How To Use Evidently In A Sentence

  • They evidently find the densely planted crop a satisfactory alternative to the nettles and brambles that they generally build in. Times, Sunday Times
  • Before this ugly edifice, and between it and the wheel-track of the street, was a grass-plot, much overgrown with burdock, pig-weed, apple-pern, and such unsightly vegetation, which evidently found something congenial in the soil that had so early borne the black flower of civilised society, a prison. The Scarlet Letter
  • And evidently this time apart allowed the two to approach their partnership rejuvenated and ready for some serious woodshedding, as they reportedly recorded dozens of tracks before pruning down to these relatively lean 14 songs.
  • The questions were evidently unexpected to the slow-witted spokesman, who instantly found himself tongue-tied.
  • Judging from these movies, Mark Wilkinson is evidently some kind of caecilian-hunting guru genius: with just two lazy, shallow strokes of a spade, he was able to discover two caecilians in their native habitat. ScienceBlogs Channel : Life Science
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  • It is the realm of _psychical life_; and, still more decidedly and more evidently, the _realm of mind_. The Theories of Darwin and Their Relation to Philosophy, Religion, and Morality
  • Evidently, for many influentials in world music, the art is a question of conquering and ruling the earth, no less.
  • Before it stood a pipkin, in which something was evidently kept warm. Two on a Tower
  • This enumeration is evidently designed to convey an impression of universality [Baumgarten]. Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • This was Gerard's account of the Cucumber, while of the Cucumber Pompion, which was evidently our Vegetable Marrow, and of which he has described and figured the variety which we now call the Custard Marrow, he says, "it maketh a man apt and ready to fall into the disease called the colericke passion, and of some the felonie. The plant-lore & garden-craft of Shakespeare
  • The term evidently comes from the meal being eaten at the "high" (main) table, rather than the smaller table common in living rooms. All about Tea
  • The unhappy helplessness of the man in the foxskin coat evidently afforded him great pleasure. The Schoolmistress and other stories
  • We saw the engine had evidently refused to take a very sharp curve. Times, Sunday Times
  • But what was remarkable in the lady was, that although her features were handsome, and upon the whole pleasing, the pupil of each eye was dimmed with the whiteness of cataract, and she was evidently stone-blind. The Purcell Papers
  • Evidently neither Bull Connor, the segregationist police commissioner of Birmingham, nor the merchants expected this quiet beginning to blossom into a large-scale operation.
  • He closed the door and wabbled swiftly down the long drab hall of the “railroad flat,” evidently trying to walk straight. Our Mr. Wrenn
  • Moreover, its ranks have been increasingly swelled by deserters from social behaviourism - an evidently liberal position.
  • She's evidently remembering her previous encounter with a gun.
  • Its also pretty self evidently false, as the briefest foray into the science and its history will tell you.
  • J.nnifer Lopez's split from Sony Music isn't quite as amicable as she wants you to think: evidently the label abruptly dropped J. Lo because of recent flops. Crushable
  • Also accompanying the typescript is a small rectangular piece of paper upon which Leinster has evidently typed an advertisement blurb. Antiquarian Weird Tales: Murray Leinster
  • It had evidently been the ballroom or reception-room of the defunct Marchesa in palmy days. The Romance of Isabel, Lady Burton
  • Many other trial records evidently contain allusions to fairies which have been cloaked with demonological definition, however only those which contain direct references to fairies will be used as evidence of popular fairy belief.
  • He calls her "shrewish", "looking (and failing, evidently) to find someone or something in ScienceBlogs Channel : Life Science
  • A lull; "You let that child alone!" child, evidently of few years, screaming in downright terror. THOSE ON THE EDGE
  • Yes, it was covered under clingwrap, but it had evidently been left out for hours in the heat of the day - and you can't help but suspect that they're going to be tempted to re-refrigerate or re-freeze it rather than throw it away. Chinalyst - China blogs in English
  • Angelina evidently has all the attributes hot-blooded males around the world seek in a woman too; so Darwinism was always going to be present in that delivery room.
