How to use "leaves" in a sentence

Sentences

That leaves only the third, and worst, plan: I will have to amputate my right arm

No one who enters the Nautilus ever leaves

Values have shrunk to fantastic levels; taxes have risen; our ability to pay has fallen; government of all kinds is faced by serious curtailment of income; the means of exchange are frozen in the currents of trade; the withered leaves of industrial enterprise lie on every side; farmers find no markets for their produce; and the savings of many years in thousands of families are gone

Can we do this? Can we really do this? Then Robin leaves the office, and he has the manager, Mr Charles M

Yes, a lovely, new companion, she thinks as she leaves.

The judge leaves, the jury returns to its room to make a verdict, and the Lee family exit to wait in the lobby.

Cigarette time then, he thinks, and he leaves the courtroom

The grass below their feet is green and fresh, the trees are heavy with leaves, and the air smells so good that Owen forgets about Junior's mood

Now, not many people come to this side of the forest at this time of the year, but if you see someone you just put the gun down gently in a bush or under some leaves

She got up and returned to her tomato plants, taking off the dead and dying leaves from the bottom of each one

Gran threw a handful of leaves onto a pile in the corner

She brought out her paints, and, sitting in her room, started working on a picture: the green leaves of Gran's Real Space, bright and bursting with life; gray tower blocks in the background

We walked on last year's leaves

There was no sound except for the noise of a little stream and the quiet rain on the leaves

Moving quickly, he puts them into his bag and leaves

He leaves his car near the trees and waits

So you know where that leaves me?"

"Twelve years leaves a big hole in the heart."

And there, with great excitement, I saw something smooth hidden under the leaves

And that leaves three possibilities.'

'However, there's a train that leaves Pangbourne after five o'clock

Mr Fairlie never leaves his room

"Yes, and he leaves his mark - the Z - everywhere," says the old man.

"Good! We now fight together!" says Zorro and leaves.