Wits Sentence Examples

wits
  • I found it very hard to keep my wits about me.

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  • Be kind, and use your wits.

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  • I want him awake with his wits about him when we talk.

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  • At the end of her wits, Jessi held out her hand to the tall brunette.

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  • Be sure to keep your wits about you, however.

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  • We had to rely on our wits as well as our bodies to get into and out of some really rough places.

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  • No, lad, either you fellows have all lost your wits, or I have outlived mine.

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  • She, poor innocent creature, is left to be victimized by an old man who has outlived his wits.

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  • We were at our wits ' end, not knowing what was wrong with him.

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  • With your wits, instincts, fighting ability and detective skills solve the mystery of the increasing number murders caused by serial killers in the city.

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  • Use spells, melee combat and your wits to survive and succeed in your quests.

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  • Use weapons, magic and your wits to stop the chaos from destroying their world.

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  • A great idea and a great implementation, Sudoku Combat allows you to play against friends or strangers in a simple game of wits.

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  • This time Harry and his friends work together in a multitude of quests using only their wits and spell casting abilities to aid them.

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  • You'll be offered 3 different characters to choose from, and the ability to use weapons, magic and your wits to save the kingdom from a vicious tyrant.

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  • Use your strength, wits and magic to adventure through the dangerous world of Middle Earth.

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  • In this task-oriented puzzle game you must have your wits about you as you venture into the blissful world of Mercury.

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  • The atmospheric games place you on a mysterious planet armed with only your power suit and your wits.

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  • This title allows you to interact with a highly detailed environment, using both your tools and your wits to defeat enemies and explore exotic locations.

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  • As an agent, you rely a lot on your wits, athletics and weaponry to succeed in each mission.

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  • You will use the multiple weapons you find, combined with your wits to solve the mystery of Torque's past.

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  • Each area will have its own challenges, testing your wits and putting your character closer to the brink of insanity.

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  • Just be careful to let your opponent know you are using such a website - perhaps the game will turn into a battle of wits through the Internet rather than the game board!

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  • The most award-winning party game ever, Wits and Wagers is a trivia game for people who may not be good at trivia.

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  • Wits and Wagers is a fast paced, fun filled Las Vegas style game.

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  • I'm at my wits end and don't want to push him away further because I do believe he loves and cares for me.

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  • When a candidate for Senate falls in love with the wait staffer of a local New York hotel, the Senatorial hopeful's press team finds themselves at their wits' end.

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  • Frozen for a few moments by the audacity of this woman, the two men finally collected their wits and dashed out the door after her, but she was already gone.

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  • When Santa Barbara ended, Walker returned to Pine Valley and Liza, as a foil for Dixie's relationship with husband Tad.For over a decade, Walker portrayed Liza Colby as she matched wits with some of the most eligible bachelor's in town.

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  • I made it through my first knitting sock with my wits intact, and you can, too.

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  • Survivor - Contestants battle wits and weather to survive nature in exotic locales.

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  • American Gladiators is a test of speed, strength, and wits.

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  • Discovery Channel and Science Channel show Survivorman puts survivalist expert Les Stroud in dangerous situations in the wilderness where he must rely on his skills and wits to escape.

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  • We never-the-less decided to postpone discussion until the following day when, as Martha said, we had a night of rumination and our wits about us.

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  • She was frightened out of her wits, like the rest of us but it's not like her to just drop out of sight, unless Quinn talked her into it.

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  • It was ridiculous to stand here, trying to match wits with such a polished salesman.

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  • And then, it's up to my wits to keep me alive.

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  • And he who would understand what he remembers to have been said, whether in a dream or when he was awake, by the prophetic and enthusiastic nature, or what he has seen, must first recover his wits; and then he will be able to explain rationally what all 1 This misunderstanding of Acts ii.

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  • Some of his verses attracted the attention of the town, and the earl of Rochester, with Sir Charles Sedley and other wits, came down to see him.

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  • The vine-growers were at their wits' end to account for this new plague, which threatened to be even more costly than the oidium.

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  • Much of Holbach's fame is due to his intimate connexion with the brilliant coterie of bold thinkers and polished wits whose creed, the new philosophy, is concentrated in the famous Encyclopedie.

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  • Of this the chief wits and great men of the nation were members and its badge was a gridiron.

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  • The city was the literary centre of Federalist ideas in the latter part of the 18th century, being the home of Lemuel Hopkins, John Trumbull, Joel Barlow and David Humphreys, the leading members of a group of authors known as the " Hartford Wits "; and in 1814-1815 the city was the meeting-place of the famous Hartford Convention, an event of great importance in the history of the Federalist party.

