34 adverbs to describe how to thrills

So thought the Duchess Helen of Mortain where she sat upon her white palfrey screened by the thick-budded foliage, seeing nought but this golden-locked singer whose voice thrilled strangely in her ears.

He learned, too, that Joan was most delighted, and that her voice was softer and thrilled him more deeply, when he paid attention to that little, warm, living thing in the bearskin.

It was the first kiss I had ever had from any one since I was a little boy; and as I half struggled against but finally returned it, it thrilled me powerfully.

He was thrilled anew, and his resolve hesitated before the fine pallor of her face, the slim lines of her figure, and the glimpses of her smooth white skin through the openwork in the yoke and sleeves of her blouse.

A pleasant sense of relief thrilled softly through him.

Eurydice struggles in the clutch of bestial devils; Pluto, like a mediaeval Satan, frowns above the scene of fiendish riot; the violin of Orpheus thrills faintly through the infernal tumult.

There was no tenderness in his tone, but, oddly, she thrilled to its imperiousness, conscious of the old magnetism compelling her.

What is the magic in this tune so that if one hear it even on a cheap piano in an auxiliary hospital, or scraped thinly on a violin in a courtyard of Paris, it thrills one horribly?

Even nownow, after yearsI thrill intensely to recall the dread remembrance; but to live through it, to breathe daily the mawkish, miasmatic atmosphere, all vapid with the suffocating deathah, it was terror too deep, nausea too foul, for mortal bearing.

" The prose thrilled her even more intimately than the verse.

Ghost-stories invariably thrill us with additional horror when read during a journey, and by night in a town, in a house, and in a room where we have never been before.

It thrills me magnificently, and I am meaning it when I say that I think the women who do not feel it are torpid or cowardly.

It thrilled her naughtily to be addressed as La Marquise, to be accused of goings-on at the court of Louis XVIII, about which the less said the better.

Even nownow, after yearsI thrill intensely to recall the dread remembrance; but to live through it, to breathe daily the mawkish, miasmatic atmosphere, all vapid with the suffocating deathah, it was terror too deep, nausea too foul, for mortal bearing.

What joy can send The spirit thrilling onward with the wind, In untamed exultation, like the thought That fills the Homeward Bound?

And so it is atmosphere, in Tasso and Camoens, that counts much more than substance; both poets seem perpetually thrilled by something they cannot expressthe non so che of Tasso.

The day was Saturday, and he was pleasantly thrilled by the unwonted crowds on River Street, which he now entered.

The picture, as it flashed on the screen, positively thrilled them.

If it had been his own heart that he had hit in the sand his breast could hardly have thrilled more sharply.

" Many occurrences of a similarly thrilling character have been related in the camps of the contending armies.

But there was something splendidly thrilling in our conquest of that narrow upflung edge of mountain.

A clear rising cry floated high above the wailing of the storm; a wild, musical cry, beginning on a low note, and thrilling swiftly up to a keen, sharp-edged howl.

Does he suppose that after waiting all this time for the only man in the world who can keep me interested for four hours on a stretch and send my pulse up to a hundred and make me feel those thrilly thrills I've always longed fordoes he suppose that now I'm going to pay any attention to his silly notions about wills and things?

She had been tremendously thrilled and impressed by his dominance over the wolf.

But she could not wait, and her hand, fluttering restlessly upon his shoulder, crept up to touch his cheek, thrilling him unbearably, as if each sensitive finger-tip repeated her urgency.

34 adverbs to describe how to  thrills  - Adverbs for  thrills