Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

8 Sentences With "most estimable"

How to use most estimable in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "most estimable" and check conjugation/comparative form for "most estimable". Mastering all the usages of "most estimable" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The best performers in the comeback rally of the last one month do not have the most estimable qualities.
In her autobiography, Liliuokalani, who may have been unaware or indifferent, downplays his family background, not mentioning if they were related: > He was a most estimable man, far superior to many of a corresponding rank, > which was not of the highest; yet he was a good specimen of the Hawaiian > race, of noble birth and patriotic sentiments.
Although its constructive aesthetics presents a great eclecticism, is important to indicate the entrance of the great facade. Follow the steps of the central staircase regular service, stand two columns - "dístilo" smooth shaft and reduced éntasis, with its pedestal, “basa”, toscano-romano capital marked “astragalo”. This is the most estimable attention to aesthetic impact section. On the two abacus terminals holds a short frieze with the inscription in English the name of the school.
Survey Graphic: Magazine of Social Interpretation, Volume 32 (Survey Associates, 1943), p. 273 Literary critic Diana Trilling deemed the book “most estimable,” a “social- work novel, despite the fact that it is unsparing in its criticism of that profession.”Trilling, Diana. "Fiction in Review" The Nation, June 12, 1943, pp. 842–843 Slade’s 5th book, the novel Margaret (1946), returned to the sensitive theme held close by the author—prostitution and the social forces behind it.
He further stated that he trusted the state convention would craft a ticket that would command the support of the people of West Virginia. Following his announcement, the Spirit of Jefferson newspaper in Charles Town stated of Flournoy on May 1, 1900: "Mr. Flournoy is a most estimable gentleman, well and favorably known here, would doubtless make an excellent governor, and as the nominee of the Democratic party would receive a hearty support in the Eastern panhandle." Flournoy also received the support of the Democratic Party in Mineral County in May 1900.
First-hand accounts, such as Charles Lanman's Adventures in the Wilds of the United States, note her reputation as a hostess: "From personal experience I can speak of one…of these establishments kept by Miss Fatio, a most estimable and popular lady; and if the others are as home-like and comfortable as this, the ancient city may well be proud of her houses for the accommodation of travelers and invalids." Under Fatio's management, the house on Aviles Street became known as Miss Fatio's. The establishment was a fixture in St. Augustine until her death in 1875. The Fatio House is a setting in Constance Fenimore Woolson's fictional story about visitors to St. Augustine.
Dalton at p 9 Where Peterborough described the regiment as "a regiment of the most estimable I have knowne, and that is governed by sober, able and discreete officers", Kingwell wrote to Harley with a bad report as to the regiment's condition, and his wife later upbraided Harley for "wretched neglect" of it.Portland MS at pages 258-261 Peterborough's view may have changed when he sent Kingwell back to England as "seditious and insolent".Childs, Army of Charles II at p 117 Further, there were two smaller (nominally about 500 men, as against 1,000 in the principal units) regiments, both Irish, from the disbanded Royalist Forces which had served with the Spanish Army in Flanders: Fitzgerald's Regiment and Farrell's Regiment. It is not clear which of the earlier Royalist regiments had become Fitzgerald's prior to its appearance in Mardyke in 1661.
First almoner to Marie-Adélaïde of Savoy, duchess of Burgundy, Gustave Louis Chaix d'Est-Ange, Dictionnaire des familles anciennes ou notables, p. 276 he was elected a member of the Académie française on 5 January 1702, replacing François Charpentier. He was received into the Académie on 7 September 1702 by abbot Gallois, a reception in which his nieces assisted, to entertain themselves at his expense - they sat at a tribune in what was the beginning of women being admitted to the Académie's public sittings (though Chamillart rarely came to the Académie himself despite his seat on it). Little is known of his life - D'Alembert thought him "most estimable for the probity that made his administration happy" and that Chamillart was surprised at the number of the prelates sitting in the Académie "which must essentially be a society of letters" and "must not end up being a [church] council".

No results under this filter, show 8 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.