25 adjectives to describe expletive

When there is Fuel enough, no matter what it isThus the Ends of Sentences in the News Papers, as, This wants Confirmation, This occasions many Speculations, and Time will discover the Event, are read by them, and considered not as mere Expletives.

" "Well, I'll be" Dicky uttered his favorite expletive.

Pap exploded his favourite expletive till it sounded ferocious, "That ain't quare feelin's.

" Norgate's emphatic expletive was only half-stifled as she continued.

The old man was striking when at his worst, and Simpson almost admired him for his command of explosive expletives.

Now among us, many clergymen act too directly contrary to this method, that from a habit of saving time and paper, which they acquired at the University, they write in so diminutive a manner, with such frequent blots and interlineations, that they are hardly able to go on without perpetual hesitations or extemporary expletives:

Jim Holden turned round and looked at him as if he thought he had got hold of some new-fashioned expletive,possibly a pretty hard one.

There was a tense, pregnant silence, broken by Mr. Sims in fervent expletive.

Hence, if our leaders in their style Are able to suppress their bile, And practise noble moderation In comment and in objurgation, Why should not I, a doggerel bard, All futile expletives discard, And discipline my restive soul With salutary cuss-control? * * * *

But harmless expletives of human kind.

I have since seen full-grown men, under slighter provocation than we endured, jerk off a collar, tear it in two, and throw it to the winds, chased by the most soul-harrowing expletives.

And Frank, as he felt the wheels under the aeroplane touch the earth, also heard a loud cry and some lusty Spanish expletives as a pistol was discharged.

From the numerous expletives which abound in Scott's letters, such as are not now considered in good taste among gentlemen, I infer that like most gentlemen of his social standing in those times he was in the habit of using, when highly excited or irritated, what is called profane language.

I was all but mute, uttering only an occasional expletive when forced to perform acts against my will.

He is a very Leveller in poetry; he creeps along, with ten little words in every line, and helps out his numbers with For to, and Unto, and all the pretty expletives he can find, till he drags them to the end of another line: while the Sense is left, tired, halfway behind it.

" The boy let out a string of rough expletives under his breath.

"Well," I replied, "suppose he did go into a regular tantrum and use all the most startling expletives in the vocabulary for fifteen minutes!

Sadly often they added the tritest three-monosyllabled expletive known to red-hot English.

I can see him sporting with children, or taking long walks, or cutting down trees for exercise, or given to deep draughts of old October when thirsty; but to see him with a long pipe, or dallying with ladies, or giving vent to unseemly expletives, or retailing scandals,these and other disreputable follies are utterly inconceivable of Mr. Gladstone.

At first glance I thought that the room was empty, then suddenly I heard another violent expletive and became aware of a man sitting close beside the iron stove.

" One thing we notice in most of the familiar letters of Byron,that he makes frequent use of a vulgar expletive.

One wheel had fallen from the wagon, and the wagonmaster was jumping up and down, shouting angry expletives at the ox.

When divested of the strange Western expletives and imprecations with which the old man used to spice his reminiscences, some of them are enough.

He indulged in a few German expletives, bombastic and thunderous, which relieved him so much that he was able to conclude his speech in English.

And with the brief expletive he condemned his disloyalty to the sprightly, slender Dorothy; the Peter Pan of the Blue Mesa; the dream girl of that idle noon at the Big Spring.

25 adjectives to describe  expletive