25 adverbs to describe how to sorest

He used to tie her to a peach tree in the yard, and whip her till there was no sound place to lay another stroke, and repeat it so often that her back was kept continually sore.

Although her heart was strangely sore, she nevertheless felt proud of what Tom had accomplished.

"At last, with a beating heart, though half perished with cold, and with terribly sore feet, the detective began to realize that the tramp was gradually working his way back towards Kensington.

She could concoct no reason for remaining at home herself; her throat had been a trifle sore last night, but not even the memory of it could bring it back this morning.

I was trapesing along distreshful an' moighty sore, in a street just away off the Strand here, when I obsarved the docthor-man that was at the Crystial Palace station a-smilin' an' beckonin' at me from a door.

So for the rest of that day Jack and I lay on our backs in the shade, doing nothing, but exceedingly sore one against the other for these mischances.

" "My wrists and ankles are awfully sore.

The soles of my feet are infernally sore.

Having no more Indian reserves to visit, I took the stage, and rumbled over corduroys, republicans, stumps, and ruts, until my ribs were literally sore, through London, Xenia, and Lebanon, to Cincinnati.

I fear thy poor bones are mightily sore," quoth Little John soberly, but with a sly twinkle in his eyes.

But I guess Dad Cumberland'll be mighty sore on me.

An attempt of Dorothy to revive his former sportiveness was the single occasion on which his quiet demeanor yielded to a violent display of grief; he burst into passionate weeping, and ran and hid himself, for his heart had become so miserably sore that even the hand of kindness tortured it like fire.

It ached inside and was sore outside, and he did not seem to have any control of it at all.

But he'll be sore secretly at you, and where there is a question of choice of cashier between your father and another maneven though the other man has not been so long in the bankhow do you think his mind will work; I mean, if you lose?

Sair, serve, sore, sorely.

He seemed vastly sore at himself.

Till that a Brize*, a scorned little creature, Through his faire hide his angrie sting did threaten, And vext so sore, that all his goodly feature And all his plenteous pasture nought him pleased: So by the small the great is oft diseased**.

Too sick of it alltoo sore.

" In like vein, we have: "This world nis but a thurghfare ful of wo, And we ben pilgrimes, passinge to and fro; Deeth is an ende of every worldly sore.

Well, after I had served time breaking clay I didn't care anything about bookstoo sore, too dogged, too full of hate.

Dead sore on the game.

Referring to Cicero's exile, he had made that sore subject doubly sore by declaring that it was not Cicero's unpopularity, so much as his unfortunate propensity to bad verse, which had been the cause of it.

"How do you feelpretty sore?

Adv. unwillingly &c adj.; grudgingly, with a heavy heart; with a bad, with an ill grace; against one's wishes, against one's will, against the grain, sore against one's wishes, sore against one's will, sore against one's grain; invita Minerva [Lat.]; a contre caeur [Fr.]; malgre soi

It is horribly sore to-night and another sick person added to our tentthree out of fine injured, and the most troublesome surfaces to come.

25 adverbs to describe how to  sorest  - Adverbs for  sorest