  • The intendment, I say, of the apostle, in that exceptive plea he puts in, “Nevertheless,” is evidently to exempt some from the state of falling away, which might be argued against them from the defection of others. The Doctrine of the Saints��� Perseverance Explained and Confirmed
  • This is evidently not true. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her motherlessness plays no small role in this; her obstinate self-sufficiency evidently compensates for her father's meekness and her mother's absence.
  • But so far has he been from stirring and taking away that which is, or contradicting that which evidently appears, that he casts not so much as one single word out of the accustomed use; but taking away all figurative fraud that might hurt or endamage things, he again restored the ordinary and useful signification to words in these verses: - Essays and Miscellanies
  • She should have been here two hours ago so she's evidently decided not to come after all.
  • The audiences before whom _The Revenge_ was produced evidently showed themselves ill-affected towards such a medley of purely fictitious creations, and of historical personages and incidents, treated in the most arbitrary fashion. Bussy D'Ambois and The Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois
  • The architect, thought long and hard about the look of his upturned boats but evidently did not realise that the stoor created by construction work would trigger the fire alarms.
  • Evidently, comportment was the key to both characters.
  • This was back in the days, of course, when the New Zealand Electricity Department ran things and had a higher tolerance for brown-outs, evidently.
  • Whether the blue devils were flying around or not, I could not exactly discover, but the whiskey and _blue ruin_ were evidently powerful in their effects. Real Life In London, Volumes I. and II. Or, The Rambles And Adventures Of Bob Tallyho, Esq., And His Cousin, The Hon. Tom Dashall, Through The Metropolis; Exhibiting A Living Picture Of Fashionable Characters, Manners, And Amusements In High And Low Life
  • The tree was evidently hollow throughout its length; but perhaps some portion of the alburnum still remained intact. Godfrey Morgan A Californian Mystery
  • She walked slowly down the road, evidently in pain.
  • They evidently mistook this brandy-bibbing as a swaggering habit of mine; whereas I was honestly prescribing for myself what had been recommended to me as the best preventive of cholera.
  • Self-evidently a handful of companies will benefit.
  • Thus, in one place we have the following avowal, which is only not _naïf_ because evidently put in to please the prejudices of sympathetically narrow readers. The Continental Monthly, Vol. 1, No. 5, May, 1862 Devoted To Literature And National Policy
  • Today's dean and chapter have evidently decided that is long enough. Times, Sunday Times
  • Though evidently representing the same individual, the head was much calmer than that of the agitated portrait of the previous decade.
  • In other words the Greek seems to encompass a profound complexity of meaning as regards the placement (if that is the right word) of the head cloth, napkin, or, in fact, the σουδαριον/sudarium (in essence the same word, evidently a technical term in the repertoire of near eastern undertakers in Roman-occupied Palestine). Archive 2009-04-01
  • This canteen (with a funnel on its top, like a cavalier cap slouched over the eyes) was set on edge upon the puncheon, with the hole toward myself; and through this hole, which seemed puckered up like the mouth of a very precise old maid, the creature was emitting certain rumbling and grumbling noises which he evidently intended for intelligible talk. Archive 2008-12-01
  • But as I approached, so the branches beneath which they played gradually disparted, and I saw not far distant from them one sitting who evidently had these jocund boys in charge. Henry Brocken His Travels and Adventures in the Rich, Strange, Scarce-Imaginable Regions of Romance
  • Evidently, as the water slowly receded in the city, the museum's ground floor took on water from hydrostatic pressure through cracks in the concrete slab.
