in no sense造句1. The hotel was in no sense comfortable.
2. We are in no sense obliged to agree to this.
3. Though his background was modest, it was in no sense deprived.
4. In no sense can the issue be said to be resolved.
5. He was in no sense a political prisoner, but a gangster and racketeer who rightly did six years in jail.
6. But in no sense can that be true.
7. Social Security is in no sense an insurance program.
8. They are in no sense wards of the state.
9. It was in no sense a revival of the political dissent symbolised by Cromwellian puritanism.
10. But he was in no sense putting on an act.
11. Probation should in no sense be seen as a soft option by the judiciary.
12. Primarily a political tract, it can in no sense be regarded as an empirical analysis of society.
13. In no sense is he a gentleman.
14. The conclusion is in no sense scientific.
15. Gouvernail in no sense a shy man.
16. Drought is in no sense better than floods.
17. This in no sense is due to meanness.
18. He is , in no sense, a genius.
19. In no sense should such a thing be allowed to happen in our school.Sentence dictionary
20. I'll be in no sense accomplice or help in this cruel business.
21. I heard different stories about him, and in no sense did it reflect in the book.
22. I must make it clear that I am in no sense a geography teacher.
23. In no sense did he realize he had make such a serious mistake.
24. It'should be emphasized that the laser is in no sense a source of energy.
25. This process is, in no sense, a divorce between the Labour Party and the trade union movement.
26. This says that a member can defend itself, but in no sense does it endorse a prolonged campaign of counter-attack.
27. Philosophy and religion Locke and the sense of sight Locke's philistinism was in no sense an aberration.
28. He has also asked us to make it clear that this plan is in no sense intended to be fixed and final.
29. It is time to know how to have forgotten, in no sense to continue!
30. He had been her husband's college friend; was now a journalist, and in no sense a society man or "a man about town, " which were, perhaps, some of the reasons she had never met him.