Trace
in sentence
361 examples of Trace in a sentence
There is no longer any
trace
of a loss of public confidence in the central leadership.
Governments can of course counteract market deficiencies, but the commonly used mechanisms still require a
trace
level of demand, which does not exist for pandemic-disease diagnostics until the brink of an outbreak.
'I am ready to swear I can't find in my soul a
trace
of regret for my freedom,' said Levin, with a smile.
There was no
trace
of dust left about; there was a mat beside the bed; on the table medicine bottles and a bottle of water were neatly placed, also a pile of folded linen which would be required later, and Kitty's embroidery.
The reality of his sufferings destroyed it, leaving no
trace
nor even any recollection of the former hopes, in Levin, Kitty, or the patient himself.
He tried to find some
trace
of the conversation which he knew, by her having remained so long in Dolly's room, must have taken place.
'Can it possibly have been but a momentary mood that will pass without leaving a trace?' he wondered.
Its naked walls didn't reveal any
trace
of a door or window.
This man expressed himself with perfect ease and without a
trace
of an accent.
Then, when the operation was over, we burned every
trace
of our stay on that islet, which if I could have, I'd have blown up.""From all this, may I assume that such a boat costs a fortune?""An iron ship, Professor Aronnax, runs 1,125 francs per metric ton.
No
trace
either of coquetry or of affectation had ever appeared in her nature.
At Vergy, he found no
trace
of these unpleasant memories; for the first time in his life, he could see no one that was his enemy.
No
trace
of hypocrisy came to sully the purity of this simple soul, carried away by a passion such as she had never felt.
Don't mix any more with such people,' said Madame de Renal, still preserving a
trace
of that glacial air which had suddenly taken the place of an expression of the tenderest affection.
'Sincere!' repeated the abbe Pirard with an air of surprise, gazing at Julien; but this time the abbe's gaze was less devoid of all
trace
of humanity.
No doubt, provincials may be accused of a
trace
of vulgarity, or of a want of politeness; but they do show a little warmth in answering one.
He detected a
trace
of servility in it.
A limpid spring which wells up to quench my thirst in the burning desert of mediocrity over which I
trace
my painful course!
The pleasure of triumphing over the Marquis de Croisenois completed the rout of this lingering
trace
of virtue.
'Until now, I was a smug, basely profiting by a
trace
of courage.
There, one of them kept a close watch over him, and if the honour of the noble family required that the adventure should have a tragic ending, it was easy to end everything with one of those poisons which leave no trace; then, they would say that he had died a natural death, and would take his dead body back to his room.
'There is a
trace
of madness there,' Julien told himself.
'I can find no
trace
of papers,' replied the cure.
Of all the qualities that had distinguished him in the past, there remained to him only a
trace
of firmness.
34'There is a
trace
of madness in the way the whole of this family have of looking at things,' thought the Marechale; 'they are infatuated with their little abbe, who can do nothing but sit and stare at one; it is true, his eyes are not bad-looking.'
There was no longer any
trace
of rugged grandeur in him, any Roman virtue; death appeared to him on a higher plane, and as a thing less easily to be won.
Once order had been restored, every
trace
of those events would have been erased and everything would take its previous course once more.
It was a rude, mud-built town in the time of the Britons, who squatted there, until the Roman legions evicted them; and replaced their clay-baked walls by mighty fortifications, the
trace
of which Time has not yet succeeded in sweeping away, so well those old-world masons knew how to build.
Weather and war their rougher
trace
Have left on that majestic face; But 'tis his dignity of eye!
In some, impressions are vivid and transitory; in others, more deep and lasting: indeed, there are some philosophers who pretend to
trace
a connection between the physical and mental powers of the animal; but, for my part, madam, I believe that the one is much influenced by habit and association, and the other subject altogether to the peculiar laws of matter."
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