93 adjectives to describe packed

Quite a decent little pack, faute de mieux; and Bobby Amphlett, who hunts them, is a great pal of mine.

And yes, a pedestrian, carrying a light pack, could make much better time than a horseman with pack animals.

their gaping jaws eludes, And yet a moment lives; till round inclosed 270 By all the greedy pack, with infant screams She yields her breath, and there reluctant dies.

The prudent huntsman, therefore, will supply, With annual large recruits, his broken pack, And propagate their kind.

So he sat back in the snow and waited, while the ravenous pack tore at the dead doe.

there arose constant now the hoarse and dreadful bayings of the Hounds, and made known that a mighty pack did be out.

He would turn on the fiercest pack of wolves.

Censure of an over-numerous pack.

"Two ... two kings of diamonds...." He laughed, a long, harsh laugh, the laugh of a maniac, or of a man possessed, whilst one long thin finger pointed tremblingly to the card still held by Richard Lambert, and then to its counterpart in the midst of the scattered pack.

Presently in the press I observed a queer old fellow carrying on his back a monstrous pack of umbrellas.

"They seem to have been pretty much occupied, too," observed the captain, "for a better thumbed pack I never yet found in the forecastle of a ship.

See my brave pack!

" "Portable power pack," said Kimball.

You sweat as though you had a mule-pack on your back. MICHO.

When he came into a real wood, of trees large and many, it was about noon, and finding a comfortable place with his back to a tree he ate from the precious pack.

'We know that where thick pack may be found early in January, open water and a clear sea may be found in February, and broadly that the later the date the easier the chance of getting through.

We escaped from the heavy floes about us into much thinner pack, then through two water holes, then back to the thinner pack consisting of thin floes of large area fairly easily broken.

A fast and well-bred pack, established more than sixty years ago, they have been admirably presided over by Mr. Albert Brassey for close on a quarter of a century.

They wished to continue their debates on Saturdays, Sir Robert's only day of rest, when he used to rush to Richmond New Park, there to amuse himself with a favourite pack of beagles.

Not until he had reached the shelter of the tamaracks did the Indian youth lay down his burden, and then in his own exhaustion he fell prone upon the snow, his black eyes fixed cautiously upon the feasting pack.

It was difficult to imagine how he could possibly stand up to a ferocious pack of Saber-Toothed Light Bulbs.

Standing in a doorway of the building, where a light burned, he opened a small flat leather pack that swung from his belt, along with the excellent map of Belgium inclosed in a leather frame which every German officer carried.

Yard by yard Thor worked his way upward, snarling at the frantic pack, defying the man-smell, the strange thunder, the burning lightningeven death itself, and five hundred yards below Langdon cursed despairingly as the dogs hung so close he could not fire.

the wise old hound Regardless of the frolic pack, attends His master's side, or slumbers at his ease Beneath the bending shade; there many a ring 220 Runs o'er in dreams; now on the doubtful foil Puzzles perplexed, or doubles intricate Cautious unfolds, then winged with all his speed, Bounds o'er the lawn to seize his panting prey: And in imperfect whimperings speaks his joy.

All now is free as air, and the gay pack In the rough bristly stubbles range unblamed; No widow's tears o'erflow, no secret curse Swells in the farmer's breast, which his pale lips 60 Trembling conceal, by his fierce landlord awed: But courteous now he levels every fence, Joins in the common cry, and halloos loud, Charmed with the rattling thunder of the field.

93 adjectives to describe  packed