69 adverbs to describe how to about

Dat call him all de voodooall!" He stared wildly about in the darkness as though expecting to see the night thronged.

It is an inhabitant of the sea, ascending rivers, principally about the end of winter, and, after passing a few months in fresh water, returning again to its oceanic residence.

Alas, that which I dare not look on, And yet, why should I shun that Image here, Which I continually about me bear?

"Don't run!" said Rudolph, and catching the woman roughly about the shoulders, thrust her behind him.

[They go to fight ridiculously, and ever as Scaramouch passes, Harlequin leaps aside, and skips so nimbly about, he cannot touch him for his Life; which after a while endeavouring in vain, he lays down his Sword.

V. be in motion &c adj.; move, go, hie, gang, budge, stir, pass, flit; hover about, hover round, hover about; shift, slide, glide; roll, roll on; flow, stream, run, drift, sweep along; wander &c (deviate) 279; walk &c 266; change one's place, shift one's place, change one's quarters, shift one's quarters; dodge; keep going, keep moving; put in motion, set in motion; move; impel &c 276; propel &c 284; render movable, mobilize.

One circumstance worthy of remark is that in all these discussions on the Constitution the people take no interest, and concern themselves solely about their own affairs, limiting their wishes to having a Constitution and getting rid of the aristocrats...

We are getting so much less particular nowadays about formalities.

And then the question is barely about the signification of one or both these WORDS; in that they not having both the same complex ideas to which they give these two names, one holds and the other denies, that these two names may be affirmed one of another.

What are clergymen perpetually about?

Nothing was left to him now but such courageous resistance as it was in his power to make, and he prepared, with the worn weapon which he still held in his firm grasp, to oppose as he best could the immense "hammer"to use General Grant's own illustrationwhich was plainly about to be raised to strike.

We are very much interested in the cleaning of city streets, and well we may be; but up to this day a larger number of men and women have concerned themselves actively about sweeping them of dust and dirt than of sweeping them free of these children.

I don't know who the other man is; I think he has been sent over specially about the powder.

" "Then turn straight about and go down the first street, and you'll reach it before the trolley-car you see up there can strike this corner.

The feathery white plume of steam, woven by the wind into soft, fantastic shapes, no longer capped the crater; its place had been usurped by thick, dark fumes of smoke swirling sullenly about.

When he came to think of it, he did not feel quite so sure practically about that matter of the utter natural selfishness of everybody.

I looked for him to retaliate, but he contented himself with swimming about forlornly a safe ten feet away.

" "And wherefore?" "Master," quoth Roger, glancing furtively about, "in my youth I did see a goodly man be-devilled by horrid spells by an ancient hag that was a noted witch, and he acted thusa poor wight that was thereafter damnably be-devilled into a small, black rabbit, see you" "Saw you all this indeed, Roger?" "All but the be-devilling, master, for being young and sore frighted I ran away and hid myself.

Armories, galleries and museums to which nothing is added have something funereal and ghostly about them; the mind is restricted in such a limited field of art.

My mind is fixed, and cannot, like a stone, Be turned at will indifferently about; And what I think, to that, and that alone, I utterance give, alike within, without; Nor can like mat be rolled and carried out.

Months it takes, years sometimes, in civilisation, with barriers of out on the prairie, alone, with the pulse of nature throbbing, throbbing, insistently all about, the process is very swift, so swift that an hour can suffice.

" "There, dear, it's all right, and you'll feel kind about me always when you remember me?"

Lavretsky began to thinkheaven knows whyabout Sir Robert Peel; then about French history; lastly, about the victory which he would have gained if he had been a general.

"Bold as this bird is in darting about and chasing larger ones, he is less than four inches longonly about the size of one of the hawk-moths that come out to feed, just as this valiant pygmy lancer leaves the flowers for the night.

He was very firm and lordly about it.

69 adverbs to describe how to  about  - Adverbs for  about