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How To Use Braveness In A Sentence

  • ‘Yes,’ I answered, finding the braveness to admit it.
  • It is said that only the animal of intelligence, braveness would commIt'suicide.
  • I told him he was the bravest man I'd ever known, leaving out how his braveness usually crossed the line into pigheaded stupidity (one should cut someone a little slack when he's on his deathbed).
  • I wish to give some kind of braveness to other people, just tell them it's so easy. Who wants to be a millionaire?
  • Yell out! There are talents, ability and magic in braveness.
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  • I was greatly moved by the braveness of the survivors who are encouraging themselves in trying to live on through this enormous disaster," the emperor said. Emperor Akihito Urges His Stricken Nation to Continue On
  • The older I get, I'm trying to take this big, bold braveness and use my brain.
  • A richly layered anti-realist film, it showed a real courage and braveness to explore and experiment formally.
  • That's the way I see it a good deal now with all that kind of braveness in some of the colored people. Three Lives Stories of The Good Anna, Melanctha and The Gentle Lena
  • These are brilliant programmes, some telling stories from much closer to home? one includes an American army deserter? and all full of stubborn courage, braveness, luck and some jaw-dropping cruelty. Radio head: Promised Land
  • Yell out! There are talents, ability and magic in the braveness.
  • We have matured certainly as we can win tonight when we are less creative but with intelligence, braveness and calm. Arsenal's Theo Walcott misses cup final, Cesc Fábregas a major doubt
  • For them, it symbolizes machismo - braveness, courage and the feel of ‘being a man'.
  • Bergen quotes Muhammad Musa, "a laconic, massively built commander" who led 600 Afghan soldiers to the Tora Bora front lines, on the fanatical braveness of al-Qaeda's fighters. Peter Bergen's "The Longest War"
  • Mr. Seda, whose face invites us in even as it gives nothing away, deserves most of the credit for clarifying a simple mystery at the heart of braveness; how, stripped to his elemental self, a hero is a kind of innocent. Blood on Their Boots
  • That’s the way I see it a good deal now with all that kind of braveness in some of the colored people. Melanctha: Each One as She May: Paras. 201-300

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