  • Miller's particular approach, the warmongering approach, is self-evidently reminiscent of the Bush/Cheney years, in which any domestic reversal was followed by an elevated level on the colour-coded risk-assessment wheel. Frank Miller and the rise of cryptofascist Hollywood
  • People who use this term evidently have no real knowledge of what the Nazis did Open Democracy News Analysis - Comments
  • The Duke tried to appear unconcerned, but both he and his wife were so evidently embarrassed that they won the sympathy of their fellow passengers. Consuelo & Alva: Love and Power in the Gilded Age
  • One of them glanced scowlingly at Floyd, as he passed the lad, evidently associating his wounds with the presence of the prisoner. The Boy Ranchers Among the Indians or, Trailing the Yaquis
  • The lady was evidently flattered by his offer and accepted in a weak and nervous voice as he kissed her hand.
  • The former chief sub who had been with the paper for eight years, was evidently marginalised and ostracised after a disagreement with the publisher.
  • Camden society what the old church at Jamestown probably was, may be seen the tomb of a Tazewell, who died in 1706, on which is engraved the coat of arms of the family, -- a lion rampant, bearing a helmet with a vizor closed on his back; an escutcheon, which is evidently of Norman origin, and won by some daring feat of arms, and which could only have been held by one of the conquering race. Discourse of the Life and Character of the Hon. Littleton Waller Tazewell
  • Evidently, "the old man" hit his head hard enough to cause a subcranial hemorrhage. Wilberteets Diary Entry
  • Evidently part of her lungs must be _very_ sound still; and they say _no one's_ lungs are _quite sound_. The Letters of Queen Victoria, Volume 1 (of 3), 1837-1843) A Selection from Her Majesty's Correspondence Between the Years 1837 and 1861
  • Evidently, then, the calyx is a protecting covering for the other parts of the flower until blossoming time. The First Book of Farming
  • The reply received was evidently not in favour of extreme measures for the strong arm of the British was notoriously far-reaching, and serious trouble might ensue if the subadar were killed. The Story of the Guides
  • The gateway arch was dark - evidently it isn't lit during the wee hours of the morning.
  • SO, I'LL stand corrected on the "saviour" perception "bit", but you evidently still haven't been reading much, or you're only reading from sources or providers that are [omissive] about what's really been going on since election day 2008. CommonDreams.org Headlines
  • Evidently there isn't enough land in the UK to grow oilseed for bio-fuel even to meet the EU 2020 target and to grow crops to feed people.
  • Their investigative chess journalism is also evidently of high calibre.
  • There were cobwebs and old wooden crates and barrels scattered carelessly about; evidently, this place had once been used for storage.
  • Even ‘reverence for the emperor, the most important ideological buttress of the old order, was evidently giving way’.
  • But the exchange of commodities is evidently an act characterized by a total abstraction from use-value. A Bland and Deadly Courtesy
  • We have not seen a drop of water on the surface; the ground evidently absorbs all that falls; the scrub is principally the mulga and hakea bushes and acacia, with a few other small bushes, but very little salt bush. The Journals of John McDouall Stuart
  • Evidently the good denizens of the street were too busy fretting about the economy to concern themselves with such small geographical matters.
  • The development and unification to a type, however, was carried on mostly in Germany, where native boar-hounds were evidently cross-bred with numerous imported English hounds.
  • It has subsequently been interpreted as a tubiform green alga and as a cyanobacterium, and Ordovician specimens that are evidently Halysis have been referred to the filamentous green alga Oedogonium Link, 1820.
  • These columns moved forward on the surface of the sea, and the clouds not following them with equal rapidity, they assumed a bent or incurvated shape, and frequently appeared crossing each other, evidently proceeding in different directions; from whence we concluded, that it being calm, each of these water-spouts caused a wind of its own. A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 14
  • And, more than sixty years on from the siege, the compelling attraction of music in this place is evidently still felt by ordinary citizens.
  • Mind you, it is a pity that other Scottish pundits are not as forthright as Walker was last week, many evidently willing to accept handsome pay packets for doing little more than stating the obvious.
  • This species, typical of mesic to dry-mesic upland forests, has wind-dispersed seeds and evidently readily invades barrens.
