This parable speak I unto you
sentimental dissemblers, unto you, the "pure discerners!" You do I call--covetous ones!
'Because,' said Alfred, 'I am disposed to be
sentimental myself, on your appropriation of the jewels and the money, Mr Boffin.
The Countess Lidia Ivanovna had, as a very young and
sentimental girl, been married to a wealthy man of high rank, an extremely good-natured, jovial, and extremely dissipated rake.
"It's disappointing to find that at heart you are
sentimental. I should have liked you better if you hadn't made that ingenuous appeal to my sympathies."
She is a little afraid of being terribly bored when she gets back to Boston, and she is very
sentimental."
"In a few minutes," she said, smiling at him, "we should have become
sentimental."
If he had expected to find her languishing, reproachful, or indulging in
sentimental tears, he must have been greatly surprised.
The sun was beginning to grow dreamy, and the whole world to wear a dangerously
sentimental expression.
Trent was seldom
sentimental, but from the first he had had an uneasy presentiment concerning this man who lay now within his power and so near to death.
My light burned till two and three in the morning, which led a good neighbour woman into a bit of
sentimental Sherlock-Holmes deduction.
"Only," said he, "it is no longer the
sentimental card of the seventeenth century, it is the card of life, very neatly divided into two parts, one feminine, the other masculine; the right hemisphere for woman, the left for man."
Italians are always nice," said Meg, who was a little
sentimental.