Similar words: believe, believe in, believably, believable, disbelieve, make believe, make-believe, unbelievable. Meaning: [-vɪŋ] n. the cognitive process that leads to convictions.
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91. He raised a hand to touch his face, not believing what he saw.
92. The merit of originality is not novelty; it is sincerity. The believing man is the original man. Thomas Carlyle
93. You can accept reality without believing every yarn it spins. Robert Brault
94. Black professionals with disposable income believing in the black community enough to support black businesses.
95. In the late 1960s almost all major exporters began to cut back production, apparently believing that surpluses would otherwise become unsustainable.
96. These appear to be the most stubborn obstacles to our believing that the inscription reproduces essentially the words of Themistokles.
97. She leaves, he believing she is going to the dentist.
98. It is an aspect of metaphysics, which is the study of what we are justified in believing from first principles.
99. I have difficulty believing we can climb it in relative safety without ropes and gear.
100. Baltusnikas shot wide, scarcely believing he had so much room in the Republic's penalty area.
101. People usually tend to cling to their beliefs until the price for believing them becomes too high, or until after they are victimized by their beliefs. Dr T.P.Chia
102. Or at least I persist to this day in believing that I was.
103. He pulled the trigger, believing that the safety catch was on.
104. Believing that character is as vital in a leader as drive and competence, I had to agree with them.
105. Looking to the past, she seeks to illuminate the present, believing there to be no unbridgeable gap between the two.
106. Older people were also left unimpressed with mobile phone text messaging, believing that it caused spelling to deteriorate.
107. I was really excited, believing that I was going places.
108. Believing that clothes make the musician, the Cliburn competition rewarded him with a shopping spree at Neiman Marcus.
109. It would imply that Labour was ill-advised in ever tabling the amendment, and in believing it to undermine the opt-out.
110. She had decided not to attend the funeral, believing now that dignified restraint was her best role.
111. Somehow with the right count Glover had a harder time believing any ofit was real.
112. Margaret Thatcher had no tolerance for jokes of any kind,[www.Sentencedict.com] believing them to be a waste of time.
113. One cannot be prepared for something while secretly believing it will not happen. Nelson Mandela
114. The criminals conned victims into believing that they could earn money inspecting businesses for compliance with the law.
115. When they began appearing all over town, people began believing he could win.
116. Half believing that his leg was broken, he stooped and tried to fend the object off with his hands.
117. Even so, he tiptoed into war, never quite believing that it would reach the magnitude it did.
118. He ruled out huge rolling jackpots of up to £20 million, believing they attract crime.
119. We are left with the unspecific practical objection, the objection that is as much to say that only seeing is believing.
120. This is another reason for believing that the best regressions take place under hypnosis.
More similar words: believe, believe in, believably, believable, disbelieve, make believe, make-believe, unbelievable, unbelievably, believability, it is believed that, retrieving, relieve, relieved, belie, belief, unrelieved, unbelief, disbelief, beyond belief, reviving, labeling, evince, Kevin, grapevine, relief, obelisk, belittle, white lie, hotelier.