39 adverbs to describe how to fetches

Mave Sullivan, have pity on meI heard some one name herI'll die without you give me a dhrink!" Mave hastily fetched some water, and in the course of two or three days Sarah's situation, thanks to the attention of Mave and her neighbours, was changed for the better, and she was conveyed home to the Prophet's cabin on a litteronly to die in a few days.

En bimeby, w'en he'd ax' Solomon some mo' queshtuns, he sez, sezee: "'Now, Solomon, I doan want you ter say a wo'd ter nobody 'bout meetin' me heah, but I wants you ter slip up ter de house, en fetch me some clo's en some shoes,I fergot ter tell you dat a man rob' me back yander on de road en swap' clo's wid me widout axin' me whuther er no,but you neenter say nuffin 'bout dat, nuther.

" Racey's fingers gripped the bottle-neck and fetched it forth.

"A blouse like that would be awfully fetching on you.

Meanwhile Sir Feeble Fainwou'd, who just at the moment of entering the bridal chamber has been hurriedly fetched away by Bellmour under the pretext of an urgent message from Sir Cautious concerning some midnight plot and an outbreak in the city, arrives at the house in great terror, and Sir Cautious (not knowing the reason of so late a visit) and he sit opposite each other for a while, gaping and staring in amaze.

No matter; fetch him, fetch him, bring him To answer to this matter at the bar.

And now the destroyer pauses,fetches breath,wipes his beaded brow, takes a wary view of the bearings of the tree,and then with a slow and watchful care recommences his work.

" That Idalian Ganymede was therefore fetched by Jupiter into heaven, Hephaestion dear to Alexander, Antinous to Adrian.

I'll change my state with any wretch, Thou canst from gaol or dunghill fetch; My pain's past cure, another hell, I may not in this torment dwell!

and that Greek and Latin, which heretofore (though never so impertinently fetched in) was counted admirable, because it had a learned twang; yet, now, such stuff, being out of fashion, is esteemed but very bad company!

"Then fetch it hither!" cried Little John, who waxed angry by this time.

Stay, let me see, ile fetch him to my house,

and that Greek and Latin, which heretofore (though never so impertinently fetched in) was counted admirable, because it had a learned twang; yet, now, such stuff, being out of fashion, is esteemed but very bad company!

" "Within three days," cried the enchanter, loudly, "fetch Rinaldo and Ricciardetto into the pass of Roncesvalles.

The Story of the Satraps In the year of grace 1381 (Nicolas begins) was Dame Anne magnificently fetched from remote Bohemia, and at Westminster married to Sire Richard, the second monarch of that name to reign in England.

"Well, you keep 'em in line with that little clump o' trees be'ind, an' you'll just fetch the crick nicely.

He's a goin' to fetch that housekeepin' book up north with him, an' my opinion is thet he's a-projec'ing to show it to Mr. Burroughs.

Within doors an eye may be on her, so she slips out to the wood-stack in the yard, ostensibly to fetch a log for the fire, and indulges in a few moments of flirtation behind the shelter of the faggots.

It was of khaki, with a divided skirt, and a peculiarly fetching jacket.

Shall we so often, when describing to our neighbors the color of something we have seen, refer them, not to some natural object in our neighborhood, but perchance to a bit of earth fetched from the other side of the planet, which possibly they may find at the apothecary's, but which probably neither they

*** A certain number of cold storage eggs at sixpence each are being released in Berlin and buyers are urged to "fetch them promptly.

I'll be up and about again, never fear; but you'd better be fetching a doctor, Axel, 'tis quicker that way.

He played our humorous parts, but he had a sweet voice for singing of ditties, and could fetch a tear as readily as a laugh, and he was also exceeding nimble at a dance, which was the strangest thing in the world, considering his great girth.

The outward air is drawn in by the vocal artery, and sent by mediation of the midriff to the lungs, which, dilating themselves as a pair of bellows, reciprocally fetch it in, and send it out to the heart to cool it; and from thence now being hot, convey it again, still taking in fresh.

"If he were pressed," they said, "by the Germans or the Swiss, and had not with him enough men to make his way back freely to his own borders, he had only to let them know, and they would expose their persons and their property to go after him and fetch him back safely within his said borders, but as for making war again at his instance, they were not free to aid him any more with either men or money."

39 adverbs to describe how to  fetches  - Adverbs for  fetches