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How To Use In truth In A Sentence

  • The dress wasn't low cut, but in truth she didn't have a lot of cleavage to reveal, her figure being quite elfin.
  • In truth, she could not have known she had fallen into this realm as the mere awareness of self and location whether spatial or otherwise would negate the very nature of the state itself.
  • In truth, though, Oxford did not produce the hockey they are no doubt capable of in the second period.
  • In truth it was all he could do to contain himself, and he felt that his only chance of bearing up was to say nothing more than was absolutely necessary in short ejaculatory phrases. Dusty Diamonds Cut and Polished A Tale of City Arab Life and Adventure
  • In truth, they worked superbly as a team - they were the duumvirate who, in the first, formative years of independence, effectively united and strengthened India.
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  • In truth, taking on Sandamhor as a family enterprise would be an impossibility without my mother's salary as a headteacher on a neighbouring island. Back to the land: from London to sheep farming on Eigg
  • In truth, he seems to be more motivated and inspired by bitterness and spite than ever.
  • In truth, more money in the teachers' pay packets is only papering over the cracks, not attacking and solving the real problems.
  • In truth it is the genetic similarity between humans and primates that makes experimenting on them expedient.
  • In truth, she knew he probably did indeed possess that strength but it made her feel a little better by trying to bruise his male ego.
  • In truth, how she died was unknown, a secret that remained with her family.
  • Sometimes a little lie helps to strengthen relationships, or to avoid unnecessary conflicts and tensions. Sometimes omitting certain truth serves to protect ourselves and others. Dr T.P.Chia 
  • But Miescher died in 1895, aged just 51, and never really followed up what in truth was a fine insight.
  • In truth, the party will remain unelectable until it learns how to conduct a conversation with the country, employing a more emollient vocabulary…
  • In truth, they may have the get-up-and-go traction to battle winter weather, but they cannot stop any better than a car without all-wheel drive. Winter tires: Comparing stopping distances in snow
  • In truth, not even the most passionately pro-choice individual supports the idea of aborting rather than delivering viable fetuses. Out of the mouths of pro-aborts
  • There were, in truth, many such theories, and to some of them the term metaphysical, in M. Comte's sense, cannot justly be applied. Auguste Comte and Positivism
  • In truth this Caucasian wine, although rather sour, accompanied by the boiled fowl, known as pilau -- has rather a pleasant taste about it. The Adventures of a Special Correspondent
  • Realistic hope abounds but, in truth, it probably won't happen.
  • In truth the game never rose above mediocrity, as Dingle and Crokes struggled to find their range.
  • There are no limits to our human ability to justify our fear for, in truth, the world is a fearful place.
  • Even the moneys of Cyprus were flowing somewhat overfreely into the coffers of the Venetian Provveditori who kept vigilant watch over the island kingdom -- which was, in truth, no longer anything but a Venetian province, except in name. The Royal Pawn of Venice A Romance of Cyprus
  • But in truth we have chosen to shelve the unification-independence dispute and focus on reviving the economy and strengthening Taiwan.
  • If Mad Men isn't a perfect show, it wasn't a perfect time, but I do think what you see as a flaw is an attempt for the show to remain truthful. Ask Matt: CSI: Miami Move, a Bones Scoop-let, Lone Star, NCIS and More!
  • Through his mother's contacts, he acted as if he were born to greatness, whereas in truth he had to achieve it by his own indefatigable efforts.
  • When wine is in truth is out. 
  • It means that we let go of posturing and pretence and live simply as we are, in truth, at ease with ourselves and with others, not having to worry about who's up or who's down, who's in or who's out.
  • In truth this sum is a mere drop in the ocean to the Chancellor.
  • In truth, the gamble in bringing Doyen back against an instinct to keep him for another season never looked like succeeding.
  • In truth, the music didn't really take off - the church was stifling, people were shuffling on their feet and the music ebbed and flowed, promising climaxes that it didn't deliver, and tip-toeing around solemnity.
  • When the claim Of a roan of distinguished merit arose, there was generally no vacancy of this kind; and when the vacancies occurred, the offices were in truth given away upon political or family considerations, without much re - gard to distinguished merit The word sinecure was a very unpopular word, and indeed so was the word pension, of which several no very favourable definitions had been given. The Parliamentary Register: Or an Impartial Report of the Debates that Have Occured in the Two ...
