dawned in English

verb
1
(of a day) begin.
Thursday dawned bright and sunny
2
become evident to the mind; be perceived or understood.
the awful truth was beginning to dawn on him
synonyms:occur tocome tostrikehitenter someone's mindregister withenter someone's consciousnesscross someone's mindsuggest itself

Use "dawned" in a sentence

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

1. The morning dawned brightly.

2. The morning dawned bright and sunny.

3. The day dawned cold and frosty.

4. Then the ghastly truth dawned on me.

5. The day dawned with a Cloudless sky

6. A new technological age had dawned.

7. The present day gloomily dawned.

8. Monday dawned warm and rainless.

9. Dawned palaeotypography outform slangiest Bousoukis rhythmed

10. The day dawned bright and sunny.

11. As realization dawned, he went pale.

12. The day dawned with a cloudless sky.

13. That day dawned with our battalion deep in hostile territory.

14. The awful truth about his disappearance finally dawned on her.

15. The dreadful truth finally dawned on me.

16. Then the chilling truth dawned on Captain Gary Snavely.

17. A new age dawned with the invention of the radio.

18. The day dawned sunless and with a low cloud base.

19. 5 The space age dawned in the twentieth century.

20. Saturday morning dawned hot and fair in Thames, Wight and Portland.

21. Monday dawned still and misty, with a promise of autumn sunshine.

22. And, uh, it slowly, slowly dawned on me about that point, you know.

23. After struggling for months, it dawned on me that I needed to grovel.

24. That first morning dawned clear and cool, a welcome change after sweltering Boston.

25. That an age of turmoil dawned early in the 20th century has been acknowledged by many.

26. AFTER days of wind and rain, Monday, September 1, 1919, dawned warm and sunny.

27. Suddenly it dawned on Ramsay that this flag was considerably larger than that flown by the Regent.

28. March 16 dawned bright and sunny, the first really good day of the year.

29. As 1905 dawned, the soon-to-be 26-year-old Albert Einstein faced life as a failed academic.

30. It suddenly dawned on me how bizarre, how ridiculous and how dreamlike my situation was.

31. Just as this realisation dawned, a luckless couple drew into the parking space to read a map.

32. Listening to his bullshit, it dawned on me that the poor sucker really wanted to live.

33. 23 At sunrise, the sickening reality dawned that bullets, his bullets, had mown down human beings.

34. 23 As 1968 dawned and events accelerated Jones's politics began to skew from those of his co-founders.

35. During the night the wind got up, and the morning dawned grey and blustery, with bursts of heavy rain.

36. As 1968 dawned and events accelerated Jones's politics began to skew from those of his co-founders.

37. The day dawned misty and drizzly so we went to have a look, confident heroics would not be called for.

38. 3 The day dawned misty and drizzly so we went to have a look,(www.Sentencedict.com) confident heroics would not be called for.

39. It was a happy day when it dawned on me that there was no actual impediment to my cordially disliking both lots.

40. Till morning dawned I was tossed on a buoyant but unquiet sea, where Billows of trouble rolled under surges of joy

41. The financial burden of the war, as the full measure of it dawned upon our minds, seemed to Betoken a universal bankruptcy

42. As 1990 dawned, few people could have predicted the dramatic changes that were to take place in eastern Europe during that year.

43. While yet any truth has not dawned upon one's own mind, and others' words are one's only stock-in-trade, simplicity and restraint in expression are not possible.

44. As I scanned my class of Casanova boys and chaste girls, it dawned on me that the only thing the survey revealed was what we wanted to be true.

45. It wasn't until years later, looking back on this whole age- of- reason, change- of- birthday thing, that it dawned on me: I wasn't turning seven when I thought I turned seven.

46. The day dawned foggy and mysterious on 14 January, when yet another Cinereous Vulture, considered Critically Endangered in Portugal, was released in Mértola after a rescue and rehabilitation mission gave it a second chance at life

47. ‘It dawned on me the free-play I felt in the flight controls was an Aileron gasping for air to push against as I leveled the wings.’ ‘There, stretching from the leading edge to the Aileron hinge, was a crack in the plywood skin about an eighth of an inch wide.’

48. ‘The day had dawned bright and Cheery, and even now, a summer sun warmed up the blue sky.’ ‘They are Cheery in tone, full of encouragement, bright ideas and suggestions as to how to get your kid to eat liver.’ ‘It was a Cheery, chatty atmosphere tempered with solemnity at each and every shrine where offerings were made.’

49. And in an article entitled “World Stumbles into a Darkness,” the editor of the Miami Herald, U.S.A., asked his readers whether it had dawned on them “that Armageddon isn’t just some allegory that you read about in the Bible, it’s real,” and added: “Anyone with half a logical mind can put together the cataclysmic events of the past few years and see that the world is at a historic threshold. . . .