Use "inquirer" in a sentence
inquirer example sentences
inquirer
1. “National Inquirer eat your heart out,” he replied and walked away
2. “What?” he said with an annoyance that suggested a wrong response might land the inquirer in pain beyond their imagining
3. The papers, magazines – some like The National Inquirer and a few others are in a class all their own – TV, Internet and radio commit too many mistakes in reporting
4. The reverend looked over the shoulder of his inquirer as if the lobby contained the solution to his present quandary
5. She thought he had been going to say engaged to be married, for though she had known even at Redchester, in spite of the care taken to shut such knowledge out, that the world included wicked persons who loved without engagements or marriages, sometimes indeed even without having been properly introduced, persons who were afterwards punished by the correctly plighted by not being asked to tea, they were, the Bishop informed an anxious inquirer once when he had supposed her out of the room, in God's infinite mercy numerically negligible
6. The Branton Inquirer ran a giant front page spread of the team, with yours truly in full stride
7. suppose that so painstaking an inquirer and accurate a
8. circumstance which cannot but be regarded with some wonder by an attentive inquirer
9. Stuart, who believes in "Hell" said, "The inconsistency with which they have sometimes rendered the word Sheol, in the same connection and with the same sense, is a striking circumstance which cannot but be regarded with some wonder by an attentive inquirer
10. Oh, no! “Well,” continues the inquirer, “if they enter into the presence of the Lord at death with a new body, as you have implied, how do you make out that the resurrection does not occur at death? In that question lies the secret and solution of the whole difficulty
11. * They offer to the inquirer a remarkable phenomenon in the history of thought, doubly remarkable as appearing at the very end of the Mosaic Dispensation, while standing also in close contemporary relation with the teaching of the 'Word made Flesh
12. We trust, however, that, after having gone carefully through the Present table, the honest inquirer will find it sufficient proof in support of our statements
13. A vigorous application of the moral sense to some well-established dogmas usually ends in unbelief, unless the inquirer is happy enough to find a spiritual clue to guide him out of the labyrinth of his difficulties
14. Stuart, who believes in "Hell" says, "The inconsistency with which they have sometimes rendered the word Sheol, in the same connection and with the same sense, is a striking circum-stance which cannot but be regarded with some wonder by an attentive inquirer
15. by the same inquirer is scarcely less vital: infant mortality
16. The professor, in annoyance, and, as it were, mental suffering at the interruption, looked round at the strange inquirer, more like a bargeman than a philosopher, and turned his eyes upon Sergey Ivanovitch, as though to ask: What’s one to say to him? But Sergey Ivanovitch, who had been talking with far less heat and one-sidedness than the professor, and who had sufficient breadth of mind to answer the professor, and at the same time to comprehend the simple and natural point of view from which the question was put, smiled and said:
17. who the inquirer was; but he thought better (or worse) of it, and turned and
18. "Ech!" Pyotr Stepanovitch waved his hand as though to keep off the overwhelming penetration of the inquirer
19. "You will not tell us?" wondered the inquirer
20. His face instantly changed its cheerful aspect as he breathlessly whispered to his inquirer, "Lumme, the ole man! 'Ere, mate, buzz orf quick—a-a-an' don't let 'im cop yer a-talkin' to the sentry on dooty, or Jerry's barrage will be a washaht when the Big Noise starts 'is fireworks!"—William St
21. “Assuming that Andrews, Ellicott, Neander, Lange, and others of the same class, provide for the minute and curious inquirer, the author has aimed at producing a book of continuous, easy narrative, in which the reader may as far as possible, see the Saviour of men live and move and may hear the words He utters with a most vivid attainable idea of His circumstances and surroundings