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Sentences with noble

no·ble
N n
  • He was an upright and noble man who was always willing to help in any way he could.
  • He had implicit faith in the noble intentions of the Emperor.
  • He was a man of noble character.
  • It was noble of her to come forward with this information.
  • ...the great parks with their noble trees.
  • ...rich and noble families.
  • His mother came from a noble family but he refused to use a title of nobility in front of his name as requested by his mother.
  • Macduff is a Scottish noble who suspects that Macbeth has murdered Duncan from the very beginning.
  • More and more nobles made Moscow their home during Catherine's reign.
  • A noble deed
  • Sadly, this plan is riddled with problems, no matter how noble it sounds.
  • How can one person, no matter how noble, confess the sins of another?
  • A noble avenue of trees
  • A noble strain of horses
  • Can there be a more noble, unselfish profession?
  • The Riesling renaissance started years ago, yet most British drinkers remain curiously indifferent to this noble grape's charms.
  • A noble view
  • A noble thought.
  • If you have been disappointed by bottles bearing such names, do not blame Reisling - it has nothing whatsoever to do with this noble grape.
  • Sometimes Western rulers and apologists dress up intervention in the Middle East with talk of more noble causes.
  • A noble poem.
  • A noble monument.
  • The new privileges belong to ‘preferred minorities’ rather than noble families.
  • If you have the goal of being born into a noble family in your future life, surrounded by wealth and luxury and by many beautiful forms, it is possible that this aim might be fulfilled because of the effect of the practice.
  • Now defiled with graffiti, this noble monument may be as much of a tribute as we'll get for a depression-era Edmonton history; perhaps it's fitting.
  • This personal contact also reminds the student that he or she is part of a larger effort to mobilize the American people for noble intellectual and moral causes.
  • Born into a noble family, he held several official positions in Paris before his connection with the Duke of Orl�ans allowed him to take up composing.
  • Families knew that their successful integration into the noble ranks of society rested on their lineage being recognized as worthy.
  • While this may sound noble, they can't seriously think this will be effective.
  • But salvation is now at hand for lovers of the noble grape who previously had no option but to pour away their expensive and lovingly laid-down bottles.
  • I cut him short and moved on to say that neither self-hatred nor envy were good reasons to strive to improve oneself and that ambition was a fine and noble thing when seen as part of a quest for perfection, for its own sake.
  • She pulled a necklace that belonged to the noble family from her pocket and threw it on the ground.
  • His intentions in this formation, he said, had been noble at first.
  • I am still yet to be convinced that Argentinian Malbec is one of the great wines of the world, or the Malbec is a truly noble grape variety.
  • The President's Broader Middle East and North Africa Initiative is certainly a noble goal in principle.
  • The only blemish on such noble intentions was the absence yesterday of ordinary people.
  • The courageous protagonist ventured slightly from the kingdom, reaching for his noble steed.
  • It was said he could pick out a noble from a peasant in a room, even if they were all dressed in the finest robes of state.
  • Sir Syed Ahmad Khan was born in a noble family at Delhi on October 17, 1817.
  • No matter how noble your intentions, your upbringing shows true.
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