  • However, evidently sarongs and mocktails on sun-kissed beaches don't mean a thing to Jean.
  • He evidently purged himself of enough angst to be able to craft a follow-up that's warm, nimble and surprisingly funny in places.
  • There was evidently some deep distinction in a fox's psyche between moving objects and stationary ones.
  • Finally, there was evidently something extra in the refreshments and that would redound to their credit. ADRIENNE AND THE CHALET SCHOOL
  • But we confess that it is a little mortifying to our pride of time and place, to meet an old beggar-woman, who from the dust on her tattered brogues has evidently marched miles from her last night's wayside howf, and who holds out her withered palm for charity, at an hour when a cripple of fourscore might have been supposed sleeping on her pallet of straw. Recreations of Christopher North, Volume 2
  • Nadia evidently asked him to play an organ reduction of it at the service, and appeared to be satisfied with the result.
  • If this declaration is disbelieved, as my former declarations have evidently been, what more can I do or say? Letter 62
  • The higher purpose of art is evidently to correct the spiritual errors of a soulless, competitive, materialist society.
  • We looked for our share of the victuals, but they told me old bl -- bl "---- Again he hesitated, evidently afraid that some" unsonsy "thing was behind him. Traditions of Lancashire, Volume 2 (of 2)
  • Recent scholarship has hardly begun to gauge the strands of influence flowing out of the studios of western artists in what were then called the “presidencies” of Bengal, Behar, and Oudh — and thence to the workshops of indigenous Indian court and other local painters who evidently admired, or at least for whatever reasonsoughtto emulate them. Francesco Renaldi in Dacca
  • Any growth in unemployment is self-evidently a matter of extreme seriousness.
  • Well, that's what I call ongrateful, dog-gone my skin if it ain't," said the guard, who had been evidently struck with M'liss's generosity. The Luck of Roaring Camp and Other Tales With Condensed Novels, Spanish and American Legends, and Earlier Papers
  • Whatever one's political leanings, the threat of serious disruption from the miners, union seemed quite evidently an ideological hangover.
  • The cold clouds seen at 100 micrometres are large and diffuse, evidently just beginning to condense under their own gravity.
  • Amen! went up to heaven in ratification of the deed, mingled with a few hisses and wrathful exclamations from some who were evidently in a rowdyish state of mind, but who were at once cowed by the popular feeling. Revolution Day
  • On his release, the widowed trickster evidently won himself a rich wife among the élite Jewish merchant class in Frankfort.
  • Evidently, she had nothing to do with the whole affair.
  • Evidently the appelation "birdbrain" didn't bother her, as her bird brain was perhaps the most powerful brain in Xanth. Dragon on a Pedestal
  • The pizza base (handmade with organic flour) was evidently homespun, with its biscuity, nicely burned crust.
  • And why should such broad, self-evidently adaptable phrases be interpreted solely according to what any ratifier thought, particularly when it appears that: (a) at least some chose those phrases precisely to accommodate changes they could not foresee and (b) many rejected the notion, necessarily embraced by originalists, that legal texts like the Constitution ought to be interpreted by reference to extrinsic historical materials? Nan Aron: Justice Scalia Pulls Out the Old "I'm With Stupid" T-Shirt
  • Are they "edgier," less sentimental, and therefore, (evidently) more award-worthy? The other g-word
  • The downbeat defeatism or hollow war cries have disappeared and while they made a rod for their own back with the opening-day draw with Aberdeen, the players and management evidently believe all is not lost and time is on their side.
  • Charlotte evidently believes that women are so socially disadvantaged that they must strike, like bandits, when opportunity offers - and if necessary dissimulate to get their prize.
