Use "abut" in a sentence
abut example sentences
abut
1. Those who know even a little abut Marxism realize that
2. abut the Industrial Tour?”
3. Often he even ranted abut Jews to Kissinger, who had lost family in the Holocaust
4. "How abut we rest some more, Lily? After the busy week we have had, you must be still be tired and I admit I am too
5. The plateau, whose sides fell away toward the wooded shores on the east, west and south, sloped upward toward the north to abut on a tangle of rocky cliffs, the highest point of the island
6. What are you going to do abut the Third Force?” Rachel said
7. � This becomes a statement abut out ourselves, that we believe we are able to respond to situations, and are therefore responsible for the actions we take
8. “He knows abut the two of us from the newspapers,” I said to Jezzie instead
9. What advice would you offer to Western traders abut candlestick analysis?
10. This afternoon a carrier's cart with two men made a call at the empty house whose grounds abut on ours, the house to which, you will remember, the patient twice ran away
11. This wall did not abut directly on the Street; it formed a deeply retreating niche, concealed by its two corners from two observers who might have been, one in the Rue Polonceau, the other in the Rue Droit-Mur
12. Any one who had chanced to pass through the little town of Vernon at this epoch, and who had happened to walk across that fine monumental bridge, which will soon be succeeded, let us hope, by some hideous iron cable bridge, might have observed, had he dropped his eyes over the parapet, a man about fifty years of age wearing a leather cap, and trousers and a waistcoat of coarse gray cloth, to which something yellow which had been a red ribbon, was sewn, shod with wooden sabots, tanned by the sun, his face nearly black and his hair nearly white, a large scar on his forehead which ran down upon his cheek, bowed, bent, prematurely aged, who walked nearly every day, hoe and sickle in hand, in one of those compartments surrounded by walls which abut on the bridge, and border the left bank of the Seine like a chain of terraces, charming enclosures full of flowers of which one could say, were they much larger: "these are gardens," and were they a little smaller: "these are bouquets
13. " All these enclosures abut upon the river at one end, and on a house at the other