12 adjectives to describe buccaneering

Glorious buccaneer.

HOLLAND, RUPERT S. The splendid buccaneer, a tale of the Atlantic coast in pirate days.

The stranger ran a couple of lengths astern the Ocean Star, swung his main-yard aback and hailed; but while the bold buccaneer was doing this, Captain Lane had performed an equally sea-manlike manoeuvre.

So when I heard that the man I sought was this notorious buccaneer I showed my alarm by dropping my jaw. Mercer laughed.

Its strength, they said, was a hundred and forty large vessels, "without counting the smaller," having on board thirty-five thousand men, Normans, Picards, Italians, sailors and soldiers of all countries, under the command of two French leaders, Hugh Quiret, titular admiral, and Nicholas Bchuchet, King Philip's treasurer, and of a famous Genoese buccaneer, named Barbavera.

" Jack had an impulse, worthy of the tempestuous buccaneer of the picture, to call to his father to come down; and then to bar the front door until his burning questions were heard.

A manthis Helmar of to-dayabout whom more strange tales were told than of the bloody buccaneer himself.

Lozana describes Colman as a daring, turbulent buccaneer.

Last, but ah! surely not least dear, That blithe and buxom buccaneer, Th' avenging goddess of her sex, Born the base soul of man to vex, And wring from him those tears and sighs Tortured from woman's heart and eyes.

She depicts you as a sort of cardiacal buccaneer and visibly gloats over the tale of your enormities.

If we only treated all commercial buccaneers and bumptious tyrants on the same terms, if we gently chided their brutalities as rather quaint mistakes in the conduct of life, if we simply told them that they would 'understand when they were older,' we should probably be adopting the best and most crushing attitude towards the weaknesses of humanity.

Lozana describes Colman as a daring, turbulent buccaneer.

12 adjectives to describe  buccaneering