  • To live without philosophizing is in truth the same as keeping the eyes closed without attempting to open them. Rene Descartes 
  • Everyone suffers agonies of mortification that he'll seem a trailer-trash rube if he says out loud the plain truth that the modernist emperor has no clothes.
  • Trust is in truth unlikely to be restored for so long as politicians try and prove that one side is more honest and trustworthy than the other.
  • And he was gifted with that peculiar power which enables a man to have the last word in every encounter, -- a power which we are apt to call repartee, which is in truth the readiness which comes from continual practice. The Duke's Children
  • Thorough analysis of the phenomena of immunization, an analysis based on extremely numerous experiments, has shown that phagocytosis is in truth a defence action on the part of the organism against the agents of disease. Ilya Mechnikov - Nobel Lecture
  • (In truth, their annual rainfall is closer to half the amount we received this week alone.) Jetlag : Bev Vincent
  • It is, in truth, almost as bad as it sounds; but this song has wormed its way into my affections, probably something to do with the whistling. Readers recommend: songs with special guests
  • She also has the integrity to remain uncompromising in the refusal to acknowledge opinions that are not grounded in truth.
  • The plain truth is that you'll never get to university.
  • He took the idea for his own and rewarded me by telling me that my pale yellow hair was also misnamed: it was, in truth, honey-coloured. Oscar Wilde and the Dead Man’s Smile
  • In truth, these peregrinations required the talents of a mountain goat.
  • In truth, naked aggression does not suit him.
  • In truth, Newport Beach has always drawn a diverse population of sailing enthusiasts and dory fishermen, Gatsby wannabes and dedicated surfers, limo owners and beach-cruiser pedalers.
  • Queen's Majesty is not pleased that I should molest her Highness with any more of my colourable letters, which, although they be termed colourable, yet not offending the Queen's Majesty, I must say for myself that it was the plain truth, even as I desire to be saved afore Studies from Court and Cloister: being essays, historical and literary dealing mainly with subjects relating to the XVIth and XVIIth centuries
  • In truth few have worshipped at that altar and gone forth into chosen ways unmindful of her history, unimbued with her love, or untrained in stating facts — those readily correlated by one and all — such as it has been the effort here to record, some possibly through filial affection a little tinted but in the main void of any intent at exaggeration or misrepresentation. The University of Virginia
  • It's too bad Amazon cannot overnight a sense of perspective, because there are, in truth, tougher situations to find yourself in.
  • In truth, his encounter with Toby Addington had disquieted him.
  • In truth, much of the ongoing research in neural networks today is involved with learning.
  • In truth I could not notice much difference from my seat near the front.
  • In truth, he has written as easily about love as he has about tyranny, as nimbly about rabid dictators as about powerless artists; he has given us "Vargas Llosa light," in delightfully erotic (thinly veiled autobiographical) stories, and "Vargas Llosa dark," in elaborately researched and profoundly illuminating historical novels. The power of Mario Vargas Llosa's words led the political writer to Nobel Prize
  • Wisdom is only found in truth
  • Her people's era on West 107th long since past, Mrs. Weissman had no fondness for the coarse new crowd, and in truth, was a kind of pitiable figure - a yenta who had lost her nosiness.
  • In truth, persons exist but without inherent existence, and this is called the selflessness of persons; when it comes to other phenomena such as eyes, ears, body, mind, mountain, and the like, this is called the selflessness of phenomena. Becoming Enlightened
  • He claimed that my town was ‘on his way’ to Denver, but in truth his little layover added at least two hours of driving time to his vacation.
  • In truth they are animated by nothing but their own lust for power and their desire for dominion over others.
  • They are going to have to step up this latest performance however by several notches, and in truth one has to seriously question their ability to do so.
  • Worship in truth is the antidote to idolatry, while worship in spirit is the antidote to hypocrisy.
  • In truth the whole evening was testimony to the benefits that can be accrued from Transition Year.
