Examples of using "«noble" in a sentence and their english translations:
He is a man of noble mind.
He is of noble blood.
He is of noble ancestry.
He is noble of heart.
Whereas like faithful, responsible, grand, worthy, adventurous,
She was a noble prostitute in Frankfurt.
He is a man of noble birth.
Noble be man, helpful and good.
Neon is a noble gas.
He is of noble blood.
that they are facing a real noblewoman.
the Tauernschecke and German noble goat.
The noble Countess of Ahlefeld blushed and grew pale.
Writing is mankind's noblest conquest.
Looks very noble, the machine, I think.
It is sweet and noble to die for one's country.
Your sister looks as noble as if she were a princess.
Louis-Nicolas Davout was born into a noble family from Burgundy,
Your sister looks as noble as if she were a princess.
The horse is the noblest conquest ever made by man.
Words that sound nice always contain beautiful images.
Your sister looks as noble as if she were a princess.
immoral war – in his memoirs he even praised the ‘noble and courageous resistance’
The noble knight held his breath as he gazed at the beautiful princess.
The love for all living creatures is the most noble attribute of man.
They were a rich, noble family, born in affluence and nurtured in luxury.
In the Internet age, the once noble title of publisher has been demoted to the insipid "content provider".
The search for the truth is the most noble of occupations, and its publication, a duty.
- It is sweet and right to die for your homeland.
- It is sweet and noble to die for one's country.
- Sweet and fitting it is to die for your country.
Lucy was the shyest and most beautiful of all the girls in the land, and Caroll was the bravest and noblest of all the boys in the township.
To his valour he added a most exquisite genius and understanding, grandeur of mind, and a capacity equally turned for military or civil affairs.
"And there / 'neath Hector's kin three hundred years complete / the kingdom shall endure, till Ilia fair, / queen-priestess, twins by Mars' embrace shall bear."
Then Dido, struck with wonder at the sight / of one so great and in so strange a plight, / "O Goddess-born! what fate through dangers sore, / what force to savage coasts compels thy flight?"
The garden in which stands my humble abode is separated only by a lane from Rosings Park, her ladyship's residence.
"Ye too, my servants, hearken my commands. / Outside the city is a mound, where, dear / to Ceres once, but now deserted, stands / a temple, and an aged cypress near, / for ages hallowed with religious fear."
"Not so Achilles, whom thy lying tongue / would feign thy father; like a foeman brave, / he scorned a suppliant's rights and trust to wrong, / and sent me home in safety, – ay, and gave / my Hector's lifeless body to the grave."
There was once a bundle of matches, who were all extremely proud of their high descent, for their genealogical tree, that is to say, the tall fir-tree, from which each of them was a splinter, had been a tree of great antiquity, and distinguished by his height from all the other trees of the forest.
"Tell me," she says, "thy wanderings; stranger, come, / thy friends' mishaps and Danaan wiles proclaim; / for seven long summers now have seen thee roam / o'er every land and sea, far from thy native home."
There, ministering justice, she presides, / and deals the law, and from her throne of state, / as choice determines or as chance decides, / to each, in equal share, his separate task divides. / Sudden, behold a concourse. Looking down, / his late-lost friends AEneas sees again, / Segestus, brave Cloanthus of renown, / Antheus and others of the Trojan train, / whom the black squall had scattered o'er the main, / and driven afar upon an alien strand.
So when the bold and compact band I see, / "Brave hearts", I cry, "but brave, alas! in vain; / if firm your purpose holds to follow me / who dare the worst, our present plight is plain. / Troy's guardian gods have left her; altar, fane, / all is deserted, every temple bare. / The town ye aid is burning. Forward, then, / to die and mingle in the tumult's blare."
The sun's eclipses and the changing moons, / whence man and beast, whence lightning and the rain, / Arcturus, watery Hyads and the Wain; / what causes make the winter nights so long, / why sinks the sun so quickly in the main.