10 adverbs to describe how to silver

Opposite to the lens there is placed a round-bottomed flask, silvered inside.

The filmy disc of the moon had risen in the east, and was already faintly silvering the shadowy scenery below, while yet Sir Bale stood in the mellow light of the western sun, which still touched also the summits of the opposite peaks of Morvyn Fells.

On the cover of soft snow-white leather was incrusted a long silver lily, intersected by a tuft of big violet thistles.

It is silvered internally, and provided with a powerful rotary agitator that favors the admixture of the water and gas.

The United States at that time had neither gold nor silver regularly in circulation (except in California), and there was a long-continued discussion of "a return to specie payments," which meant the return to a metallic standard, and the redemption of greenbacks on demand.

For example, a shirt was called lime; a chambermaid, limogère; sheets, limanswords all derived from the gipsy word lima, a shirt: they called an écu, a rusquin or rougesme, from rujia, the common word for money; a rich man, rupin; a house, turne; a knife, chourin, from rup, turna, and chori, which, in the gipsy tongue, mean respectively silver, castle, and knife.

Yes, it was just as he remembered it twenty years beforethe same dingy old silver, the same little heap of gold, the same tray of tarnished jewelry glimmered in the faint light of a solitary gas-burner behind the murky glass.

Instead of specially silvering a flask inside, it will be found convenient to make use of one of the silvered globes which are sold as Christmas tree ornaments.

The print on the card was deeply silvered.

He thought more about the silver downstairs, and what it was likely to realize in the auction-room.

10 adverbs to describe how to  silver  - Adverbs for  silver