98 adverbs to describe how to cleans

The ladies are very comfortable and have as many visitors as they like in the afternoon at stated hours, and the rooms are very tempting with white walls and furniture, and scrupulously clean.

Eve must use wisdom and tact, as well as example; if she would have Adam accept her standard of cleanliness she must see to it that her example is beautifully clean instead of painfully so.

It was a handsome cabin, well kept, with white woodwork spotlessly clean, leather cushionsmuch better than one would expect.

The Tuesday morning Tribune greeted them at the breakfast table, and the presswork was remarkably clean and distinct.

This, a tolerably clean place, enclosed with strong bamboos, was the most habitable part of a long shed which supplied the place of the tribunal destroyed in a storm two years before.

Line a delicately clean stewpan with the ham cut in thin broad slices, carefully trimming off all its rusty fat; cut up the beef and veal in pieces about 3 inches square, and lay them on the ham; set it on the stove, and draw it down, and stir frequently.

Prepare the head, either by skinning or cleaning the skin very nicely; split it in two; take out the brains, and put it into boiling water; add the leeks and seasoning, and simmer very gently for 4 hours.

The floor was almost immaculately clean.

The interior of the church is spacious, wonderfully clean, and decorated at the high altar end in most tasteful style.

In brief, such injuries must be kept scrupulously neat and surgically clean.

The house was exquisitely clean and orderly, the food appetizing, the conversation pleasant and profitable, and the atmosphere genial.

It is then allowed to cool, a sheet being thrown around the carcase, to prevent the air from discolouring the newly-cleaned skin.

The new arrival was a young man in a surprisingly clean and beautifully fitting uniform, and wearing a helmet instead of the cloth cap commonly worn in the trenches.

How do you account for that?" "Sir," I replied, "last week my little son had his knockabout suit dry-cleaned in Perthshire by the petrol-substitute process.

The tiny house was exceedingly clean, and comfortably furnished.

A lukewarm leg of mutton, very underdone, was on the table, the cloth of which was by no means clean; the dishes, which contained quite cold vegetables, were cracked and did not match; the bread was of the commonest kind, that which is called "household;" the knives were badly cleaned, and the plate was worn off the forks and spoons.

Or if a martin has been in ahead of the fox, he'll find only the skull, the end of the tail, the feet, and a few of the larger bones, and they'll be picked mighty clean at that.

His .303 was freshly cleaned and oiled.

The C.O. pronounced Matilda to be moderately clean.

Small sticks, covered with wash-leather pads, are the best things to use for cleaning the glasses inside, and a clean duster for polishing the outside.

Being a physiologist tells me that your sort of bodya transparently clean and strong and utterly unconscious bodygoes with a transparently clean and strong and utterly unconscious soul.

If your dog must stroll into my orderly-room, will you please see that she is kept reasonably clean?

Finally, three months and twenty-seven days from the date of the earthquake, having traversed only 900 odd English miles, I let go in the Venice lagoon, in the early morning of the 10th September, the lateen sail and stone anchor of a Maltese speronare, which I had found, and partially cleaned, at Trieste; and thence I passed up the Canalazzo in a gondola.

The Romping Betsy was a large, full-rigged brig, not overly clean, and had evidently been in commission for some time.

Kashán, which stands on a vast plain about two thousand feet above sea-level, is picturesque and unusually clean for an Eastern town.

98 adverbs to describe how to  cleans  - Adverbs for  cleans