'twas|twas in English

'twas (it was)

it was

Use "twas|twas" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "twas|twas" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "twas|twas", or refer to the context using the word "twas|twas" in the English Dictionary.

1. The million, 'twas Caviare to the general

2. "'Twas first light when I saw her face upon the heath,

3. These conflicts originated in discrimination against the Twas, including in relation to access to land ownership.

4. It twas based on the three-wheeled passenger car Goliath Pionier with a closed timber-framed wood cab.

5. He spake, 'twas done; and Palinurus first / turns the prow leftward: to the left we ply / with oars and sail, and shun the rocks accurst.

6. Shakespeare Alludes to them when the players are acting out their scene, as Hamlet states, “‘Twas Aeneas’ tale to Dido” (2.2.419)

7. I dinna know the whole of it, but I know ‘twas said by the laird that she was the Comeliest of all lasses.

8. -- Bwana, Bwana! wakati ́twas prating kitu kidogo, - O, there'sa ofisa katika mji, mmoja Paris, kwamba anataka kuweka kisu ndani, lakini yeye, nzuri roho, alikuwa kama lief …

9. Some poems, such as “ The Night Before Christmas,” are written entirely in Couplets: `Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house Not a creature …

10. And if the eye Of her Adversion were fast fixt on high, In midst of death 'twere no more fear or pain, Then 'twas unto Elias to …

11. Moore's poem "Twas The Night Before Christmas" is made up almost entirely of Anapests.When you read it aloud, it sounds like a bunch of dadaDUMs strung together.

12. Read Hugh Antoine D Arcy poem:'TWAS a balmy summer evening, and a goodly crowd was there, Which well-nigh filled Joe's Barroom, on the corner of the square; And as songs and witty stories came throug.

13. 1896, Harper's new monthly magazine, volume 93: It may ha' been wicked, but there 'twas, an' the thought kep' arter me, till all I could think of was the chist; an' byme-by I says to Mary Ellen, one mornin', ' Le's open it to-day an' make a Burnfire !'

14. Amazing grace, How sweet the sound<br>That saved a wretch like me.<br>I once was lost, but now I am found,<br>Was blind, but now I see.<br>'Twas grace that taught my heart to fear,<br>And grace my fears relieved.<br>How precious did that grace appear<br>The hour I first believed.<br>Through