Use "disbelieve|disbelieved|disbelieves|disbelieving" in a sentence

1. As a scientist,he disbelieves in Jesus.

2. I disbelieved reports of UFO sightings.

3. I disbelieve in UFOs.

4. 1 As a scientist,he disbelieves in Jesus.

5. I disbelieve in God.

6. We disbelieve in religion.

7. Now, I disbelieve in Gob.

8. Just as an athiest is one who disbelieves in God, so an "Ademonist" is one who disbelieves in fallen angels

9. Why should I disbelieve her story?

10. I disbelieve every word you say.

11. There is no reason to disbelieve him.

12. We have no reason to disbelieve him.

13. Disbelieving his unlikely story, she looked askance at Jack.

14. We disbelieve in the principles of Ingsoc.

15. I see no reason to disbelieve him.

16. I was forced to disbelieve him.

17. Don't think I disbelieve your story.

18. The jury had no reason to disbelieve the witnesses.

19. One is to disbelieve in their existence.

20. He had never been able to disbelieve it completely.

21. If you disbelieve me, it doesn't get you at all.

22. However, an Agnostic neither believes nor disbelieves in a god or religious doctrine

23. For what if some disbelieved? Shall their unbelief annul the faithfulness of God?

24. I was forced to disbelieve in his story.

25. Rom. 3 For what if some disbelieved? Shall their unbelief annul the faithfulness of God?

26. In another word, disbelieve the viewpoint of other per people.

27. 24 And the favourite, oddly, is the architect of the prospectus that was disbelieved.

28. You have no reason to disbelieve their account of what happened.

29. The Lazio supporters including me were in a sense of disbelieve.

30. Antonyms for Clutched include freed, lost, released, abandoned, broken, dishonoured, dishonored, forgotten, disbelieved and forsook

31. There was no reason to disbelieve what he had just been told.

32. 9 The Jews’ disbelieving response to Jehovah’s prophecies has prevented them from heeding his warnings.

33. But now you disbelieve me. So you men often blow hot and cold.

34. This is a humble conclusion, but I cannot make myself disbelieve it.

35. He had nothing to gain from lying so we saw no reason to disbelieve him.

36. But many disbelieving locals have stayed behind, even as technicians in plastic suits and respirators swarm over the town.

37. Rather - for years - he had denied himself banality, as if disbelieving in the possibility of such physical transcendence.

38. Parker would regard pressure to marry as identical with pressure to disbelieve Scripture, to Apostatize

39. In bed at last, believing and disbelieving, she turned her face delightedly into the pillows, smothering her certainty of kisses.

40. Antonyms for Conceptualize include disbelieve, disregard, ignore, neglect, destroy, look away, forget, break, know and ruin

41. Disbelieving Chortles over forecasts of an abrupt change will die away as temperatures fall sharply from the pleasantly unseasonal

42. He had shouted wolf so often that he had come to disbelieve in his own assertions.

43. 10 Secondly, and crucially, it is not sophisticated exegesis that leads scholars to disbelieve in devils.

44. At the end of the book, Dumbledore attempts to convince a disbelieving Minister for Magic, Cornelius Fudge, that Voldemort has returned.

45. They made each other miserable, locking wills, disbelieving that the other party could long endure a war of emotional attrition.

46. Antonyms for Cogitate include discard, dismiss, disregard, forget, ignore, neglect, misunderstand, disbelieve, ruin and destroy

47. Secondly, and crucially, it is not sophisticated exegesis that leads scholars to disbelieve in devils.

48. Perhaps the best approach to reading a proof for the first time is positively to disbelieve each assertion made.

49. It was also a sign that William Mulholland chose, if not exactly to ignore, then to disbelieve.

50. Agnostics believe that we should not believe or disbelieve in God’s existence, because it is impossible to know either way

51. The Greeks and Romans defined an Atheist not as someone who disbelieved in God but as someone who rejected the traditional gods who protected the social order

52. Atheistic adjective nonbelieving, sceptic, disbelieving, faithless, heathen, infidel, godless, irreligious, unbelieving, freethinking, paganistic, nullifidian Atheistic philosophers Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition

53. Backwardly disbelieve veličanstvo airish bane asthenia licencja souther detectably siviilivihkiminen, siviiliavioliitto poor house insuspeito ferment balibol, pangbutas, barrena to put the horses (to); to harness the horses

54. Agnostic noun sceptic, cynic, scoffer, doubter, disbeliever, unbeliever, doubting Thomas, Pyrrhonist He was, if not an atheist, an Agnostic. adjective sceptical, questioning, doubting, cynical, doubtful, scoffing, unconvinced, disbelieving, incredulous, quizzical, mistrustful, unbelieving She grew up in an Agnostic …

55. In common usage, "Cynicism" means a disposition to disbelieve in the sincerity or goodness of human motives and actions, and a tendency to express this by sneers and sarcasm.

56. Quran 16:106 "He who disbelieves in Allah after his having believed, not he who is compelled while his heart is at rest on account of faith, but he who opens (his) breast to disbelief-- on these is the wrath of Allah, and they shall have a grievous chastisement."

57. (1Jo 4:1; Ac 17:11, 12) Love produces confidence in one’s faithful Christian brothers; a Christian would not suspect them or disbelieve them unless there was absolute proof that they were wrong. —2Co 2:3; Ga 5:10; Phm 21.

58. 18 And it came to pass that they were angry with him, even because he had greater power than they, for it were a not possible that they could disbelieve his words, for so great was his faith on the Lord Jesus Christ that angels did minister unto him daily.

59. Similarly, even if the crime to which the Alibi applies is the only one charged, the prosecutor could begin to attack the defendant's credibility, possibly even bringing up prior convictions, which could be enough to cause a jury to disbelieve the Alibi unless it is iron clad.

60. Cynical Same as cynic, 3.; Cynical Having or showing a disposition to disbelieve in or doubt the sincerity or value of social usages or of personal character, motives, or doings, and to express or intimate the disbelief or doubt by sarcasm, satire, sneers, or other in-direction; captious; carping; sarcastic; satirical: as, a Cynical remark; a Cynical smile.

61. But this intrigue of the Antient is a piece of private history, the truth of which my beloved cares not to own, and indeed affects to disbelieve: as she does also some puisny gallantries of her foolish brother; which, by way of recrimination, I have hinted at, without naming my informant in their family.