47 adverbs to describe how to what

" Now this is precisely what the New York hackman invariably does before he gathers up the reins and urges on his "galled jades."

He had almost beforehand settled what he thought of it, and practically what he intended to say.

Afterward, whythen" "Well; what then?" as he hesitated, growing red again.

Nothing peculiar to Shakespeare; but merely what was equally true of thousands of other young men, his contemporaries, and hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of those of antecedent and succeeding generations.

If to be perfect In a certain sphere, What matter, soon or late, or here or there?

He had in his instinct alone everything requisite to live in a state of nature; in his cultivated reason he has barely what is necessary to live in a state of society.

"What queer kind uv craft is that?" He pointed back to the mouth of the now distant inlet, from which a curious-looking black craft was emerging at what seemed to be great speed.

But what more dim or distantmore drearily, hopelessly notional, than that thought?' 'Only the thought that there is none.

"Butler," sez I when I hearn on't, "I can't imagine what a butler duz.

"Emily who? Emily what?" Captain Brisket turned and regarded her in amazement.

All which thinges beyng considered, I hope that diuers knowing what euil, and mischief there is in daunses, will giue them ouer and cast them away, thinking or supposing, that in that, that thei haue retained & fauoured them, euen unto this present, they haue rather done it thorowe ignoraunce, than thorowe stubburnesse or selfe will.

And thei answeren alle with o voys, what so evere zee commanden, it schalle be don.

Who thwarts what fondly all expect, He bath disturbed a hornet's nest; The empire which they should protect, It lieth plundered and oppress'd.

If he does so, he only desires what the New Testament formally, and word for word, promises him; whatsoever be the meaning of the term, he is not to be blamed for using it.

"What, with Gerald lying there!" happily.

Whether the executive government possesses any, or what, power under the Constitution, independently of Congress, to prevent or punish this and similar offenses against the law of nations was a subject which engaged the attention of our most eminent statesmen in the time of the Administration of General Washington and on the occasion of the French Revolution.

For this is what it isonly perhaps less a comedy than a tragedy.

How, when, at length, he reach'd his home, His heart foretold a gentle doom; With tears of fondness in his eyes, Hoping to cause a glad surprize; Full of submission, pondering o'er What he too lightly priz'd before; The curse with tenfold vengeance fell.

So now they feel what lordly Love can do, That proudly practise to deface his name; In vain they wrastle with so fierce a foe; Of little sparks arise a blazing flame.

But this circumstance affords no valid argument for considering any of these English terms to be mere adjectives; and, say what we will, it is plain that they have not the signification of adjectives, nor can we ascribe to them the construction of adjectives, without making their grammatical agreement to be what it very manifestly is not.

Meantime, what of Quasimodo? He had rushed to her cell when the king's troops, having beaten off the vagrants, entered the church, and it was empty!

Yet didn't you see, yet didn't you see, What naughty tricks they put upon me?

Rome was in want of a good naval station in the upper Adriatica want which was not supplied by her possessions on the Italian shore; her new allies, especially the Greek commercial towns, saw in the Romans their deliverers, and doubtless did what they could permanently to secure so powerful a protection; in Greece itself no one was in a position to oppose the movement; on the contrary, the praise of the liberators was on every one's lips.

But regardless of what the mentally, physically, and morally perfect individuals might do after attaining their perfection, anarchy assumes the millennium,and the millennium is yet a long way off.

But I must Justifie what privately, I censurd to you: my ambition is (Even by my hopes and love to Poesie) To live to perfect such a worke, as this, Clad in such elegant proprietie Of words, including a mortallitie.

47 adverbs to describe how to  what  - Adverbs for  what