| 1. | Like distant breadth to TAURUS with the Seav'. - from Paradise Lost by John Milton |
| 2. | Divine instinct, breadth of vision, the law of reason, health. - from Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman |
| 3. | Old age, calm, expanded, broad with the haughty breadth of the universe. - from Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman |
| 4. | He was a dark man altogether, with good eyes and a good bold breadth between them. - from A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens |
| 5. | its breadth and massiveness of development. - from The Iliad of Homer by Homer |
| 6. | Heathcliff measured the height and breadth of the speaker with an eye full of derision. - from Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte |
| 7. | And yet the spacious breadth of this divisio. - from The Complete Works of William Shakespeare by William Shakespeare |
| 8. | That was the breadth of a puddle on the garden walk which he had evidently walked across. - from A Study In Scarlet by Arthur Conan Doyle |
| 9. | Then she bears some breadth DROMIO OF SYRACUSE. - from The Complete Works of William Shakespeare by William Shakespeare |
| 10. | The lychgate of a field showed Father Conmee breadths of cabbages, curtseying to him with ample underleaves. - from Ulysses by James Joyce |