Get Free Checker

then again

ADVERB
  1. (contrastive) from another point of view
    on the other hand, she is too ambitious for her own good
    then again, she might not go

How To Use then again In A Sentence

  • Space Invaders never made me feel guilty, but, then again, they never baaed at me when they died. Another Embedding Test « Whatever
  • Springtime for Henry played Broadway in the early '30s and then again in the early '50s but became a laughingstock as Edward Everett Horton repeatedly barnstormed it.
  • Then again, kitty probably avulsed a a claw or two and was sore for a while. Because I Am a Bad Bad Person… « Whatever
  • Scamp had an airtight alibi, naturally, but then again young Leakey never said who exactly had done it.
  • Then again, it's got nothing to do with the gods when you've got a filthy temper, and that I certainly have.
  • Then again, when has the table had any relevance on this topsy-turvy league?
  • If this bothers you then again you have the power to change things. Times, Sunday Times
  • How, otherwise, is intellection possible if I can jointly believe that humans were once apes, but then again weren't?
  • Then again, there are those who reckon that's a load of old tosh and who would love nothing more than to be a fly on the wall next time BT's chiefs get together.
  • Then again, integrity, honesty and character are not items that can be used to describe today's left.
View all