Sentence for fine | Use fine in a sentence

A sentence using the word fine. The sentences below are ordered by length from shorter and easier to longer and more complex. They use fine in a sentence, providing visitors a sentence for fine.

  • Very fine sunset! (8)
  • A fine couple, eh? (12)
  • Fine view, no doubt. (8)
  • Ours is a fine calling. (8)
  • A fine figure of a man! (10)
  • It must be a fine sight. (10)
  • But his bearing was fine. (10)
  • In fine, it is Hippogriff. (10)
  • Ah, that was a fine endeavor! (1)
  • Fine tomorrow, to a certainty! (10)
  • How fine a thing is virtue, sir! (8)
  • Selina is no fine lady, I assure you. (4)
  • Mr. Warwick had a fine taste in wine. (10)
  • Renee will have a fine hotel in Paris. (10)
  • It was a fine piece of discernment in him. (10)
  • A fine open sea, he says, and very pure air. (4)
  • If it could only be fine weather in his heart! (8)
  • All its strings to viewless fingers Yearning, modulations fine! (10)
  • He thought this would be something rather fine. (9)
  • It was a fine heat; neck-and-neck past the Stand. (10)
  • He went into a cafe and asked for a fine champagne. (8)
  • Still, they had a fine view up here, right over London. (8)
  • Coffee and fine pastry, she said, who would refuse that? (12)
  • Courage wants training, as well as other fine capacities. (10)
  • She is a woman of the most malicious fine wit imaginable. (10)
  • He hits the mean of a fine style and a natural in dialogue. (10)
  • In fine, Tolstoy is certainly not to be held up as infallible. (9)
  • He has not such a fine air and way of walking as Mr. Knightley. (4)
  • A trace of hardness, like fine enamel, settled on her features. (13)
  • A succession of fine days followed, and they walked every morning. (9)
  • In fine, he favoured Peterborough with a lesson in worldly views. (10)
  • Looking on the fine head and face, Lady Racial saw nothing of this. (10)
  • The gentleman could speak fine High German, he went on, that was sure. (12)
  • They wanted him to make a fine figure in the world in some manner or other. (4)
  • A fine awaits the luckless man caught exchanging words with an outside woman. (21)
  • She had an understanding of art, a high and fine perception of its qualities. (12)
  • Here all of the fine, delicate, and colorful flowers and plants can be placed. (17)
  • Louisa had fine naval fervour to begin with, and they would soon grow more alike. (4)
  • And if my feathers were not very fine in themselves, they were all from over seas. (2)
  • Betsey went with alacrity, proud to shew her abilities before her fine new sister. (4)
  • Barbara, stooping to perform this rite, saw a tear stealing down the carved fine nose. (8)
  • It was a fine night to be within doors over dinner, and hear the rain upon the windows. (2)
  • The fellow (he leaned round to Colonel Halkett) must be a fellow of a fine constitution. (10)
  • You may be sure that we were in a fine perspiration when we came to our place of resting. (4)
  • George has a very fine horse running in the Rutlandshire a very fine horse. (8)
  • The fine impurities will settle on the top and its proportional relation to the sand estimated. (17)
  • The door was half open, and passing through it might be seen the petrified figure of a fine man. (10)
  • It was sufficient that the ladies should lend the inspiration of their bonnets to this fine match. (10)
  • He could have thanked her for yielding her hand without a stage scene; she had fine breeding by nature. (10)
  • Renee complains that she loses the vulgar art of walking in her complaisant attention to the fine Arts. (10)
  • He flattered the Tories and dazzled the Whigs by fine dinners and balls to which all factions were invited. (18)
  • It is not ugly, you see, at this end; there is some fine timber, but the situation of the house is dreadful. (4)
  • On a fine day he would probably have passed by on the other side; he now entered and tapped upon the wicket. (8)
  • The weather had now been clear quite long enough, and it was raining again, a fine, bitter, piercing drizzle. (9)
  • This was the song George heard, trembling and dying to the chords of the fine piano that was a little out of tune. (8)
  • In fine, young Ralph was popular, and our superb prince, denied the privilege of despising, ended by detesting him. (10)
  • He had a very fine flock, and, while she was with them, he had been bid more for his wool than any body in the country. (4)
  • It seemed quite a shame, especially considering how many houses there are where fine instruments are absolutely thrown away. (4)
  • Here he was almost as fine as in his poetry, and only less fine than in his more fortunate essays in fiction. (9)
  • Round her the bees hummed carelessly, the blossom dropped, the dappled sunlight covered her with a pattern as of her own fine lace. (8)
  • Here was a paper with a fine reputation, but uncertain or disappearing profits; it must be strengthened, enlarged, and made to pay. (16)
  • Then the weather turned warm again, and held fine till the beginning of October, within a week of the time when Jackson was to sail. (9)
  • Not sensualism, but sham spiritualism, was the meaning; and however fine the notes, they come skilfully evoked of the under-brute in us. (10)
  • The hair was brushed from her temples, leaving one of those fine reckless outlines which the action of driving, and the pace, admirably set off. (10)
  • It is this fine literary sense, penetrating even to a supposititious occasion, which clings to the ode and makes it so far caviare to the general. (14)
  • His other compositions include choral works in smaller forms, with string or other accompaniment suited to chamber-music, part-songs, church music, and a number of fine songs. (3)

Also see sentences for: affected, airy, artful, capital, courtly, crack, cultured.

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