20 adjectives to describe gan

"Yes," said Dean SWIFT, "and let us have some, and a little gin, say five fingers, and a trifle of milk.

Certainly, continuous gin does not chill the faculties.

Straightway he contrived a cunning gin for the slaying of this bird.

Frae twenty-four to five-and-forty, My muse was neither sweer nor dorty, My Pegasus would break his tether, E'en at the shagging of a feather, And through ideas scour like drift, Streaking his wings up to the lift; Then, then my soul was in a low, That gart my members safely row; But eild and judgment 'gin to say, Let be your sangs, and learn to pray.

Still may yon spider round your pages spin, Subtle and slow, her emblematic gin! Buried in dust and lost in silence dwell!

Me-en-gan stopped by the door, but the stranger walked steadily the length of the room until he faced the Factor.

A pretty innocent fool; well, Governour, Though I think well of your custom, and could wish my self For this night in your place, heartily wish it: Yet if you play not fair play and above board too, I have a foolish gin here, I say no more; I'le tell you what, and if your honours guts are not inchanted.

'O, nanae at a'deevil thank it; a gravesteen wad gie guid bree gin ye gied it plenty

They ginned the cotton with iron rods; a mechanical cotton gin was introduced not until later.

The smallness of their number, and their want of arms, quite elevated the courage of Miago, who loudly vaunted his intention of monopolizing a northern gin, in order to astonish his friends upon our return to the south: stealing away the ladies being, as I have before remarked, the crowning and most honourable achievement of which man, in the eyes of these savages, is capable.

So ther 's plenty o' water, an' o' course ther 's fishin'; an' oncet gin 'em poles an' git 'em to work, an' they 're out o' mischief fur that day.

Most of the men appeared to possess two, the pair in general consisting of a fat plump gin and one much younger.

It is said that in 1792 some two or three million pounds of short-staple cotton was gathered in the Piedmont, perhaps in anticipation of a practicable gin, and that the state of Georgia had appointed a commission to promote the desired invention.

No man had a more thorough knowledge of the proper night stations, where good feed might be procured for his charge, and good liquor for Watch and himself; Watch, like other sheepdogs, being accustomed to live chiefly on bread and beer, while his master preferred gin.

Thomas Spaulding offered to supply Joseph Eve's gins from the Bahama Islands at fifty guineas each; and Eve himself shortly immigrated to Augusta to contend for his patent rights on roller-gins, for some of his workmen had changed his model in such a way as to increase the speed, and had put their rival gins upon the market.

The master held in his hand a rusty old gin, the iron jaws of which were tightly closed upon the body of an enormous rat.

The berries are used in preparing the well-known spiritous liquor gin, and have been considered of great use in medicine.

Still may yon spider round your pages spin, Subtle and slow, her emblematic gin! Buried in dust and lost in silence dwell!

Here and there between the houses stand half a dozen curious architectural quadrupeds called "balagáns" (bah-lah-gans'), or fish storehouses.

Day before yesterday,' as you, was his first round at the work; so I goes up an' draws out my ha'af-crown same as usual, an' walks straight off for the Four Lords for a ha'af-crown's worth o' gin.

20 adjectives to describe  gan