  • He that trusts in a lie shall perish in truth
  • Now the ‘Evening Pulpit,’ in its endeavour to make the facts of this transaction known, had placed what it called the domicile of this company in Paris, whereas it was ascertained that its official head-quarters had in truth been placed at Vienna. The Way We Live Now
  • Mrs Proudie in truth believed that the archdeacon was an actual emanation from Satan, sent to those parts to devour souls — as she would call it — and that she herself was an emanation of another sort, sent from another source expressly to Barchester, to prevent such devouring, as far as it might possibly be prevented by a mortal agency. A dollop from Trollope | clusterflock
  • And this was thought no small peece of cunning, being in deed a matter of some difficultie to finde out so many wordes beginning with one letter as might make a iust volume, thought in truth it were but a phantasticall deuise and to no purpose at all more then to make them harmonicall to the rude eares of those barbarous ages. The Arte of English Poesie
  • Around him in his lifetime grew legends of wealth, miserliness, misogyny, and efficiency, some of which had a basis in truth.
  • Revolutionary patriots, was based on clearer perceptions of certain truths on the part of the cisatlantic English; and this claiming of separate standards in literature is a continuation of that historic attitude. A Study of Hawthorne
  • In truth, as the respondent submitted, it was the prisoner's conduct before and not as the result of allocation which was likely to be a factor which would affect the prospect of release on parole.
  • May we all therefore learn to worship, and to learn, in spirit and in truth.
  • In truth, it is their weekend pick-me-up; their only opportunity to hear and speak the language at which they worked all their student days.
  • In truth, we were both unhappy.
  • In truth, the rise in imports was largely driven by commodity stockpiling.
  • Sackers" like Brady – who in truth does not do a lot on JuniorApprentice but presumably got the gig for her experience of working with self-made men of vaguely scrotal appearance – are clearly going to be in increasingly high demand in these straitened times. 'Sacker' Karren Brady would never sugar the pill for Gianfranco Zola
  • We project them on to the outside world, but in truth they are only reflections of our internal world.
  • In truth, the patio is the hub of activity for a large and loving family. Huellas ...Dona Carlota
  • Although, she thought, as she glanced at him, in truth she'd expected something other than this staid automobile.
  • But, in truth, Fleury was simply anticipating the policy of the renversement des alliances (breaking up of the alliances), which began in 1756, and which by uniting The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 6: Fathers of the Church-Gregory XI
  • In truth, I myself have been generous in serving him, for the fellow is built as strong as Edinburgh Castle, and his anatomy would have matched any that is in the chirurgical hall of Padua. The Fair Maid of Perth
  • The recognition or non-recognition of a certain truth depends not on external causes, but on certain other causes within the man himself.
  • It must be confessed, however, that the field of English slang verse and canting song, though not altogether barren, has yet small claim to the idiomatic and plastic treatment that obtains in many an _Argot - song_ and _Germania-romance; _ in truth, with a few notable exceptions, there is little in the present collection that can claim literary rank. Musa Pedestris - Three Centuries of Canting Songs and Slang Rhymes [1536 - 1896]
  • These were not minutes to be fondly remembered, in truth, for their relaxative powers. Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph
  • In truth, he was a card cheat of remarkable dexterity who routinely cleaned out the sophisticates in games of three-card monte.
  • In truth, Labour saw education mechanistically - either as an engine of productivity or an engine of social justice.
  • What Norman had shot, then, was an antelope; and the reason why it is called "cabree" by the voyageurs, and "goat" by the fur-traders, is partly from its colour resembling that of the common goat, but more from the fact, that along the upper part of its neck there is a standing mane, which does in truth give it somewhat the appearance of the Popular Adventure Tales
  • In truth, however, it was _not language that generated the intellect; it is the intellect that formerly invented language: and even now the new-born human being brings with him into the world far more intellect than talent for language_. The Mind of the Child, Part II The Development of the Intellect, International Education Series Edited By William T. Harris, Volume IX.
  • That is not a metaphor, it is the plain truth.
  • In truth, much of her verse is as light as souffle but has considerably more substance.
  • Frederick 'which he thinks demanded' another more easy Dress, 'but, in truth, it can only be attributed to the most verjuiced spite and personal malice. The Works of Aphra Behn Volume IV.
