54 Words to use with facts

Labor fact book.

(It's a fact series, v.3)

The transformation of Japan is a fact patent to the whole world.

Fact sheet no.9.

In the absence of interesting facts apropos of the arrest of the distinguished K.C., some of the papers published summaries of his legal career, and the more famous cases with which he had been connected.

A, B. (Market boy series) (Drug facts series)

In point of fact experience has proved that, so far as Congress is concerned, the results of judicial interference have been negative.

Your snap judgment is to tell this disgraceful fact broadcast.

As a matter of fact character, as the chief end of man and the sole guaranty of a decent society, has been neglected; it was not disregarded by any conscious process, but the headlong events that have followed since the fifteenth century have steadily distorted our judgment and confused our standards of value even to reversal.

Miss Philps, with her matter of fact cheeriness, her strength and her experience, was exactly what that house of overstrained nerves needed.

This combination of the revealed and the historical will not appear strange, if we remember that the mediaeval view of the world under criticism was, as Christian, historico-religious, and, moreover, that for the philosophy of religion the two in fact coincide, inasmuch as revelation is conceived as an historical event, and the historical religions assume the character of revealed.

According to all precedents, human and divine, from the Garden of Eden to Romeo and Juliet, "the age of consent" would by common sense appear to be the age at which the woman did in fact consent; such is the common law, but such is not usually law by our statutes.

As for myself, after visiting a friend lately,[Do remember all the time that this is the Professor's paper,]I satisfied myself that I had better concede the fact thatmy contemporaries are not so young as they have been,and that,awkward as it is,science and history agree in telling me that I can claim the immunities and must own the humiliations of the early stage of senility.

A few score generations ahead, and all mankind will be in sober fact descendants from our blood.

The first journals were in fact diaries, daily records of happenings, compiled often for the pleasure and use of the compiler alone, sometimes for monarchs or statesmen or friends; later to be circulated for the information of a circle of readers, or distributed in copies to subscribers among the public at large.

Listen then; for though to baffle Thy desire were my intention, By my miseries overmastered, I am forced to tell my secret; Not so much have I been granted License to avow my sufferings, But I am, as 't were commanded Thus to break my painful silence, Doing honestly, though sadly, Willingly the fact disclosing, Which by force had been extracted.

Johnson's fits of bad temper, like Goldsmith's blundering, must be unsparingly revealed by a biographer, because they are in fact expressions of the whole character.

"No, my dear, they are recent facts-facts which he dares not denyfacts for which he ought to be banished from all virtuous society.

"A very curious fact hath been taken notice of by those expert metaphysicians.

These pillagers are in fact highwaymen or privateershaving no laws, and acting from the impulses of their own fierce hearts.

It now becomes necessary to admit a prosaic fact hitherto concealed from the Reader.

It was with great reluctance that I took up the subject, and when I did, I have been so complete a fact hunter all my life, that I found it as difficult to lay it down.

It is a knowledge of this very shameful proceeding, which has made me most especially anxious to avoid fact hunting.

When we gain access to the histories of China and of India, the endlessness of the subject-matter will reveal to us the defects in the study, and force our historians to see that the object of science is to recognize the many in the one, to perceive the rules in any given example, and to apply to the life of nations a knowledge of mankind; not to go on counting up facts ad infinitum.

The fact isit belongs to me.'

54 Words to use with  facts