Synonym: aristocratic, dignified, distinguished, eminent, grand, grandiose, great, important, lofty, magnificent, majestic, prominent, stately. Antonym: humble, ignoble, low. Similar words: ignoble, problem, nobody, doorknob, oblique, oblige, obliged, obliquely. Meaning: ['nəʊbl] n. a titled peer of the realm. adj. 1. impressive in appearance 2. of or belonging to or constituting the hereditary aristocracy especially as derived from feudal times 3. having or showing or indicative of high or elevated character 4. inert especially toward oxygen.
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(121) The structure of agriculture makes it difficult to treat the peasant drive for noble land as the harbinger of rural capitalism.
(122) Noble landownership, the prime source of peasant resentment, was far from fading peacefully away.
(123) And he was now teaching young Patsy, unbeknownst to his elder brothers, the rudiments of the noble art of self-defence.
(124) Noble sense of personal dignity had passed the point where such treatment was tolerable.
(125) He enjoys all this renaissance art, full of noble statesmen, florid gestures and people being resurrected.
(126) However unattractive King James was as a man and a monarch, he did leave a few noble monuments to grace his reign.
(127) Recently, Noble Metals received an order to produce a large 10% Iridium/Platinum billet from which 10-1 kilo weights will be made.
(128) Any female from a noble line, feeble though she is, ranks above anyone from a lower stratum of society.
(129) If you wish to glimpse inside a human soul and get to know a man, don't bother analyzing his ways of being silent, of talking, of weeping, of seeing how much he is moved by noble ideas; you will get better results if you just watch him laugh. If he laughs well, he's a good man. Fyodor Dostoyevsky
(130) Your genius for copying the handwriting of the noble, the illustrious, the famous and the infamous is remarkable.
(131) They are fierce and noble warriors and though the dragons are few they can still rouse some in times of great need.
(131) Sentencedict.com is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find excellent sentences for a large number of words.
(132) Richard Noble describes the heart of an instrument which can be used for serious scientific study.
(133) I was not paid to preside over disasters - however noble the cause.
(134) Give expression to the noble desires that lie in your heart. Gordon B Hinckley
(135) So despite Stephen West's lovely cor anglais solo, and some noble brass sounds, the orchestra sounded choked.
(136) He represents a great noble of the Empire, perhaps even the Emperor himself.
(137) There is a fine specimen of this noble tree - the tallest in Britain - at Stourhead in Wiltshire.
(138) In its place she put her noble Negro, patient, saintly Tom.
(139) This made a great impact on the ten-year-old youth of noble lineage.
(140) Biscop Baducing was born into a noble family, then was ordained into the priesthood at the age of twenty-five.
(141) She could easily have noble blood, she looked the sort.
(142) They were more akin to the machine politicians we know today than to the noble coalition builders and power-brokers who preceded them.
(143) The noble forehead, glittering blue eyes, high cheekbones and well-formed beard suggested the conquistador Cortes.
(144) To show that you want them to succeed, you might assist their noble effort by applying masking tape to their mouths.
(145) Be happy, noble heart, be blessed for all the good thou hast done and wilt do hereafter, and let my gratitude remain in obscurity like your good deeds. Alexandre Dumas
(146) Since the principal advantage of being a noble was the right to exploit peasant labour, serfdom looked set to continue.
(147) In this magnificent room, he looked as if he belonged, his face and bearing as noble as any aristocrat's.
(148) My noble friend the Earl of Caithness has agreed to attend in my place.
(149) The intention is noble, I suppose: Teach them sportsmanship, fair play and all that.
(150) The health service has genuinely noble ideals: it provides excellent treatment irrespective of income.