  • For example, in "Winter's Tale" his account of the death of the boy Mamillius is evidently a reflex of his own emotion when he lost his son, Hamnet, an emotion which at the time he pictured deathlessly in Arthur and the grief of the Queen-mother Constance. The Man Shakespeare
  • He looked so wistful as he went away, hearing the frolic and evidently having none of his own. Little Women
  • Finding that we were as yet out of range, the lateener once more kept away upon her former course, evidently recognising the possibility that, if she did not, we might still slip past her. Under the Meteor Flag Log of a Midshipman during the French Revolutionary War
  • It evidently rather pleased him to hear that he was going away. Little Lord Fauntleroy
  • Shiny Shiny reports on the Boob Enhancer which is a small device with an LCD that evidently massages and "relaxes" one's breasts by improving circulation. Boob Enhancer
  • That was a tame and pithless performance, and if Jasper was in it at all he was evidently resting his better forces for the bigger battle at three o'clock in the impending afternoon. John Jasper: The Unmatched Negro Philosopher and Preacher
  • There is something quite evidently wrong with that second question. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Although a primitive recording programme was in progress, the company evidently had to scrape the bottom of the barrel for material.
  • But when speaking of the rendition of Handelian arias, he evidently uses the term vibrato in the same sense as Sieber does tremolando. Sixty Years of California Song
  • Do you really think it wise to attack them here and when we are so evidently outnumbered? Man of Honour
  • At Hannah's bidding, I fly downstairs barefoot and beg Mr. Hakim to get us one of his mini cabs When I return, I find her standing at the rickety wardrobe, holding my shoulder-bag which has evidently slipped from its hiding place in the rush but not, thank Heaven, my precious copy of J'Accuse! The mission song
  • This was evidently named by someone who has never seen either a lime or a melon, let alone a pomelo. Limecat Halloween Costume » E-Mail
  • ‘Oh, hello,’ she'd said to Brett, evidently surprised to see him standing in her kitchen with her daughter.
  • The chauffeur made wild, appealing gestures of his innocence, evidently to no avail, for when he turned around and climbed back into the driver's seat his expression was not a little dejected.
  • This killer disease of young people in dense cities caused coughing and was evidently exacerbated by polluted air, just as it was relieved by the pure air of the mountains.
  • There is evidently something about a life of poverty and chastity that appeals. Times, Sunday Times
  • Teresa, however, evidently, declined such overtures.
  • Evidently, whatever sort of debilitating bug was on that disk, it had so far managed to get past one of the best protective programs available.
  • English writers are constantly cited as the fathers of our verse, the name of their great Scottish compeer is apt to be passed over in silence; but he is evidently worthy of being enrolled in that little constellation of remote but never-failing luminaries, who shine in the highest firmament of literature, and who, like morning stars, sang together at the bright dawning of British poesy. The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon
  • A friend who is in a position to know tells me that Adams evidently didn't know how the characters' South Asian names should be accented, and consequently, he consistently misset one of them. Archive 2007-10-01
  • It evidently rather pleased him to hear that he was going away. Little Lord Fauntleroy
  • They evidently punched the Tulua code into the cockpit computer.
  • This kind of peloria may for distinction sake be called regular or congenital peloria (see chapter on that subject); but where a flower becomes regular by the increase in number of its irregular portions, as in the _Linaria_ already alluded to, where not only one petal is spurred, but all five of them are furnished with such appendages, and which are the result of an irregular development of those organs, the peloria is evidently not congenital, but occurs at a more or less advanced stage of development. Vegetable Teratology An Account of the Principal Deviations from the Usual Construction of Plants
  • Present plant communities are evidently ephemeral aggregations controlled by intersecting gradients of floral change.
  • [Footnote 1: This evidently referred to the "adumbration" of Autobiography, Letters and Literary Remains of Mrs. Piozzi (Thrale) (2nd ed.) (2 vols.) Edited with notes and Introductory Account of her life and writings
  • The mimbar, the high pulpit, had evidently been used to warm Kaginovich's troops on cold nights. SOMEWHERE EAST OF LIFE
  • Turning round, they could dimly make out two buggies, evidently in a race. THE WITCH TREE SYMBOL
  • Evidently, the girls didn't pay much attention, since they are shown sleeping and playing patty-cake instead.