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  • In social life, in the company of the wits and writers of his day, his faculties seemed to desert him.

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  • Doubtless this coincidence gave a ready handle to the scoffing wits of the time, and among the numerous popular names given to the Beghards - bons garcons, boni pueri, boni valeti and the like - we find also that of Lollards (from Flemish liillen, " to stammer").

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  • Wessel, who up to that time had only been known as the president of a club of wits, immediately wrote Love without Stockings (1772), in which a plot of the most abject triviality is worked out in strict accordance with the rules of French tragedy, and in most pompous and pathetic Alexandrines.

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  • The great dogmas of the Christian Church were shaped by the interplay of the subtle wits of the theologians of the Oriental Churches.

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  • And I do easily see, that place of any reasonable commandment doth bring commandment of more wits than of a man's own.

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  • As he himself said, he " rang the bell which called the wits together."

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  • Myths of unknown antiquity, for example, have been attracted into the legend of Charlemagne, just as the bons mots of old wits are transferred to living humorists.

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  • Speak to most accountants and they would say it is a battle of wits, not to say combative.

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  • So test your wits make free crossword puzzle and tickle your brain everyday with the USA TODAY Crossword 2006 Calendar.

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  • Der Kaiser the betting fish Pit your wits against Der Kaiser, our piscine betting guru.

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  • Her plan to hook up with an acquaintance falling through, she is forced to live by her wits and burgeoning sexuality.

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  • The game should prove advantageous for the experienced Dungeons and Dragons player who cannot find a Dungeon Master against which to pit wits.

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  • The JLA and Titans match wits with Batman Enemies and the Injustice League.

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  • We were at our wits ' end, not knowing what was wrong wits ' end, not knowing what was wrong with him.

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  • The Topics deal with dialectic and constitute an anatomy of argumentation, or, according to what seems to be Aristotle's own metaphor, a survey of the tactical vantage-points (7-67rot) for the conflict of wits in which the prize is primarily victory, though it is a barren victory unless it is also knowledge.

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  • The remainder of the film is a battle of wits to see who gets the pie.

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  • It's always the most rewarding when you are able to finish a game based on your own wits and skills, but everyone needs a helping hand sometimes.

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  • Armed with his wits and his trusty whip, Indiana can stand up to anything - except snakes!

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  • He was treasurer and a leading member of the Brothers, a society of wits and statesmen which recalls the days of Horace and Maecenas.

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  • His influence, which grew during the 18th century in spite of the depreciation of Dr Johnson, has shared in the eclipse of the Queen Anne wits which began about the time of Jeffrey.

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  • The loose atheistical wits at Will's might write such stuff to divert the painted Jezebels of the court; but did it become a minister of the gospel to copy the evil fashions of the world?

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  • It wits perhaps characteristic of Gladstone, though it was unquestionibly unfortunate, that, in determining on this radical change of policy, he consulted few, if any, of his previous colleagues.

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  • The following year she returned to Sceaux, where she resumed her salon and gathered round her a brilliant company of wits and poets.

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  • The margravine made Baireuth one of the intellectual centres of Germany, surrounding herself with a little court of wits and artists which gained added prestige from the occasional visits of Voltaire and Frederick the Great.

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  • A striking feature was the preamble, setting forth the doctrines on which the edict was based, which won the praise of the philosophes and the ridicule of the wits; this Turgot rewrote three times, it is said, in order to make it" so clear that any village judge could explain it to the peasants."The opposition to the edict was strong.

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  • Derby is the birthplace of David Humphreys (1752-1818), a soldier, diplomatist and writer, General Washington's aide and military secretary from 1780 until the end of the War of Independence, the first minister of the United States to Portugal (1790-1797) and minister to Spain in 1797-1802, and one of the "Hartford Wits."

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  • His home, Holland House in London, became a meeting place of wits and statesmen of the day.

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  • Besides, he had the distinct impression he'd best keep his wits about him.

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  • It seemed almost as if his wits were sharpened into a keener edge by his very difficulties; but since he condemned on principle every war which was not strictly defensive, and it had fallen to his lot to guide a comparatively small power, he always preferred the way of negotiation, even sometimes where the diplomatic tangle would perhaps best have been severed boldly by the sword.

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  • The negative side of deism came to the front, and, communicated with fatal facility, seems ultimately to have constituted the deism that was commonly professed at the clubs of the wits and the tea-tables of polite society.

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  • She was escorted with great ceremony to Moscow in 1728 and exhibited to the people attired in the splendid, old-fashioned robes of a tsaritsa; but years of rigid seclusion had dulled her wits, and her best friends soon convinced themselves that a convent was a much more suitable place for her than a throne.

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