  • I would give the best habergeon I ever wrought, that the difficulty in truth rested with me, for there were then the better chance of its being removed. The Fair Maid of Perth
  • He was, in truth, a nomad, a rootless wanderer, trailing from one country to another and one place to another, varying longer stays with many restless shorter travels, living alone except when visiting or journeying with friends.
  • Though I am in truth a Turk, and those who serve and rob me here are Turks, yet the fellah is the same as he was five thousand years ago. The Project Gutenberg Complete Works of Gilbert Parker
  • In truth, for Pearce there is no division between natural and supernatural, at least not when she is at the top of her form.
  • In truth the blindworm is perfectly harmless and quite safe to handle.
  • Knowledge, in truth, is the great sun in the firmament. Life and power are scattered with all its beams.
  • Now let us take the other question, -- which may indeed be called a question as to the allowableness of resting confidently in truth already gained, without consenting to examine the claims of something asserting itself to be a new truth, yet which seems to interfere with the old. The Christian Life Its Course, Its Hindrances, And Its Helps
  • Ray would later put the museum thing down to a certain nihilism instilled by all that final-year, second-term psychosis, but in truth it was merely another instance of late-night drinking spawning an idea so intoxicating that the next morning failed to sober them of it. A Big Boy Did It and Ran Away
  • In truth, I found his malformed body and dim ways somewhat revolting. THE GOLDEN FOOL: BOOK TWO OF THE TAWNY MAN
  • Then through the gloom, with clear-pealing voice from across the stream, she called on Phrontis, the youngest of Phrixus 'sons, and he with his brothers and Aeson's son recognised the maiden's _voice_; and in silence his comrades wondered when they knew that it was so in truth. The Argonautica
  • The act of Adam and Eve was not original sin, but, in truth, first blessing.
  • The first stage test which is applied on the application for leave will lead to a refusal if the applicant has no interest whatever and is in truth no more than a meddlesome busybody.
  • Wisdom is found only in truth. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 
  • In truth, no two persons could have been more thoroughly mismated -- Byron, the human volcano, and his wife, a prim, narrow-minded, and peevish woman. Famous Affinities of History — Complete
  • Though he had fine words to say about democracy, in truth he doubted the ability of the people to act wisely.
  • In truth, he was politically bankrupt after 2000, and he is not all that much stronger today.
  • Early independence leaders were in truth little better than rebels.
  • Whatever happens, he will have discovered one thing above all else: that the wonderful thing about America is that in truth any backwoods child can grow up to be President.
  • I don't know, and that's the plain truth .
  • In truth it is, quite on the contrary, a proof of the post-exilian date of the Priestly Code that it makes sons of Aaron of the priests of the central sanctuary, who, even in the traditional understanding (2Chronicles xiii. 10), are in one way or other simply the priests of Prolegomena
  • In truth, the thugs merely use football as their excuse to indulge their mania for mindless violence.
  • Despite his joy in Wolff as someone who in his own fashion had arrived at certain truths which he himself had also discovered, and despite his agreement with Wolff's phenomenalistic principle, Goethe could in no way accept his explanation of why metamorphosis took place in plants. Man or Matter
  • Wisdom is only found in truth
  • In indirect contexts sense, and not designation, matters and so we may know the well-ordering principle for natural numbers, but not know the principle of mathematical induction because, while they are equivalent in truth value, they have different senses. Intensional Logic
  • In truth, this is a profit-seeking goliath with demanding shareholders. Times, Sunday Times
  • In truth, I'm probably just a mild hypochondriac who should get out more, but if no one hears from me for more than three days, please call the following number…
  • The national government felt no legal obligation to protect antislavery activists and, in truth, reacted indifferently to attacks upon them.
  • Knowledge, in truth, is the great sun in the firmament. Life and power are scattered with all its beams.
  • In truth, the other figures in the square are all distinguished by the kind of bravery that used to appeal to us more.
  • In truth, we touch the essence of his reflexion on cinema - as though he had to resort to all the subtleties of reason in order to appease his lamentations.
  • And for their sake I sanctify Myself , that they themselves also may be sanctified in truth.