  • I seem to be OK, though - my knees are grazed (but not too badly), and the toes of my left foot are evidently a bit sprained.
  • A hasty exclamation was recorded faithfully over our detectaphone, close to the transmitter, evidently. Guy Garrick
  • They were evidently so enamored of the pitahaya cactus that they picked the seeds out of their feces and ate them again. Almost an Island: Travels in Baja California by Bruce Berger
  • I had reached this church by an old archway, whose origin was evidently defensive, and crossing the dim and silent square, surrounded by mediaeval houses, some half ruinous, and all more or less adorned with pellitory, ivy-linaria, and other wall-plants which had fixed their roots between the gaping stones. Wanderings by southern waters, eastern Aquitaine
  • Before that, there was only the glare of unsuccess, without, evidently, the masterpiece's long but occasionally beneficent shadow. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Evidently Amazon is able to better leverage pricing with the shippers—allowing them greater flexibility in the order fulfillment process.
  • Evidently you, your editor, and your organization do not operate under the same rules of journalism.
  • Evidently, it's only frivolous if somebody has been disabled for life.
  • Hirsch concedes as ‘self-evidently true’ the notion that one cannot know for certain the author's intended meaning.
  • The work was evidently intended to be a special monument to the unexcelled graphic mastery of its author.
  • It cannot be identical with the νεώς ό Έκατόμπεδος nor with the opisthodomos, for the three appellations occur at the same date evidently designating three different places. The American Journal of Archaeology, 1893-1
  • I have used the word verdure, but it is really a misnomer, for although the prevailing tint of the foliage was a dark green, the entire forest was streaked like a rainbow with innumerable flowers, and the breeze which blew from it was laden with the most delightful perfume, Evidently it was all a howling wilderness, for we could not detect the slightest vestige of human dwellings or cultivation. A Trip to Venus
  • A roll of carpet and some mats stood in a corner, chairs and tables with burlaps round their legs waited here and there, a cot with a mattress on it, evidently to be transformed into a "couch," held packages of bafflingly irregular shapes and sizes. T. Tembarom
  • The publication, which is also known to have been preparing tabloid dummies, is evidently not going to reveal its hand.
  • He had a system: evidently he had taken advice. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was evidently, immensely pleased with his own little bit of book-learning; he even insisted on talking and writing Latin -- pure "swank" -- whereas his family would surely have preferred their native Frankish. From a Terrace in Prague
  • But it evidently wasn't quite on song when the big moment came this year. The Sun
  • These statistics have been employed to suggest that a lot of evidently happily married women are faithless and untrustworthy people who have ruthlessly deceived their unsuspecting husbands.
  • [69] Apuleius _Apologia_, 523: Pleraque tamen rei familiaris in nomen uxoris callidissima fraude confert, etc.; id., 545, 546 proves further the power of the wife: ea condicione factam conjunctionem, si nullis a me susceptis liberis vita demigrasset, ut dos omnis, etc. -- evidently the woman was dictating the disposal of her dowry. A Short History of Women's Rights From the Days of Augustus to the Present Time. with Special Reference to England and the United States. Second Edition Revised, With Additions.
  • In both we have "phonic," evidently meaning the same in each case, limited or modified by the preceding part -- _poly_ and Music Talks with Children
  • This distinction is evidently rough and needs refinement, but one has some sense of what is intended.
  • Mr. Gardiner, whose manners were very easy and pleasant, encouraged her communicativeness by his questions and remarks; Mrs. Reynolds, either by pride or attachment, had evidently great pleasure in talking of her master and his sister. Pride and Prejudice
  • He was not overwhelmed with grief for Kit, but evidently his eyes felt otherwise.
  • Evidently, her relationship with Nick didn't earn her a legion of admirers.
