

  • What remains to console thee for the loss of this last love--this last friendship, so infamously crushed?

  • What remains now of all these splendid projects?

  • What remains untold by me should be heard by thee from the mouths of persons well-versed in the three Vedas, O Yudhishthira.

  • What remains is the inceptive will to achieve Righteousness.

  • What remains of the Brahmana's property, O Yudhishthira, after this should be divided into ten equal portions.

  • In the midst of so much ruin, what remains standing?

  • By what means it can arrive at this, and how it can do it without danger, is what remains for us to investigate.

  • However that may be, what remains of this tendency is the belief in continuity, and we have just seen that if this belief were to disappear in its turn, experimental science would become impossible.

  • What remains then of the principle of the equality of action and reaction?

  • In fact, the greater part of what remains to us of the unfinished monument may be ascribed to this period of comparatively uninterrupted labour.

  • II What remains of the correspondence between Michelangelo and the Marchioness opens with a letter referring to their interchange of sonnets and drawings.

  • The whole of what remains is indifferent.

  • But enough of this, let us now proceed to what remains.

  • Let the son of Albinus tell me, if from five ounces one be subtracted, what remains?


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "what remains" 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 amount; what becomes; what can; what direction; what exists; what hope; what land; what meanes; what means; what name; what not; what others; what precedes; what prompted; what takes; what the; what thing; what think; what thinkest; what thou; what used; what way; what were; whatever form; whatever part; whether you