Pleased
in sentence
899 examples of Pleased in a sentence
Whether influenced by the club or by the wine he had drunk, Levin chatted with Vronsky about the best breeds of cattle, and was very
pleased
to find that he had not the least animosity toward the man.
'I am very, very pleased,' she repeated, and from her lips these simple words seemed to Levin to possess a peculiar meaning.
'Good-bye!' she said, retaining his hand and gazing at him with a look that drew him to her.'I am very
pleased
que la glace est rompue.'[That the ice is broken.]
'I was very
pleased
to meet Vronsky.
She was
pleased
by this appeal to tenderness.
'I am very
pleased
to see you, especially to-day,' said the Countess Lydia Ivanovna, pointing to a seat beside Karenin.
'I have known you a long time, and am very
pleased
to know you more intimately.
She is very
pleased.
'I am very
pleased
–' she began in a trembling voice.
Kitty would have been still more
pleased.
If I go away he will, at the bottom of his heart, be pleased.'
The clearness with which she now saw her own and every one else's life
pleased
her.
But when you see the truth, what are you to do?''Reason has been given to man to enable him to escape from his troubles,' said the lady, in French, evidently
pleased
with her phrase and mincing with her tongue.
Also there was an accompanying fact that
pleased
Koznyshev.
Koznyshev said he would be very pleased, and crossed over to the other platform.
'Kostya will be so
pleased!
He was
pleased
by the thought that it was easier to believe in an existing living Church which compounds all the beliefs of men, and has God at its head and is therefore holy and infallible, and from it to accept belief in God, a distant, mysterious God, the Creation, and so on.
First Katavasov amused the ladies with his original jokes, which on first acquaintance with him always
pleased
people, and afterwards, encouraged by Koznyshev, he recounted his very interesting observations on the differences in character, and even in physiognomy, between male and female house-flies and on their life.
The unknown man's face must have
pleased
him that he should have been taken by one of these itchings for confidence which sometimes make old people talk aloud even when alone.
I don't trust a woman who puts on such proud airs and never seems to be
pleased
where she is.
The bosses were always bothering him about the damned planking question; he feared every hour the appearance of the engineer Négrel, followed by Dansaert, shouting, discussing, ordering everything to be done over again, and he remarked that his putter's timbering gave greater satisfaction to these gentlemen, in spite of their air of never being
pleased
with anything, and their repeated assertions that the Company would one day or another take radical measures.
The matter had already been arranged with the head captain and the engineer, who were very
pleased
with the young man.
She accepted a chair, and seemed
pleased
to hear that she was at last to be married; then, as they were looking for Zacharie, she replied in her soft voice:"I am waiting for him; he is over there."
They were very tipsy and seemed well
pleased
with themselves, digging their elbows into each other and grinning.
M. Hennebeau would be
pleased!
"We shall be quite pleased."
Besides, if the law was not pleased, so much the better!
Souvarine, if he had cared to come, would have applauded his ideas so far as he recognized them,
pleased
with his pupil's progress in anarchism and satisfied with the programme, except the article on education, a relic of silly sentimentality, for men needed to be dipped in a bath of holy and salutary ignorance.
Still
pleased
with his success, Deneulin related the checked rebellion at Jean-Bart.
Lucie and Jeanne had been much afraid, but they were
pleased
to have seen it all.
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