24449 examples of forgotten in sentences

"I haven't forgotten that and the chief is not allowed to forget it, either.

It is his business to conceive some subtler and more comprehensive war aim than bare military victory, and to make sure that, when he has died safely in his bed and been forgotten, other men shall not have to do over again the work which he complacently bungled.

Old feuds were forgotten.

four months later, is almost too recent to have been forgotten.

The old political formulae do not fit the present problems; they read now like documents taken out of a forgotten age.

The older cries sound as if they belonged to a past age which men have almost forgotten.

That this bill, the first essay of political consideration, as a subject long forgotten, should be liable to objection, cannot be strange; but surely, justice, policy, common reason, require, that we should be trusted with our own defence, and be kept, no longer in such a helpless state as, at once, to dread our enemies and confederates.

Whence Middlesex should obtain the right of being denominated the chief county cannot easily be discovered; it is, indeed, the county where the chief city happens to stand, but, how that city treated the favourite of Middlesex, is not yet forgotten.

With great propriety and dignity the king has, in his speech, neglected or forgotten them.

Whether these truths were forgotten, or despised; or, whether some better purpose was then in agitation, the representation made in Anson's voyage had such effect upon the statesmen of that time, that, in 1748, some sloops were fitted out for the fuller knowledge of Pepys's and Falkland's islands, and for further discoveries in the South sea.

From this time Falkland's island was forgotten or neglected, till the conduct of naval affairs was intrusted to the earl of Egmont, a man whose mind was vigorous and ardent, whose knowledge was extensive, and whose designs were magnificent; but who had somewhat vitiated his judgment by too much indulgence of romantick projects and airy speculations.

To be harmless, though by impotence, obtains some degree of kindness: no man hates a worm as he hates a viper; they were once dreaded enough to be detested, as serpents that could bite; they have now shown that they can only hiss, and may, therefore, quietly slink into holes, and change their slough, unmolested and forgotten.

For this reason our more important and opulent colonies see the appearance, and feel the effect, of a regular legislature, which, in some places, has acted so long with unquestioned authority, that it has forgotten whence that authority was originally derived.

But one day, turning over, as hopelessly as he was beginning to turn over everything else, a new work of Mr. Carlyle's, he fell on some such words as these: 'The beginning and the end of what is the matter with us in these days isthat WE HAVE FORGOTTEN GOD.' Forgotten God?

But one day, turning over, as hopelessly as he was beginning to turn over everything else, a new work of Mr. Carlyle's, he fell on some such words as these: 'The beginning and the end of what is the matter with us in these days isthat WE HAVE FORGOTTEN GOD.' Forgotten God?

I have not forgotten a certain talk of ours over Falk Von Muller's Recollections of Goethe, and how you materialists are often the most fantastic of theorists. . . .

He, at least, has not forgotten God.

The husband was too pressing and the wife too fond not to yield the point; and Grace took her seat in the carriage with a kind of half- formed resolution to improve the opportunity by a discourse on serious subjectsa resolution which terminated as all others do, that postpone one duty to discharge another of less magnitude; it was forgotten.

Pendennyss Castle had been for centuries the proud residence of that family; and the change of name in its possessor was forgotten with the circumstances that had led to it.

Pendennyss, who had never forgotten the good will manifested to him by Mr. Benfield, met him with a look of pleasure, as he expressed his happiness at seeing him again in London.

"I never have forgotten your goodness in sending honest Peter such a distance from home, on the object of his visit.

It was, adds John Yeardley, a precious tendering time, and I trust strength was given to preach the gospel; the sick and afflicted were not forgotten by my M. Y. In supplication.

In accompanying them home, some of them expressed to me that it had been a blessed and happy day, they hoped never to be forgotten.

" The Lion had already forgotten about his exhausted condition.

The parallel but independent development of Scotch is not to be forgotten.]

24449 examples of  forgotten  in sentences