We found 117 examples of how to use discover in an English sentence.
Sentences 76 to 100 of 117.
# | Sentence | |
---|---|---|
76. | I hope Tom doesn't discover the truth. | |
77. | It is illegal to dig up, relocate, and/or remove fossils from Grand Canyon National Park. If you find a fossil, please leave it for others to discover and scientists to study. | |
78. | If they discover our secret, it will be the whole shooting match. | |
79. | I think that you'll discover that it was Tom's fault. | |
80. | I think you'll discover that it was Tom's fault. | |
81. | I think that you'll discover it was Tom's fault. | |
82. | I think you'll discover it was Tom's fault. | |
83. | Scientists continue to discover new drugs, so there is still hope for people in a coma. | |
84. | Then she watched to see who would discover the poor prince. | |
85. | Tom was worried that someone would discover details about his past. | |
86. | Call me if you discover anything. | |
87. | What did New Horizons discover during its fly-by of Pluto? | |
88. | Tom was worried someone would discover details about his past. | |
89. | Tom was worried that somebody would discover details about his past. | |
90. | Tom was worried somebody would discover details about his past. | |
91. | I hope that Tom doesn't discover the truth. | |
92. | Discover the 25 most powerful phrases for your communication. | |
93. | I was blessed to discover Islam and accept it. | |
94. | There is nothing in biology yet found that indicates the inevitability of death. This suggests to me that it is not at all inevitable and that it is only a matter of time before biologists discover what it is that is causing us the trouble. | |
95. | Algeria needs to discover new oil fields. | |
96. | Discover your talent. | |
97. | These machines collectively are known as NASA’s Discover supercomputer and they are tasked with running sophisticated climate models to predict Earth’s future climate. | |
98. | I want to discover the truth. | |
99. | On certain large planets, whose climates, owing to the proximity of a violent sun, were very much hotter than our tropics, we sometimes found an intelligent fish-like race. It was bewildering to us to discover that a submarine world could rise to mentality of human rank, and to that drama of the spirit, which we had now so often encountered. | |
100. | Mentally the Third Men were indeed very unlike their predecessors. Their intelligence was in some ways no less agile; but it was more cunning than intellectual, more practical than theoretical. They were interested more in the world of sense-experience than in the world of abstract reason, and again far more in living things than in the lifeless. They excelled in certain kinds of art, and indeed also in some fields of science. But they were led into science more through practical, aesthetic or religious needs than through intellectual curiosity. In mathematics, for instance (helped greatly by the duodecimal system, which resulted from their having twelve fingers), they became wonderful calculators; yet they never had the curiosity to inquire into the essential nature of number. Nor, in physics, were they ever led to discover the more obscure properties of space. They were, indeed, strangely devoid of curiosity. Hence, though sometimes capable of a penetrating mystical intuition, they never seriously disciplined themselves under philosophy, nor tried to relate their mystical intuitions with the rest of their experience. |