24 adjectives to describe meets

To Kelson's delight he heard that Muriel Tredworth and her brother were coming over next day to stay with the Morristons for another dance in the neighbourhood and a near meet of the hounds; so he, warming to the Morristons, chatted away in all a lover's high spirits.

Our village is a favourite meet of the V.W.H. foxhounds.

We had an annual race meet, when all the crack horses of the district met in keen rivalry to test their pace and endurance.

The twice-daily 'edit meets' at the Adil Shahi palace ensures that only the very junior reporters intimidated by the Press Room circle break stories of any importance.

111 With such glad hearts did our despairing men Salute the appearance of the prince's fleet; And each ambitiously would claim the ken, That with first eyes did distant safety meet.

[Illustration: MISS EUPHEMIA MEETS OLIVER AND HIS PRISONER] "My father, madam," said Oliver Wolcott, uncovering his head as he motioned to Reuben to take his place near his companion, "my father is some thirty miles behind me, but hastening in this direction.

Thy joys no glittering female meets, No hive hast thou of hoarded sweets, No painted plumage to display: On hasty wings thy youth is flown, Thy sun is set, thy spring is gone We frolic while 'tis May.

Let Florence fair her Dantes justly boast, And royal Rome, her Petrarchs numbered feet, In English Wyat both of them doth coast: In whom all graceful eloquence doth meet.

They to their lovers should prove kind; Kindness is for maidens meet.

Newport is the mart where the marriageable meet.

Rome in her throng'd and stranger-crowded streets, And palaces, where pilgrim pilgrim meets, Holds not, respected Sarah, one that can Revered make the name of Englishman, Or loved, more than thy Kinsman, dear to me

The map makers could not, in consequence of the error in latitude, make their plat meet, and therefore considered the part of the united streams reached in the two different directions as different bodies of water, and without authority sought an outlet for that which they laid down as the southernmost of the two in another bay of the Gulf of St. Lawrence.

26.It is so usual a practice in our language, to put the possessive sign always and only where the two terms of the possessive relation meet, that this ending is liable to be added to any adjunct which can be taken as a part of the former noun or name; as, (1.)

" The voice was at her elbow, and she looked up with a startto meet the gaze of M. Raoul.

If Care steal amang us he's narrowly watch'd, By a smile or a squeeze of the hand he's dispatch'd; Or the arm of a friend should the stout villain meet, One blink of true love lays him dead at your feet.

Young omnibuses with plenty of bone and stamina are the best for suburban meets.

80 Here moss-grown trees expand the smallest leaf, Here half an acre's corn is half a sheaf; Here hills with naked heads the tempest meet, Rocks at their side, and torrents at their feet, Or lazy lakes, unconscious of a flood, Whose dull brown Naiads ever sleep in mud.

267 O let it be enough what thou hast done; When spotted Deaths ran arm'd through every street, With poison'd darts which not the good could shun, The speedy could out-fly, or valiant meet.

Audacity, and again audacity; upon this point, the politic and the violent meet in unison to-day.

Happy when I, from this turmoil set free, That peaceful and divine assembly see: 930 Not only those I named I there shall greet, But my own gallant virtuous Cato meet.

He hunts, and is a welcome companionthe meet frequently takes place at his house, or some of the huntsmen call for lunch; in fact, the latter is an invariable thing.

Marry, the first jolly traveler that thou wouldst meet would beat thee to a pudding for thrusting thy nose into a craft that belongeth not to thee.

These answers are true when we compare the higher animals with plants, but the differences become lost as we descend in the scale and approach the border land where botanist and zoologist meet on a common ground.

The pine squirrels seemed to be having some sort of a competitive field meet, and the tricks they did in the trees above the trail filled the two riders with delight.

24 adjectives to describe  meets