85 adjectives to describe tea

Whether the U.S. Agent at Nulato was justified or not in saying all the region hereabouts was populous in the summer with Indian camps, the native winter settlements, the half-buried ighloo, or the rude log-hut, where, for a little tea, tobacco, or sugar, you could get as much fish as you could carry, these welcome, if malodorous, places seemed, since they lost the trail, to have vanished off the face of the earth.

" Barbara ate her doughnut and drank the bitter tea.

He lifted the can of weak tea to his lips and took a long draught, handed the can back to the Boy, and leant against the staging.

The anniversary of the Roses' entrance into the Home drew nearer, and Blossy suggested that the best way to celebrate the event would be by means of a "pink tea.

but she makes delicious tea.

And, though the missionaries boast of having once penetrated further, I think, they have never calculated the tea drunk by the Chinese.

they guzzle sweet tea all day long, as the Affghans gulp down their tea, with butter in it, from morning to night.

" They lifted the long, slender glasses of iced Ceylon tea and regarded one another over the frosty rimsa long, curious glance from her; a straight gaze from him, which she decided not to sustain too long.

" Mrs. Ellis sat for some time sipping the fragrant and refreshing tea.

You get a better seat and a comfortable tea in an enclosure, with the sight of the goats scrambling wildly for a little refreshment to keep you thankful, for in the heat and dust and glare even a sheep is apt to lose sight of its mercies.

The leaves of the black currant make a pleasant tea.

It was he left us the cheap tea; to cheapen it he did, that was at that time a shilling for one bare ounce.

" The tea came, magicallydelicious cambric tea and cinnamon toast.

Then, after commending Scott, Bogers, and Moore for being men of the world, he proceeds: But for the children of the "mighty mother's," The would-be wits and can't-be gentlemen, I leave them to the daily "Tea is ready," Snug coterie, and literary lady.

" "No, ma'am," said he, "there is fancy teas of that kind, but you'd have to send to Philadelphia or New York for them.

The litter of books and papers, ink-stand and portfolio, was transferred to one of the side-tables, and in its place, on the table where his friend had been accustomed to write, Gilbert saw a cluster of medicine-bottles, a jug of toast-and-water, and a tray with a basin of lukewarm greasy-looking beef-tea.

The shout of joy that rose to the rafters rather startled the quiet female, but it was spontaneous, not to be suppressed, and told of a happy finish to our not over sumptuous tea.

When the invalid cannot digest this chicken broth with the flavouring, we would recommend plain beef tea in preference to plain chicken tea, which it would be without the addition of herbs, onions, &c. Time.1-1/2 hour.

Mr. Raleigh and Marguerite had a merry tea, and Mrs. Purcell came and poured it out for them.

For mixed tea, the usual proportion is four spoonfuls of black to one of green; more of the latter when the flavour is very much liked; but strong green tea is highly pernicious, and should never be partaken of too freely.

" MOTHER'S BIRTHDAY TEA A pleasant way for a daughter to entertain for her mother is to give a little informal afternoon tea, asking the mother's friends and their daughters and thus making it a kind of mother and daughter affair.

Sad and silent our toast we bespread, At the empty chair looked we and sighed; All insipid tea, butter, and bread, For the salt of his wit was denied.

Dawson's men were scattered here and thereone a passenger of inquiring mind, another a deckhand, yet a thirda pretty girl in khakisold tea and cakes in the vessel's saloon.

The quantity that I had swallowed was not largethe tea being hotter than I cared forand I remembered that, when I had thrown out the lump of sugar, I had turned the cup upside down on the table; so there could have been nothing solid left in it.

And so, with intervals of strolling on the deck, and an hour or so dawdled away at luncheon, and a leisurely afternoon tea, the day wore on to sunset, and they went back to Keats, while Lady Kirkbank sulked and slept in a corner of the saloon.

85 adjectives to describe  tea