531117 examples of us in sentences

This gent Coles comes out of the East to teach us poor ignorant ranchers what right hoss flesh should be.

"We'll be fighting another year, and then it'll tak us thirty-nine years more to wind up all the wire!" Off to my right there was a network of steel strands, and as I gazed at it I saw a small dark object hanging from it and fluttering in the breeze.

I think he was glad to have us back again, and to be doing his part, instead of leaving me to sing alone, without his stout help.

Up above us, as I began to sing, our airplanes were circling.

They took us, the officers of the divisional staff, to a hut, where we were offered our choice of tea or a wee hauf yin.

Our way was to take us through St. Pol and Hesdin, and, going so, we came to the town of Le Quesnoy.

But He could not expect us to love His enemies.

And if anything could have brought down that tottering statue above us it would have been the way they sang.

And there were so many like himand so many like me, God help us all!

So he began picking out a tune, and the rest of us began to sit up a bit.

After John was killed his brother officers sent us all his personal belongings.

We have no right to expect him to sing for us to-day, but if it is God's will that he should, nothing could give us greater pleasure.

Captain Godfrey meant to show us another village that day.

Or send them out to us, and we'll show them.

As we gave our names they looked through the bundles of declarations which had been arranged alphabetically, and, finding the proper one, told us that we would have to pay a duty of 5 per cent upon our typewriter and kodaks, and that a receipt and certificate would be furnished by which we could recover the money at any port by which we left India.

They are often a burden to them, particularly in hot weather, when they chafe and burn the flesh, and our Bombay friends tell us that in the summer the fountain basins, the hydrants and every other place where water can be found will be surrounded by women bathing the spots where the silver ornaments have seared the skin and cooling the metal, which is often so hot as to burn the fingers.

Near the cathedral is a statute to Lord Cornwallis, who was governor general of India in 1786, and, as the inscription informs us, died at Ghazipur, Oct. 5, 1805.

During the debate on the Clayton-Bulwer treaty, a Mr. Douglas, to whom I have before alluded, and who may be considered as the representative of the rabid and rowdy portion of the community, thus expresses himself with regard to England: "It is impossible she can love us,I do not blame her for not loving us,sir, we have wounded her vanity and humbled her pride,she can never forgive us.

During the debate on the Clayton-Bulwer treaty, a Mr. Douglas, to whom I have before alluded, and who may be considered as the representative of the rabid and rowdy portion of the community, thus expresses himself with regard to England: "It is impossible she can love us,I do not blame her for not loving us,sir, we have wounded her vanity and humbled her pride,she can never forgive us.

During the debate on the Clayton-Bulwer treaty, a Mr. Douglas, to whom I have before alluded, and who may be considered as the representative of the rabid and rowdy portion of the community, thus expresses himself with regard to England: "It is impossible she can love us,I do not blame her for not loving us,sir, we have wounded her vanity and humbled her pride,she can never forgive us.

"After which expressions, the poor little man, as though he had not the slightest conception of the meaning of the words he was using, adds the following sentence, deprecating all he had previously uttered: "I do not wish to administer to the feeling of jealousy and rivalry that exists between us and England.

"They said, John Baptist hath sent us unto thee.

"To enable us to avoid the too frequent repetition of the same word.

"The Author of nature has as truly directed that vicious actions, considered as mischievous to society, should be punished, and has as clearly put mankind under a necessity of thus punishing them, as he has directed and necessitated us to preserve our lives by food.

"An orator should not put forth all his strength at the beginning, but should rise and grow upon us, as his discourse advances.

531117 examples of  us  in sentences