How to use "drove" in a sentence

Sentences

Then I got in my truck and drove away.

'Why didn't we just get his phone number?' Megan asked as they drove back to Moab.

The army sent a car to meet us at Washington airport, and we drove to a really nice hotel

When he drove his cart into the entrance to Dutfield's Yard, the pony turned to the left and refused to go on

With Marius in the back seat, Valjean and Javert side by side in the front, the carriage drove off quickly through the dark and strangely empty streets of Paris.

He knew that he brewed illegal beer to sell and that he drove drugs across Alberta and British Colombia

Greg made the call to the hotel, and they drove to the cabin in the Yoho national park

We got into the car again and drove on, up the steep mountain road

De Winter turned the car carefully, and we drove down the twisting road again

We drove slowly through the brightly lit streets towards the hotel

I could not tell Mrs Van Hopper that every morning I drove with de Winter in his car

I could not help looking at it as we drove along.

Without a word, he started the car and we drove on

Maxim drove up to the wide stone steps and stopped the car in front of them

Favell drove away noisily and much too fast

After an early lunch, I drove into the town with Maxim.

Maxim may want me.' He got quickly back into the car again and drove away.

As we drove away, I looked back at the house

As we drove away, he was still standing there, watching us.

We drove on through the traffic and I felt full of peace

One of the valet-parking attendants brought her car, and she drove down the hotel's steeply slanted exit drive.

As she drove across the intersection and into the entrance drive that led to the Golden Pyramid Hotel, Tina couldn't shake the creepy feeling that she was being watched by someone who meant to harm her

It could tell her each man's preferred brand of liquor, each wife's favorite flower and perfume, the make of car they drove, the names and ages of their children, the nature of any illnesses or other medical conditions they might have, their favorite foods, their favorite colors, their tastes in music, their political affiliations, and scores of other facts both important and trivial

"Somehow, for some reason, they drove the bus more than four miles off the main highway, four miles off and a hell of a long way up, right up to the damn clouds

They drove up a steep, abandoned logging trail, a deteriorated dirt road so treacherous, so choked with snow, so icy that only a fool would have attempted to negotiate it any way but on foot."

When at last she drove away, he watched her car until it turned the corner and disappeared, and when she was gone, he knew why he had not wanted to let her go

He'd been trying to postpone her departure because he was afraid that he would never see her again after she drove off.

At one o'clock Elliot drove his silver Mercedes S600 sports coupe to the New Year's Day party on Sunrise Mountain

As Elliot drove away from the burning house, his instinctual sense of danger was as sensitive as it had been in his military days

He drove into the open garage as boldly as if it were his own

To him, evidently, anyone who drove a Mercedes had to be the right kind of people.

As he drove from one residential street to another, steadily heading away from the smoke, working toward a major thoroughfare, Elliot expected to encounter the black van at every intersection.

While Elliot drove, he told Tina what had happened at his house: the two thugs, their interest in the possibility of Danny's grave being reopened, their admission that they worked for some government agency, the hypodermic syringes...

The traffic thinned out as they drove farther from the heart of town, closer to the looming black mountains that thrust into the last electric-purple light in the western sky.

Elliot drove behind the restaurant and tucked the Mercedes into a slot in the deepest shadows, between a Toyota Celica and a small motor home, where it could not be seen from the street.

Though Tina continued to be buoyed by the unshakable conviction that Danny was alive, fear crept into her again as they drove onto Charleston Boulevard

He drove away from the airport

Elliot Stryker drove cautiously and kept his eyes on the road.

Crouching beside one of those bushes, huddling in the shadows just beyond the circle of frosty light from a nearby street lamp, he pulled the pistol out of his coat pocket while Tina drove away.

She drove into the heart of town

Tina was in awe of - and disquieted by - the stately forest that crowded them as they drove north on the narrowing county road

They drove onto the track, under the roof of heavy evergreen boughs, into the heart of the forest.

He sighed and drove through the gate, which swung shut behind the Explorer.

He took his foot off the brake and drove forward, through sheeting snow stained red by the strange light.

A wall of frigid air fell on the chopper and drove it down

A particularly fierce blast of wind drove snow into the windscreen with such force that, to Kurt Hensen, it sounded like shotgun pellets.

Tamaguchi drove us very hard until we isolated the antibody and figured out why it was so effective against the disease

As they drove off the plateau, around the burning wreckage of the helicopter, Danny said, "They were bad people

The commissaire drove through the open factory gate, stopped by the main entrance, and we got out of the car

My husband and I drove into the village together

I drove the cart down the road and, leaving it with my wife and servant, rushed into the house and packed a few valuables

Her face, I remember, was very white as I drove away.

The flashing light was blinding and confusing, and thin rain hit my face as I drove down the slope.

My brother went into the crowd and stopped a horse pulling a cart, while she drove in front of it

On Tuesday the three of them, still intending to get out to sea, drove through the busy country towards Colchester.

At a later date we began to feel less in danger of being seen because the sunlight outside was very bright, but at first anything approaching the house drove us back into the hall in fear

He drove to the Seaway, to a part of the beach they knew very well

'Thank you!' she said, then the carriage drove off, and the woman in white was gone.

'She's escaped from my asylum!' the man replied, and he drove off.

He left the room, went straight to his carriage, and drove away.

Anne, my wife and I then drove to London.

During World War One, Marie helped to put X-ray machines in ambulances, which Marie herself drove to the places where they were needed