How To Use dwell on In A Sentence
- Though some like to dwell on that horror while others ignore it entirely, I believe it is only true to the remarkableness of America if we acknowledge both the horror of that age and the unique American triumph in overcoming it. Bart Motes: Hillary Clinton for Supreme Court
- No one is urged to dwell on the fact that the day's fireworks displays are symbolic of an armed revolution against tyranny and colonialism.
- The lack of decoration or furniture made his mind dwell on what could be happening outside his cell, and none of it could be good news.
- You tend to dwell on the past and rake up old issues which open old wounds and bring fresh pain in relationships.
- This is a tendency to dwell on what ruffly garment was worn, the precise glossy shade of a woman's hair, and so on.
- When life is not going to plan, look for solutions rather than dwell on problems. The Sun
- I won't dwell on it with the players. Times, Sunday Times
- It will soon be well known that the surest way to inflict pain upon you is to extol the excellences or to dwell on the happiness of others, and your failings will be considered an amusing subject for jesting observation to experimentalize upon. The Young Lady's Mentor A Guide to the Formation of Character. In a Series of Letters to Her Unknown Friends
- It's not something to dwell on. The Sun
- I shut out the memory which was too painful to dwell on.