  • The great plain of white sand which is enclosed between the blue lake-like expanses of the two meeting rivers is the Plain of Alms. In truth, there are three rivers which unite here -- the Ganges, the Jumna and the Saravasti -- and this thrice-hallowed spot is known in the Hindu mythologic system as the Triveni. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 17, No. 100, April, 1876
  • They hope in time to make the non-existence of appearance appear, for in that moment what we now take to be existence will be seen to be in truth only an outlying portion of the diabolic essence.
  • In truth, Labour saw education mechanistically - either as an engine of productivity or an engine of social justice.
  • In truth, there is another aspect to this kind of soothsaying, and that is the element of creating excitement for an event where the outcome runs the risk of being a study in foregone conclusions. Another Gaze into the Kristol Ball
  • In truth, they were fortunate that Lionel Messi so untypically missed two clear chances to score and that the referee denied Barcelona a plausible penalty claim, but still there were signs that Wenger's constant reiteration of a belief in his side's "spirit" indeed had some substance. Arsène Wenger's sense of injustice veils deep-lying Arsenal issues | Richard Williams
  • But, in truth, she was pretty convivial, until she decided that she didn't particularly like you, and then slapped you on the back of the head.
  • The plain truth is that he doesn't like you.
  • I suspect in truth they are all secretly axe murderers, billowing around Brisbane in their darth vader capes and skintight black leisurewear between the hours of 3 and 5am, killing off traffic inspectors and cyclists who fail to equip their bikes with night vision. Cheeseburger Gothic » Friday writing blog: Ideas and synthesis
  • For, in truth, he is not acting in his own interest but in that of a third person, who has yet to come into existence, albeit he is under the impression that he is acting in his own But it is this very _acting in some one else's interest_ which is everywhere the stamp of greatness and gives to passionate love the touch of the sublime, making it a worthy subject for the poet. Essays of Schopenhauer
  • In this case the petals were virescent, and the stamens and pistils were entirely absent, hence in truth, the so-called flower more nearly resembled a branch. Vegetable Teratology An Account of the Principal Deviations from the Usual Construction of Plants
  • In truth the problems facing the American and British governments are of their own making.
  • Every new participant is in truth gambling on the scheme continuing long enough for him to recover his money and, he hopes, make a profit.
  • Then there was a ramekin of lemony aubergine pate which was, in truth, more of a dip and tasted of red pepper rather than aubergine.
  • They make the capture a sequence of "coyness," whereas in truth the coyness (if it may be so called) is a result of capture. Primitive Love and Love-Stories
  • And in truth, it wasn't difficult to cite examples of short-sightedness, bloody-mindedness, and cynical manipulation of memberships.
  • In truth, there is no necessary common measure between these two judgments.
  • Pesticides and added sulfites can create allergic reactions causing a person to think he is reacting to a food, when, in truth, the culprits are likely to be these additives.
  • Hans-Georg Gadamer used "occasionality" as a term for a similar relation in his discussion of portraiture in Truth and Method (1960). The Way to All Flesh
  • In truth, the emphasis on individual feelings distracts people from thinking about and caring for their communities.
  • In truth, I came away from the date feeling a bit grubby.
  • Far in the East is the great country that we call Cathay, though in truth it has many other names, and I alone of all who breathe in England have visited that land. Red Eve
  • In truth, she had thought that they would have detected each other's presence sooner.
  • In truth, what Fandral said to them was no great surprise, but it was a shock to hear the archdruid starkly speak it. WORLD OF WARCRAFT STORMRAGE
  • In truth, therefore, serial variation forms have not the theme-based unity of the classical form.
  • The only strict antithesis to Prose is Metre; nor is this, in truth, a _strict_ antithesis, because lines and passages of metre so naturally occur in writing prose, that it would be scarcely possible to avoid them, even were it desirable.] Prefaces and Prologues to Famous Books with Introductions, Notes and Illustrations
  • In truth, the popular misapprehension on this subject has not been occasioned by any obscurity in the colophons of the great printer, or in the survey of Stow, but merely by the erroneous constricted sense into which the word abbey has passed in this country. Notes and Queries, Number 38, July 20, 1850
  • My small olive-branch of fancy will be withered, in truth, and ready to drop budless from the tree, when I cease to feel a mild delight in the billings and cooings of the little birds that separate from the flocks to fly together in pairs, or in the uninstructive but mutually satisfactory converse which Strephon holds with Chloe while they dally along the primrose path. Fisherman's Luck and Some Other Uncertain Things
  • In truth, it's commonplace for harried, in-shop work schedulers or field supervisors to permit maintenance work to lapse.
