We found over 1000 examples of how to use point in an English sentence.
Sentences 1 to 25 of 1000.
# | Sentence | |
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1. | The curve extends from point A to point B. | |
2. | A point is a little point. | |
3. | One's point of view depends on the point where one sits. | |
4. | The point of play is that it has no point. | |
5. | Like Sharapova, Azarenka excels in the first two shots of the point. She likes to play first-strike tennis, going after the first ball of the point to send her opponent running. | |
6. | From the point of view of eternity, "this year" is a very precise point in time. | |
7. | When I asked him about it he explained it to me point for point. | |
8. | In geometry, a triangle's Fermat point is a point defined such that its total distance from the three triangle vertices is the minimum possible. | |
9. | What's the point of the point? | |
10. | Don't point the finger at others, point the finger at yourself. | |
11. | My car isn't fancy, but it gets me from point A to point B. | |
12. | There was no point in arguing with Tom at this point. | |
13. | There was no point in arguing with her at this point. | |
14. | There was no point in arguing with him at this point. | |
15. | There was no point in arguing with Tom about that point. | |
16. | Bvalltu and I, in company with the increasing band of our fellow explorers, visited many worlds of many strange kinds. In some we spent only a few weeks of the local time; in others we remained for centuries, or skimmed from point to point of history as our interest dictated. Like a swarm of locusts we would descend upon a new-found world, each of us singling out a suitable host. After a period of observation, long or short, we would leave, to alight again, perhaps, on the same world in another of its ages; or to distribute our company among many worlds, far apart in time and in space. | |
17. | A bird's-eye view of a large city in Japan presents an appearance quite unlike that presented by any large assemblage of buildings at home. A view of Tokio, for example, from some elevated point reveals a vast sea of roofs, the gray of the shingles and dark slate-color of the tiles, with dull reflections from their surfaces, giving a sombre effect to the whole. The even expanse is broken here and there by the fire-proof buildings, with their ponderous tiled roofs and ridges and pure white or jet-black walls. These, though in color adding to the sombre appearance, form, with the exception of the temples, one of the most conspicuous features in the general monotony. The temples are indeed conspicuous, as they tower far above the pigmy dwellings which surround them. Their great black roofs, with massive ridges and ribs, and grand sweeps and white or red gables, render them striking objects from whatever point they are viewed. Green masses of tree-foliage springing from the numerous gardens add some life to this gray sea of domiciles. | |
18. | Genghis Khan's empire spreaded from the point where the sun rises, to the point where the sun sets. | |
19. | In this graph, you can see that the sine of θ is always equal to the Y position of point A, and that the tangent of θ is always equal to the slope of the line intersecting point A and the origin. | |
20. | If anyone was to ask what the point of the story is, I really don't know. | |
21. | I wish I could care more about my grades but it seems that, at a certain point of my life, I decided they wouldn't be so important anymore. | |
22. | Excuse me; allow me to point out three errors in the above article. | |
23. | There's no point saying "Hi, how are you?" to me if you have nothing else to say. | |
24. | There is a fine line between speech that is terse and to the point and speech that is too abrupt. | |
25. | Your remarks are off the point. |