19 adjectives to describe abiding

And there my Secret Friend abides, and there I think I'll hide my heart away before to-morrow kills it, A cold to-morrow kills it.

The tiger on the left of the arch alone abides in its place; the other lies on the ground at the threshold of the gate.

I would be secret, cautious, abide in the shadow, until the hour arrived to emerge therefrom, and, with the aid of God and Wardour Wentworth, defeat his schemes and vindicate the truth!

How can decent folk abide here?

No blame to thee, whosoever dost abide By Nyle, or Gange, or Tygre, or Euphrate; Ne Afrike thereof guiltie is, nor Spaine, Nor the bolde people by the Thamis brincks, Nor the brave warlicke brood of Alemaine, Nor the borne souldier which Rhine running drinks.

But it is not in such passages that what Apollonius did for epic abides.

And in private life the same law abides, indestructible as God.

Cities of mortals woebegone Fantastic care derides, But in the serious landscape lone Stern benefit abides.

Yet one mysterious charm abides, The spring, whose ebb and flow Were praised in Pliny's classic prose Two thousand years ago, A fountain, whose perennial grace Millenniums could not efface.

And there made many a crimson speck: I think there's none that use to ride But can her pleasant trot abide; She goes so even upon the way, She will not stumble in a day; And when my master FRAN.

With Crombie, and in general with the others too, twenty-seven verbs are always irregular, which I think are sometimes regular, and therefore redundant: abide, beseech, blow, burst, creep, freeze, grind, lade, lay, pay, rive, seethe, shake, show, sleep, slide, speed, string, strive, strow, sweat, thrive, throw, weave, weep, wind, wring.

In addition to the pieces already mentioned, by the editor, is one of extraordinary excellencethe Magic Bridle: his Lines to a Boy plucking Blackberries, are a very pleasing picture of innocence: There stay in joy, Pluck, pluck, and eat thou happy boy; Sad fate abides thee.

Above revolutions truth and justice abide, as the starry heaven abides above the tempests" (i. 188-189).

Cities of mortals woebegone Fantastic care derides, But in the serious landscape lone Stern benefit abides.

But what does not appear, and is no phenomenon, but rather the noumenon; what makes appearance possible; what is not subject to the principle of causation, and therefore has no vain or vanishing existence, but abides for ever unchanged in the midst of a world full of suffering, like a ray of light in a storm,free, therefore, from all pain and fatality,this, I say, is the intelligence.

Fasting in sackcloth and ashes they came, both the king and his people, Came to the mountain of oaks, to the house of the terrible sea-gods, Hard by the gulf in the rocks, where of old the world-wide deluge Sank to the inner abyss; and the lake where the fish of the goddess, Holy, undying, abide; whom the priests feed daily with dainties.

This is the Cabin where the best of all Her Sex, that ever breath'd, or ever shall Give heat or happiness to the Shepherds side, Doth only to her worthy self abide.

The end is nearthe fierce old tiger dies! Up there on purple cushion, in the light Of flickering lamps, pale Cæsar waits for morn; His sallow face, by hideous ulcers torn, Looks ghastlier than was e'er its wont tonight; Hollow the eyes; the fire of fell disease And burning fever runs through every limb; None but the aged leech abides with him, And Macro, trusted bearer of the keys.

"If," He said once, "ye abide in My word ... ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free."

19 adjectives to describe  abiding