164 adjectives to describe dealt

These boatmen were all jolly, good-natured and pleasant people, with a vast deal of practical sense, and a valuable experience in woodcraft, albeit they were rough and unpolished.

I've given you a square deal all right.

An immense deal of legendary lore has clustered round the so-called fairy-ringslittle circles of a brighter green in old pastureswithin which the fairies were supposed to dance by night.

There was a little deal shelf here and there; but there were neither sand, salt, whitening, nor pipes.

Hearken this, ye dainty perruquiers, "who look so brisk, and smell so sweet," and have such an exquisite knack of chirruping, and lisping, and sliding over the smooth edge of the under lip,and, sometimes, agreeably too,"an infinite deal of nothing,"ye who clip and anoint the hair of Old England's curled darlings!

After that information, it is a great deal more comfortable to walk about under it than hitherto, as the men in uncovering it had moved it, and it was still swinging backwards and forwards in anything but a reassuring manner.

" "Yes, if it had been a genuinely honest deal on their side," remarked the Italian.

It had been a raw deal.

We make no comparative figure in the county, and my father was originally a man of no consideration at all; and yet I can assure you, both he and mamma had a prodigious deal of trouble to break me of this infirmity, when I was very young."

He would burn the midnight oil with equal zest to block a crooked deal on the part of a wealthy corporation or to devise a means to extricate some no less crooked rascal from the clutches of the law, provided that the rascal seemed the victim of hard luck, inheritance or environment.

It seemed to me to be a kind of sitting-room, with a plain deal table and a couple of chairs, but there was no stove, and the place looked chill and comfortless.

"Because he is a great deal too handsome ever to be a scholar.

He and his political friends were a good deal ashamed of his conduct, and finally, after many delays in bringing on the trial, and various attempts to hush up the matter, Mr. Bussier called upon Friend Hopper to say that he deeply regretted the course he had pursued.

He had taken to making cheap boxes of thin, rough deal, afterwards covered with paper.

I've done a monstrous deal of it with maps and gazetteers.

Certainly, the house was a great deal more cheerful for the presence of the two pleasant ladies.

"It is very well off," she retorted, angrily: "a precious deal better than I was at its age.

4. Ebooks are a better deal for writers.

They retired from us with a wind at S.E., leaving an impression upon my mind to which I can give no name, though surely one ingredient in it was fear, with a considerable deal of wonder and astonishment.

Accordingly, doffing his hat, which he resolved to carry home in his band, and having applied his handkerchief to his brow, he clapped the pot, in inverted fashion, upon his head, where, as the reader may suppose, it figured much like Mambrino's helmet upon the crazed capital of Don Quixote, only a great deal more magnificent in shape and dimensions.

Our hero was playing against a false deal; the man who was leading him made the fatal mistake that he was working with a gudgeon on his hook, consequently he was not watchful.

For the most part they seemed a great deal more interested in each other, in their conversations, and in their papers, than in any notice of the bombardment.

" "Well," said Father Payne, "a great deal of the news most worth telling can be told best in pictures.

" "You can go where you like, wench, and see what you can; and an uncommon deal wiser you'll be for your trouble.

Whereas classical rhetoric deals with speeches which might be delivered to convict or acquit a defendant in the law court, or to secure a certain action by the deliberative assembly, or to adorn an occasion, classical poetic deals with lyric, epic, and drama.

164 adjectives to describe  dealt