75 adjectives to describe coal

What care we? 'Til the jolly man-o'-war shot the pirate's mast away, Down on the coast of the high Barbare-e-e." I saw near me a live coal dislodged from the fire when Thrackles had thrown on the armful of wood.

But what I may term the "saccular matter" of the coal, which, either in its primary or in its degraded form constitutes by far the greater part of all the bituminous coals I have examined, is certainly not mineral charcoal; nor is its structure that of any stem or leaf.

The wood that had been put on the fire before I left had gone down into glowing coals that looked warm and inviting.

He it was who told me of his discovery of a seam of anthracite coal in the bed of a river near the Tanga railway.

However, we have made good progress and burnt little coal, which is good for the public interest.

Marshall, following his first impulse, thrust the paper into the dull red coals.

They sat all day on their little benches, high up in the great black building, with their eyes fixed always on the shallow streams of broken coal passing down the iron-sheathed chutes, and falling out of sight below them; and it was their duty to pick the particles of slate and stone from out these moving masses, bending constantly above them as they worked.

When the incense smoke cleared away, nothing could be seen on the hearth but the bright hickory coals in their bed of white ashes.

The breaker boss said that no cleaner coal was emptied into the cars at the loading place than that which came down through Ralph's chute.

Pour off the water and let dry out for one or two minutes over hot ashes or light coals.

It seems he is everywhere; and Ady seeks him on Balgay Hill and in the churchyard o' nights, when the moon's out; thereafter coming in with those eyes of hers like flaming coals, darting them on us, who don't believe in Brahma, as if we were the real heathens, and not she and her mistress.

It now turns out that the Pitch Lake, like most other things, owes its appearance on the surface to no convulsion or vagary at all, but to a most slow, orderly, and respectable process of nature, by which buried vegetable matter, which would have become peat, and finally brown coal, in a temperate climate, becomes, under the hot tropic soil, asphalt and oil, continually oozing up beneath the pressure of the strata above it.

"The golden coals in the blue fire of heaven are not higher above censure," he said.

Then into the clean grate went a handful of shavings and pitch-pine kindlings, one or two bits of hard wood, and a sprinkle of small, shiny nut-coal.

Precious coals!

He was gaunt and worn and dirty, and his eyes burned like twin coals in their cavernous sockets.

He made a fire where already there was a little heap of charred coals against a blackened rock, and they made coffee and cooked bacon.

<pb id='347.png' /> PARKER, J. V. Analytic system for the measurement of the relative tornado, cyclone and windstorm hazard of movable coal, ore, and stone handling apparatus, September 1932.

The best fire for individual cooking is a small, clear one, or, better yet, a few brisk coals.

Some extra coal and supplies were loaded on a clumsy wooden hulk, but he durst not risk her carrying expensive machinery.

"Look at his eyeslike two live coals!" gasped Tom.

Ben wuz one er dese yer big black niggershe was mo'd'n six foot high an' black ez coal.

He got there just in time; and what with t' explosion, fire-damp, and fallen coal, we never saw t' over-seer again.

If ever a fellow "heaped coals of fire on the head of his enemy," Roland Chase certainly did during the three days they continued to linger at the lodge under the pines.

A rosy, fitful coal sputtered, darting out short capillary lines and needles of fire.

75 adjectives to describe  coal