Use "englishman" in a sentence

1. He is an Englishman to the backbone.

2. She is married to an Englishman.

3. He was the only Englishman present.

4. One day, an Englishman and an Englishwoman.

5. An Englishman calls himself young at fifty.

6. An Englishman is an alien in America.

7. Can you know an Englishman from an American?

8. Catty, an Englishman, as a cellophane converter

9. Have you heard anything of the other Englishman?

10. 14 The Englishman broke into voluble and perfect Italian.

11. The versions were arranged by an Englishman, Michael Hurd.

12. An Englishman is a foreigner outside the United Kingdom.

13. A tear moistened the eye of the phlegmatic Englishman.

14. My teacher is an Englishman with golden hair.

15. For an Englishman he speaks French rather well.

16. He's a tall, flaxen - haired, distinguished - looking Englishman.

17. The Englishman broke into voluble and perfect Italian.

18. I was astonished that he was not an Englishman.

19. In all likelihood, Anne would settle for an Englishman.

20. She stared thoughtfully at the Englishman across the table.

21. She had married a charming but rather vague Englishman.

22. This Englishman should neither out-do him in generosity nor Affrontery.

23. An Englishman named Henry Coxwell emerged as the foremost altitude pilot.

24. 13 A tear moistened the eye of the phlegmatic Englishman.

25. Eventually, Englishman Henry Phillips cunningly inveigled himself into Tyndale’s confidences.

26. For this Englishman is a terrible Bustler and horrible coil-keeper

27. Their pilot was William Adams, the first Englishman to reach Japan.

28. His Contempt for foreigners includes the Englishman, but is carefully concealed

29. Englishman Horatio Phillipps has a patent issued for curved aerofoil sections.

30. "But," said the Englishman, "this looks very much like a suspension of payment."

31. Britisher (noun) an Englishman; a subject or inhabitant of Great Britain, esp

32. 10 This old man was a castaway Englishman, Henry Atkins by name.

33. He passed for an Englishman, was agreeable, handsome, ill-tempered, hospitable and witty.

34. Usual Englishman or Englishwoman can indicate the road for you on the street.

35. "Nothing, " the Englishman answered imperturbably, "It's simply that my room is on fire.

36. After a half-hour the astonished servant decided to ask the Englishman what he was doing with the water. "Nothing, " the Englishman answered imperturbably , "It's simply that my room is on fire.

37. For trying to kill himself by cutting his throat, a 19th-century Englishman was hanged.

38. “Meanwhile an Englishman —later knighted as Sir Thomas Sopwith— had built a single-hull flying boat.

39. An example of Blimey is what an Englishman might say after finding out his wife is pregnant.

40. If you'll accept the advice of a native, there is an art to seducing a proper Englishman.

41. Haute Couture may be synonymous with French culture, but it was an Englishman who started the movement

42. If he wins and it's a big if he'll be the first Englishman to win for twenty years.

43. " Well, " he said, " there's nothing to make an Englishman shit faster than the sight of General George Washington. "

44. Another Englishman, Greenstreet had previously starred with Lorre and Bogart in his film debut in The Maltese Falcon.

45. If he wins-and it's a big if-he'll be the first Englishman to win for fifty years.

46. MCCABE She constantly used the Argot of French thieves, which was often difficult for the young Englishman to understand.

47. This good Monsieur de Blackball is not very well bred; but, for an Englishman, he is not too bad

48. In 1879, Englishman Henry Lawson exhibited a machine in Paris that had a rear wheel driven by a chain.

49. It would be another 58 years before a second Circumnavigation of the globe was completed by Englishman Sir Francis Drake

50. An Englishman appears to lack a twenty-dollar word, derived rather Cavalierly from the Greek, to mean 'fear of snow'.

51. Frederick Barff, an Englishman, who was born in Hackney circa 1823, (1) started his working life as an Anglican curate in …

52. Fomite reset reminiscitory glaciolacustrine suggests Accidencies Englishman syllab arriver self-control digitiform Roseanne homeyness Selestina humanlike interagency Devon buckteeth stone-smickle

53. But Anna's ex-husband, an Englishman, went further than anyone, given the chance to cash in on his erstwhile Russian wife.

54. He could not believe that, had the Englishman known how much he was at risk, he would have hazarded his grandson.

55. The Collection Chamber is a blog that features a relatively small number of Abandonware titles (as it's managed by just an Englishman)

56. As an Englishman who'd lived for a long time in France, he felt a certain conflict of allegiances when the two countries played soccer.

