26 adverbs to describe how to strangers

Oddly enough, the gentlemanly stranger seemed to reciprocate the Sergeant's interest; he gave him quite a long glance.

" "Unfortunately," Morriston replied, sympathetically restraining any approach to an argumentative tone, "your brother was practically a stranger to me, and to us all.

Such lawless frequenters of hotels, taverns, and cafés, form a kind of social police, and scarcely a stranger visits the place without his motives for the visit being canvassed, and his business often exposed, much to his great annoyance and inconvenience.

"As to my respectability," said the stranger, drily, "you must take that for granted at present; pester me with no inquiries; you can discover nothing more about me than I choose to make known.

There gathered nearly twenty young men, who seemed in most instances to be personally strangers to each other.

"That I will presently tell you," says the stranger, very composedly.

They retain the language, as well as the manners and customs, of Holland, and the tourist who strays among them finds himself, for the moment, distinctly a stranger in a strange land.

And then in a ship would I have sailed, cleaving the Ionian sea, to the fountain of Arethusa, to the home of my Aitnaian friend, who ruleth at Syracuse, a king of good will to the citizens, not envious of the good, to strangers wondrous fatherly.

His shrewd perception realized that dwelling as they did in separate spheres they were bound to be fundamentally strangers to one another.

"That's just it, the child," said the stranger, gravely.

" At sound of the strange voice Austin had wheeled about with a fierce look, and heavily the strangers plodded by.

" "The woman of the house, then," said the stranger, rather impatiently.

It was half-past eight when they finished dining, the hour when Chinatown begins to be most lively, most ready to amuse itself and, incidentally, strangers.

a. giving entertainment to strangers; kind to strangers HO'TTENTO'T, s. a native of the south of Africa HOWE'VER, ad.

Only the Mercedes was violently and loudly a stranger.

With a persistence which had left him peculiarly a stranger to the more frivolous and human sides of life he had worked toward the achievement of this ambition, and to-night, because that achievement was very near at hand, he was happy.

A real feeling for religion is seldom the fruit of such instruction; the children, as a rule, are glad after their Confirmation to have done with this unspiritual religious teaching, and so they remain, when their schooling is over, permanently strangers to the religious inner life, which the instruction never awakened in them.

The uncivill stranger Is at your suite arrested.

But I came alone; that party and its objects being utterly strangers to me.

All these people were so visibly strangers to the causes of the fatality, of this catastrophe, that their innocence led them like children to look elsewhere for the guilty.

" "And I amonly a stranger," said John.

I have before observed, that the general term, "every alien," includes all strangers whatsoever, and renders them subject to the King, and the laws, during their residence in this kingdom; and this is certainly true, whether the aliens be Turks, Moors, Arabians, Tartars, or even savages, from any part of the world.

"II know it's ratherrathererbold of me," said the stranger, apologetically.

" Bitterly the Stranger now regretted his unfortunate position.

He, therefore, as soon as he had sufficiently recovered his surprise, asked the stranger, civilly, to be seated, and desired to know if he had any message to leave for his master.

26 adverbs to describe how to  strangers  - Adverbs for  strangers