  • He evidently knew by now that I wasn't going to show up and he still hadn't phoned.
  • She's evidently made a new friend in Brody Stevens of "The Hangover. Team Jacob On ‘Lost,’ Snooki And ‘Requels’ In Today’s Twitter-Wood » MTV Movies Blog
  • The easy (and evidently predictable) choice here for me would be Buffy but there’s an undeniable greatness in AHP as well. 10 « February « 2009 « Axiom's Edge Science Fiction and Fantasy
  • I find it somewhat aggravating that your constant complaints that I am battering straw men doesn't stop you from simply ascribing a political moderateness that I have neither shown nor hold; your sensitivity to misrepresentation evidently does not run in more than one direction. OCD
  • Thus, then, the coloring matter described as chlorophyl by Lankester has really been mainly derived from that of the endodermal algæ of the variety _plumosa_, which predominates at Naples; while the anthea-green of Krukenberg must mainly consist of the green pigment of the ectoderm, since the Trieste variety evidently does not contain algæ in any great quantity. Scientific American Supplement, No. 324, March 18, 1882
  • Quite evidently it was not his habit to discuss his business affairs with strangers.
  • The Manx naturalist Edward Forbes coined the word ‘azoic’ to describe this self-evidently lifeless zone.
  • Almost all the squares are tacked to the wall at three corners with tiny brads; a fourth nail was evidently inserted and then removed, leaving a telltale hole.
  • Nasal diamorphine is evidently effective, safe, and easy to administer.
  • After them came a portly lady of about forty - five, light - haired, sharp - eyed, and evidently good - natured.
  • It evidently became quite hostile and unpleasant. Times, Sunday Times
  • They have a grownup son, Joe Oliver Maltman, who has evidently inherited his dad's breezy, sarky, unreflective sense of humour, and whose still-unmarried condition concerns the parents not one whit. Another Year ? review
  • Evidently too stupid to realise that her relentless moaning wasn't coming across very well on the telly, Natalie decided against keeping her gob shut and instead elected to continue to behave like a spoilt child.
  • This lady has affairs of great pith and moment to convey to the maids, who make timidly respectful suggestions, which evidently carry small comfort, for the lady retires depressedly. In Seven Stages: A Flying Trip Around the World
  • The packets of sugar I bestowed were inviolately kept for them, and given little by little, though evidently very tempting to the mothers themselves. Insulinde: Experiences of a Naturalist's Wife in the Eastern Archipelago
  • The other was a smaller and tubbier man, pleasant to look upon, a man evidently who lived for and by good eating and drinking. Patsy
  • Evidently they put small faith in the "three thousand miles of cool sea-water" as a nonconductor of warfare! The World Decision
  • Your obviously jockish tendencies evidently annoy him.
  • But this assertion evidently denied the coeternity of the three persons of the Trinity; it suggested a subordination or inequality among them, and indeed implied a time when the Trinity did not exist. History of the Conflict between Religion and Science
  • The poet Alan Dixon evidently thinks the same.
  • It had evidently been a royal mausoleum. A BOOK OF LANDS AND PEOPLES
  • Evidently man is the little God, the microcosm, an image of the macrocosm, which is God's larger universe. Autobiography, sermons, addresses, and essays of Bishop L. H. Holsey, D. D.,
  • Evidently, the chef has also had a few heart-to-hearts with his kitchen.
  • The author here suggests the introduction of a useful word, radiance, to express the light, radiant heat, and actinism of the sun, which are evidently modifications of the same form of energy.
  • When he wrote his ur-alien-invasion novel, he was evidently using the British “war of extermination” againstthe Tasmanians as his model. Tom Engelhardt: In the Crosshairs: Tucson-Kabul
  • Over the back of a chair was thrown the work she had been busied with; and on the bed, almost hid by the curtains, was a pair of the prettiest little blue garters I ever saw, even in Paris, -- span-new they were, and had evidently been bought no longer ago than the evening before, -- and some other articles of feminine apparel, which I will not attempt to describe. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 27, January, 1860
  • Evidently, statin boosterism is just as rampant among British cardiologists. Archive 2003-06-01
  • I didn't think Charlie's parents would like me, but evidently I pass muster.
