any man in his senses in Hungarian

mindenjózanember mindenépeszûembe

Sentence patterns related to "any man in his senses"

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

1. His senses were working overtime.

2. The drug blunted his senses.

3. He'd need to keep his senses sharp and try to put any such callow thoughts quite out of his mind.

4. Her scent overpowered his senses.

5. The Prodigal Comes to His Senses

6. The tones sounded, to the boy's Benumbed senses, far away, as a heavily bearded man knelt down and placed his hand upon his heart

7. The only world which modern man considers at all is the external world of which his senses make him cognizant.

8. His senses were blunted by the whiskey.

9. Any man shirking his duty would be shot on the spot.

10. Evidently, the wrongdoer came to his senses.

11. Are you out of your senses to be accepting this man, Lizzy?

12. 23 Must not allow her senses any room to manoeuvre.

13. It's a constant assault on his senses.

14. Disfellowshipping may bring the wrongdoer to his senses.

15. □ What circumstances brought the prodigal to his senses?

16. —For his appearance was disfigured more than that of any other man

17. In past years a gentleman should call out any man who was rude to his wife.

18. The insult drove him out of his senses.

19. Brought to his senses, David recovered his fear of God and repented.

20. Balsams is, in some senses, the finest example of his yarn spinning

21. But John had not taken leave of his senses.

22. Any man eating sour grapes will have his own teeth set on edge.”

23. The air that came fragrantly to his brow revived his languid senses.

24. In Jesus’ parable, the prodigal son eventually “came to his senses,” to the joy of his father.

25. Welcome a prodigal child when he ‘comes to his senses’