  • It remains for future investigation to determine how far this conjecture is founded in truth; and whether in the blood of the mongoos there exists any element or quality which acts as a prophylactic. Sketches of the Natural History of Ceylon
  • So I ride my puggie back side to work, In truth I have had more motorist hold traffic to let me out, give me more room on the pass then I think they need to, or just generally been Undefined
  • It was a bit of a yomp in truth; we got the bus to Balerno and then headed across the Kips and down to Flotterstone. Easter legs.
  • In truth, the sort of skills he's trying to introduce are more easily learnt by youngsters - mature rugby players can be slow learners.
  • The myth may be engaged in the transmission of a narrative of early deeds and events, having a foundation in truth, which truth, however, has been greatly distorted and perverted by the omission or introduction of circumstances and personages, and then it constitutes the _historical myth_. The Symbolism of Freemasonry
  • In truth it had been her constant nightmare since the moment she had heard the name Michel. My Demon's Kiss
  • It was in truth a miracle.
  • Such a complication had never oc - curred to her, and in truth she was somewhat jealous of the manner his society allowed him to step into an adult emula - tion so young. Here There Are Monsters
  • Pah! the reminiscences of the horrid black-hole of a place in which we soldiers were confined; of the wretched creatures with whom I was now forced to keep company; of the ploughmen, poachers, pickpockets, who had taken refuge from poverty, or the law (as, in truth, I had done myself), is enough to make me ashamed even now, and it calls the blush into my old cheeks to think I was ever forced to keep such company. The Memoires of Barry Lyndon
  • In truth, we envy his capacity for cool detachment - this is not a luxury we can enjoy.
  • Now the 'Evening Pulpit,' in its endeavour to make the facts of this transaction known, had placed what it called the domicile of this company in Paris, whereas it was ascertained that its official head-quarters had in truth been placed at Vienna. The Way We Live Now
  • In truth, though clever and apparently effective, that blow had failed to hurt her.
  • For in truth, ” continued she, “from without, you receive not much: I have scarcely seen a person that so little knew, so totally misknew the people he lived with, as you do. Chapter XVI. Book IV
  • Paper dollars are federal reserve notes, ie: promissor batmancw: In truth, they are the 2 real legal tenders The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • In truth, he didn't fit into any category Shelley could think of. WHERE THE HEART IS
  • In truth, it is in the open spaces that we give life to the unformulated intuitions that linger within us. Nancy Colier: The New Epidemic: Chronic Boredom
  • In other words, telling the plain truth probably would have been sufficient.
  • India's movement for independence was marked by nonviolence as hundreds of thousands of Indians responded to Mahatma Gandhi's call for satyagraha, which means to be steadfast in truth.
  • In truth, Everton have arrived at this juncture only with a series of jammy draws, culminating in a tie against Crewe in the last round.
  • In truth, the scoreline somewhat flattered the champions.
  • In truth, owls are magnificent birds, hunters of the dark that keep dangerous rodent populations well in check.
  • That speculation, which is rife in the tea-rooms of the House of Commons, is - in truth - way off the mark.
  • Nowhere is the debate more lively and contentious than in psychiatric genetics, but in truth there is a dearth of substantiated, empirical data.
  • They each paid about 10 US to use the water taxi to cross the river from the Dubai side to Deria when in truth I've been across for about 2 dirhams.
  • If, in truth, this woman had left her own husband and gone away to live with another man, she had by doing so at any rate while she was doing so fallen in such a way as to make herself unfit for the society of an unmarried young woman who meant to keep her name unblemished before the world. The Belton Estate
  • In truth there was no cause for rejoicing, nor need to turn around, either.
