Sentences with Burden, Burden in a Sentence in English, Sentences For Burden

Sentences with Burden, Burden in a Sentence in English, Sentences For Burden

Advertisements

1. A burden of one’s own choice is not felt.

2. None knows the weight of another’s burden.

3. Your yoke is easy, and Your burden is light.

4. I’m overburdened by strange occurrences at the moment.

5. Remembering a wrong is like carrying a burden on the mind.

Advertisements

6. You have overburdened your argument with ostentatious erudition.

7. For all his frustrations and his chronic sense of being overburdened.

8. That which comprises the harshest burden, a king lifts first and sets down last.

9. True patriotism isn’t cheap. It’s about taking on a fair share of the burden of keeping America going.

10. With each painful contraction, she would give the string a yank so that the man could share the burden.

11. I want to burden the conscience of the affluent with all the suffering and all the hidden, bitter tears.

Advertisements

12. Prejudice is a burden that confuses the past, threatens the future and renders the present inaccessible.

13. Perhaps I have become so accustomed to the burden of secrets that I do not notice their weight until I am free of it.

14. All my life, I’ve found it difficult to advocate for myself, to ask for what I want. I fear burdening people so much.

15. Great heroes need great sorrows and burdens, or half their greatness goes unnoticed. It is all part of the fairy tale.

16. Some secrets, she thought, were better told; some were better left the burden of the carrier, that they might not cause pain to others.

17. The marvel of all history is the patience with which men and women submit to burdens unnecessarily laid upon them by their governments.

18. We have the burden and the opportunity of living in the moment when the critique of factory farming broke into the popular consciousness.

19. To be black was to be the beneficiary of a great inheritance, a special destiny, glorious burdens that only we were strong enough to bear.

20. The magic of sex is it’s acquisition without the burden of possession. No matter how many women you take home, there’s never a storage problem.

21. Overburdened householders could count on the assistance not only of their own extended families, but of the American tradition of neighborliness.

22. Thinkers think and doers do. But until the thinkers do and the doers think, progress will be just another word in the already overburdened vocabulary by sense.

23. Close both eyes see with the other one. Then we are no longer saddled by the burden of our persistent judgments our ceaseless withholding our constant exclusion.

Advertisements