36 adverbs to describe how to books

The American home book of decoration upstairs.

The Katy Kruse dolly book.

R568510. American books overseas.

"I've been reading about it in a book downstairs.

And the book which sets before us, so impartially yet so eloquently, the innumerable petty misunderstandings and contemptible jealousies which brought about this direful result, is one of the most mournful of books.

Yet the great characteristic of this book is the large-hearted tolerance of comment and judgment which makes it emphatically a friendly book.

heah ter-morrer, atter I's look' de books en 'counts ober some mo', en den we'll straighten ou' business all up.' "Mars Jeems 'lowed

The orison repeated in his arms, For God to bless her sire and all mankind; The book, the bosom on his knee reclined, Or how sweet fairy-lore he heard her con (The play-mate ere the teacher of her mind) All uncompanion'd else her years had gone, Till now in Gertrude's eyes their ninth blue summer shone.

Many good books have fortunately been popular; many bad books, still more fortunately, have been unpopular.

Holcombe with his note-book, I with my mending, and the boy with one of Lida's hands frankly under his on the red table-cloth.

Being written for his own eye, it is singularly outspoken; and its naïve, gossipy, confidential tone makes it a most diverting book, as it is, historically, a most valuable one.

Malone was far too good a book-collector to suggest a third method of discovering a book's imperfectionsnamely, reading it.

Jolly good book, the 'Pilgrim's Progress'!"

One has but to cast one's eyes over one's shelves to realize, as we see the familiar names, how literally the books that bear them are living men, merely transmigrated from their fleshly forms into the printed word.

Forty-eight more scrolls, resplendent with silver knobs and coquettishly tied with purple cord, reposed in an adjoining book-case; the forty-eight books, manifestly, of the Panopolitan bard's Dionysiaca.

She no longer prayed with a book, mechanically and by rote, but mentally, with earnestness, and with the understanding.

One doesn't often see such vigor, size and comeliness in these degenerate days," said Randal, mentally booking the fine figure in the red shirt.

It answered, in case of a surprise, to pass off for a tabib book of prescriptions; all that was necessary was to slip off the paper that was in use inside one of the folds and expose to the gaze of the inquisitive individual merely a book or rather the outer case of one, in which I had written several recipes in Urdu.

But scattered about the room were traces of numerous students: hand-bags, polished boxes of instruments, in one place a large drawing covered by newspaper, and in another a prettily bound copy of News from Nowhere, a book oddly at variance with its surroundings.

"And you?" to Hornsby, "onless you're kalkilatin' to take a little 'pasear' you're booked outside.

III THE CACHE Outwardly the book accorded ill with its surroundings.

I have been working at literature like a galley-slave; have contributed no end of stuff to the Quarterlies; and am engaged upon a book,yes Gil, positively a book,which I hope may do great things for me if ever I can finish it.

While based on the author's previous Essentials in Mediaeval and Modern History, in the present volume the plan has been so reorganized, the scope so extended, and the matter so largely rewritten, that the result is practically a new book.

There is reason to believe that the muster-book being, as above said, primarily an account-book, the words 'whether prest or not' were originally placed at the head of the column so that it might be noted against each man entered whether he had been paid 'prest-money' or not.

"Well, the book" asserted Pulz pugnaciously.

36 adverbs to describe how to  books  - Adverbs for  books