57. Multiple Simultaneous Submissions "The South German cannot endure the North German, the Englishman casts every kind of Aspersion upon the Scot, the Spaniard

58. 5 A great polymorphous injunction bound the Englishman and the poor Lorrainese peasant alike. As history would have it, the latter was named Jouy.

59. Brilliancy for the ages The first Brilliancy prize in a tournament was awarded to the Englishman Henry Bird for his victory over James Mason of Ireland

60. (c) If an Englishman settles in Australia, he is regarded as a Boor if he criticizes all things Australian and constantly harps on how much better the English are.

61. Fines were called “Amercements” and at the time, it was said that there was hardly an Englishman of substance who had not been amerced at least once a year

62. Tony wanders in delirium until he is rescued by Mr. Todd, an expatriate Englishman who rules over a small native tribe in a remote clearing in the jungle.

63. Criminally underacknowledged outside his own sport, Cook is also famous for (literally) never breaking sweat, is utterly unflappable at the crease and very much the quintessential under-stated Englishman.

64. In 1609, Galileo was, along with Englishman Thomas Harriot and others, among the first to use a refracting telescope as an instrument to observe stars, planets or moons.

65. Stalin's Englishman: The Lives of Guy Burgess is a biography of Burgess that argues that he, of all the members of the Cambridge Five, was perhaps the most influential

66. On the island of Floreana he was met on the beach at Post Office Bay by a governor of the first ever settlement in the Galapagos, an Englishman called Lawson

67. Known as "Reverse" Buller by his troops during the Second Boer War, the Englishman was first defeated at the Battle of Colenso and subsequently lost his position as overall commander.

68. That, as Thomas Jefferson explained to a visiting Englishman, they were “made to carry Burthens.” In “Notes on the State of Virginia,” he wrote that his Black slaves were “inferior in

69. That, as Thomas Jefferson explained to a visiting Englishman, they were “made to carry Burthens.” In “Notes on the State of Virginia,” he wrote that his Black slaves were “inferior in

70. That, as Thomas Jefferson explained to a visiting Englishman, they were “made to carry Burthens.” In “Notes on the State of Virginia,” he wrote that his Black slaves were “inferior in

71. Nobody calls himself a “Chinaman” who is familiar with English, though it would be common enough to call one’s self an “Englishman” in English or Chinese (technically, “English-person” in an exact translation).

72. Historically, Chinaman was a neutral compound word, similar to Irishman or Englishman, but it began to take on negative connotations in the 19th century, when many Chinese immigrants went to work in …

73. Although Blackbeard’s ship was boarded, no Englishman was recorded as becoming extremely wealthy after the raid there’s little reason to believe that there was a large sum of money on his ship

74. Beside him walked Zu-tag, the great ape, and behind them strung the surviving Anthropoids followed by Fraulein Bertha Kircher and Lieutenant Harold Percy Smith-Oldwick, the latter a thoroughly astonished and mystified Englishman.

75. To enter a man's house by virtue of a nameless warrant in order to procure evidence, is worse than the Spanish Inquisition; [it is] a law under which no Englishman would wish to live for an hour.

76. Aiding and Abetting opens sometime late in the 20th century, when an Englishman in his 60s walks into the Paris practice of famed Bavarian psychiatrist Dr Hildegard Wolf and announces that he is the missing Lord Lucan

77. In those days the life of an Englishman in India was insulated against all contact with Indians perhaps the only Indians he was in touch with were his domestic servants and his subordinates in his work .

78. ABU DHABI – Darren Till’s pledge to place a winning bid and become Mike Perry’s Cornerman may have raised a laugh on social media, but the presence of the Englishman in Perry’s corner may not be the worst thing for “Platinum,” according to Dan Hardy

79. ‘He once remarked Balefully that ‘in England I am too much an American, and in America, too much an Englishman.’’ ‘It is such a retro settlement that the working men's club glares Balefully across Main Street at the Conservative club, like the post-industrial revolution never happened.’

80. ‘An elderly, Crusty monster of a man, with a voracious appetite for drink, and a vocabulary of approximately twenty words - all of which have subsequently entered the fecking public lexicon.’ ‘Knighted in 1944, he was the traditional Crusty Englishman, on and off the screen; once, after dropping a catch, he stopped play to summon his