Replied
in sentence
4310 examples of Replied in a sentence
'The day on which I came here,' he replied, gazing at the abbe Pirard's forehead, for he could not face his terrible eye, 'I was trembling with fear: M. Chelan had told me that this was a place full of tale-bearing and spite of all sorts; spying and the accusation of one's comrades are encouraged here.
The abbe Pirard called him back, and added, in a tone of compassion:'It is for you to decide whether you wish to seize the opportunity of taking a stroll through the town.''_Incedo per ignes_,
' replied
Julien: which is to say, I am treading on dangerous ground.
Julien
replied
with candour, to the astonishment of the prelate, that this author was not to be found in the library of the Seminary.
'How do you know his name?' asked the astonished abbe; and, as he was blushing at his own question:'That is what I am not going to tell you,
' replied
the Marquis.
'You will take luncheon with me, meanwhile another horse will be hired for you, and you will leave Verrieres, without seeing anyone.''To hear is to obey,
' replied
Julien, with the prim face of a seminarist; and there was no further discussion save of theology and Latin scholarship.
'There can be no doubt,
' replied
Madame de Renal in a harsh voice, the tone of which offered a cutting reproach to Julien, 'my misdeeds were known in the town, at the time of your departure.
'God in His mercy made me understand how greatly I was sinning against Him, against my children, against my husband,
' replied
Madame de Renal.
You are leaving us for ever?''Yes,
' replied
Julien, in a resolute tone; 'yes, I am abandoning the place where I am forgotten even by her whom I have most dearly loved in all my life, and I am leaving it never to set eyes on it again.
The eldest
replied
with affection and regret for his former tutor, but it appeared that the two younger had almost forgotten him.
If you were a fool, you might let yourself be taken in by them; if you wished to succeed, you ought to let yourself be taken in.''On the day when all this ceases to agree with me,' said Julien, 'shall I be considered ungrateful if I return to my little cell, number 103?''No doubt,
' replied
the abbe, 'all the sycophants of the house will slander you, but then I shall appear.
'No,' he replied, at length, 'Julien is not a priest.'
'Two,
' replied
Julien, dismayed at seeing so great a gentleman descend to these details.
'All sorts of things,
' replied
Norbert with a shout of laughter: 'for instance, sit well back.'
'I should like to carry through the experiment,
' replied
the Marquis.
One morning when the abbe was working with Julien, in the Marquis's library, on the endless litigation with Frilair:'Sir,' said Julien suddenly, 'is dining every evening with Madame la Marquise one of my duties, or is it a favour that they show me?''It is a signal honour!
' replied
the abbe, greatly shocked.
For some minutes, that evening, he
replied
from the abundance of his heart to Julien's eager questions, then cut himself short, distressed to find himself speaking ill of everyone, and imputing it to himself as a sin.
'No, I have a new pair that cost much less,
' replied
M. de Thaler.
Norbert had found that he
replied
with too much warmth to the pleasantries of certain of his friends.
'This time,' he cried, 'there are grounds for a duel!''I should think so,
' replied
the diplomat.
'What do you want, then?
' replied
the Marquis, with irritation.
'I wager, however, Master Philosopher, that you have not discovered what you went to England to do.''Pardon me,
' replied
Julien; 'I went there to dine once a week with His Majesty's Ambassador, who is the most courteous of men.''You went to secure the Cross which is lying there' the Marquis told him.
'You ought, Monsieur le Chevalier, to introduce me to M. le Marquis de La Mole.''Indeed, so _I ought_,' thought Julien; 'but a rascal like this!''To be frank,' he replied, 'I am too humble a person in the Hotel de La Mole to take it upon me to introduce anyone.'
'Not only,' M. de La Mole replied, with a serious air, 'will you introduce the new Baron to me tomorrow, but I shall invite him to dine the day after.
He told me particularly to bring you.''I know to whom I am indebted for such kindness,
' replied
Julien, bowing to the ground.
'Jean-Jacques Rousseau,' he replied, 'is nothing but a fool in my eyes when he takes it upon himself to criticise society; he did not understand it, and approached it with the heart of an upstart flunkey.''He wrote the _Contrat Social_,' said Mathilde in a tone of veneration.
The Due de Luxembourg at Montmorency accompanies a M. Coindet on the road to Paris,
' replied
Mademoiselle de La Mole with the impetuous delight of a first enjoyment of pedantry.
Travels of Uzeri'You are feeling cross,' the Marquise de La Mole said to her; 'I warn you, that is not good manners at a ball.''It is only a headache,
' replied
Mathilde contemptuously, 'it is too hot in here.'
'Not such wretches as all that,
' replied
Conte Altamira.
'Not exactly,
' replied
Altamira coldly; 'he perhaps had some thirty wealthy landowners of his country, who were supposed to be Liberals, flung into the river.''What a monster!' said Julien again.
'You are very young!
' replied
Altamira.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Would
There
Should
Think
Shall
Could
About
Other
Nothing
Their
Asked
Great
Without
Friend
Young
Little
Master
Engineer
Never