  • He was vexed with the levity that had made him call his roomful together on so poor a pretext, and yet was vexed with the stupidity that made the witnesses so evidently find the pretext sufficient. The Tragic Muse
  • It seems self evidently the case that the authors of the plan did not consider any other possibility except the implementation of the Land Securities scheme.
  • Evidently she has committed some petty crime, but she's frustratingly vague about it. Christianity Today
  • Many had evidently made up their minds that it would be more amusing to see the cowhiding than the circus. The Underground Railroad A Record of Facts, Authentic Narratives, Letters, &c., Narrating the Hardships, Hair-Breadth Escapes and Death Struggles of the Slaves in Their Efforts for Freedom, As Related by Themselves and Others, or Witnessed by the Auth
  • Evidently the shower head is leaking and has caused a crack in our ceiling.
  • The government of Numa Pompilius was evidently theocratical. A Philosophical Dictionary
  • Even in the face of seemingly unstoppable natural disasters, some are evidently more equal than others.
  • Her champion seems evidently her admirer, and his father her adorer. Camilla
  • It is, after all, April, and the boys mother evidently continued to send him to school even though she knew that he was hitting other children.
  • The inducement had evidently proved very attractive.
  • The paratroops were a rough lot and evidently cared little what or how they ate. Operation Sea Lion
  • The traditional method of combating intuitionalism from the time of John Locke to that of Herbert Spencer has been to present the reader with a list of cruel and abominable savage customs, ridiculous superstitions, acts of religious fanaticism and intolerance, which have all alike seemed self-evidently good and right to the peoples or individuals who have practised them. Human Traits and their Social Significance
  • Jones evidently was as neat as his wife - his sidekick said Boris had a place for everything and everything in its place. YESTERDAY'S SHADOW
  • On the right of the fire was a razeed rocking-chair, evidently the peculiar property of the mistress of the mansion, and three blocks of pine log, sawn off smoothly, and made to serve for seats. Among the Pines or, South in Secession Time
  • Secretary's Office, was reputed to be an excellent mathematician, and had high testimonials of his qualification, he applied for the professorship; evidently feeling the anomalousness of his position, and his inability and powerlessness to establish a system of Public School The Story of My Life Being Reminiscences of Sixty Years' Public Service in Canada
  • She was attacked with a severe inflammation of the right eye, which had to be enucleated, and was found full of tenia echinococcus, evidently derived from the dog's tongue. Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine
  • The phrase argumentum ad verecundiam literally means the means ‘the argument from modesty’, and it was John Locke who evidently first used this phrase to refer to a kind of error or deceptive tactic that can be used by one person in discussion with another … Blogginheads Controversy
  • The vast majority of academics evidently do without any extramural research funding or operate with minimal funding.
  • The reefer was a well-dressed boy, evidently a gentleman's son; but the lieutenant was one of those old weather-beaten sea-dogs, who are seldom employed in boats, unless something more than common is to be done. Miles Wallingford Sequel to "Afloat and Ashore"
  • Of course, one of the cool rules Jefferson was jonesing for was freedom of speech, a right that, evidently, Mr. Penn believes should apply to only individuals of the same philosophical bent as himself.
  • On isolated houses, propitiatory slogans had been painted, large in red paint: `LONG LIVE THE REPUBLIC was evidently the safest slogan. SOMEWHERE EAST OF LIFE
  • Evidently excited to still be on solids, they have a traditional English breakfast consisting of tea, canned beans and crumpets flown to their San Francisco hotel every day.
  • Indeed, if the journalist is to better understand the topic upon which he prepares an article then evidently he has to be better informed.

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