  • Nevertheless many craftsmen, and Michelagnolo in particular, have been of the opinion that the Ritonda was built by three architects, of whom the first carried it as far as the cornice that is above the columns, and the second from the cornice upwards, the part, namely, that contains those windows of more graceful workmanship, for in truth this second part is very different in manner from the part below, since the vaulting was carried out without any relation between the coffering and the straight lines of what is below. Lives of the Most Eminent Painters Sculptors and Architects Vol. 05 ( of 10) Andrea da Fiesole to Lorenzo Lotto
  • Wisdom is only found in truth
  • This courage and spiritual help allowed her to do what she wanted to do all her life, undergo an operation so she could finally be what she in truth by the nature of her soul and her brain was: a woman.
  • But of faith, and the precedency it ought to have before other arguments of persuasion, I shall speak more hereafter; where I treat of it as it is ordinarily placed, in contradistinction to reason; though in truth it be nothing else but an assent founded on the highest reason. An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
  • _Gesnera_, _Cardamine_, &c. In truth, the two conditions merge one into the other, as in some begonias, where the ramenta often become leaf-like and bear small bulbils in the axil. Vegetable Teratology An Account of the Principal Deviations from the Usual Construction of Plants
  • In truth, it is an ugly thing, with its square-cut angles and exact rectilinearity. THE BROKEN GOD
  • In truth, the focaccia was more of a Scottish bap than an olive-oily, herby bread, but it did the job of holding the filling.
  • In truth, the SEC's plan will force corporations to fend off a costly plague of frivolous proxy fights just as they fend off frivolous lawsuits.
  • And Labor, in truth, is responsible for the diabolical state of ethics in Australia's radio and commercial television media.
  • Knowledge, in truth, is the great sun in the firmament. Life and power are scattered with all its beams.
  • In truth, there seems very little interest in the Mother of Parliaments expenses scam scandal. Help, Help! Said the MP who was drowning! More news from home and abroad
  • In truth, we found fevers, violent deaths, pestilential paradises where death and beauty kept charnel-house together. Chapter 15
  • He described it as a debut, but in truth he owed everything to his decade of experience.
  • But in truth, they are not purporting to tell the American public, say, that one of their patents is invalid or that the scope of its claims is not what it might appear to be.
  • The latter flew from the outset and in truth was never seriously challenged as he bowled along in front.
  • 'The very term mensuration sounds ENGINEER-LIKE,' I find him writing; and in truth what the engineer most properly deals with is that which can be measured, weighed, and numbered. Records of a Family of Engineers
  • I think pragmatically the politics are such that we would be wise to resist grants and/or contracts directly to ACORN, Inc. but try and either set up separate corporations … or use existing corporations … that are less overtly moving the money di- rectly into ACORN, Inc., though in truth it would be going there in other ways. Radical-In-Chief
  • While they were in that posture, in came a huge Sandal, with a pitchfork in his hand, who used to baste, rib-roast, swaddle, and swinge them well-favouredly, as they said, and in truth treated them after a fashion. Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
  • In truth, it is an ugly thing, with its square-cut angles and exact rectilinearity. THE BROKEN GOD
  • Bargains or no bargains, in truth British shoppers are hardly stampeding onto US bound flights at present.
  • He that trusts in a lie shall perish in truth
  • In truth, Wales should have been 20 points behind and out of the match by half time.
  • The act of Adam and Eve was not original sin, but, in truth, first blessing.
  • Literal-minded fundamentalists love to call terroir the soil and climate of a specific vineyard, but in truth it's about husbandry, about sensitivity to place and its careful management so that the best of things can be delivered of it.
  • They always claim to work hard, but in truth they're nothing but lazy idle sluggards!
  • In truth, there was something deliciously comic, not to say ironic, in the sight of the multicoloured carnival being paraded in front of serried ranks of the black-clad international fashion clan.
  • To tell the plain truth, I had no idea what the kingbolt was, but I did not choose to appear ignorant to a stranger. My Watch : An Instructive Little Tale
  • They are called Waldenses, after the name of their leader, and oppose corrupt doctrines and practices with the plain truths of the Word of God. The Choctaw Freedmen and The Story of Oak Hill Industrial Academy
  • The plain truth is that he doesn't like you.

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