9 adverbs to describe how to window

What can I fetch, sir?" Willan Blaycke leaned both his arms on the window-sill, and looking into the eyes of Victorine Dubois replied: "Marry, girl, thou hast already fetched me to such a pass that thy voice rings in my ears.

If there is a window upstairs over that one, you might drop something out on him, or borrow Parks's pistol and shoot him" "That would be pretty cowardly, wouldn't it?"

The classrooms were high and well-lighted, with many large windows, never either very clean or very dirty, which let in a flood of our uncompromisingly brilliant American daylight upon the rows of little seats and desks screwed, like those of an ocean liner, immovably to the floor, as though at any moment the building was likely to embark upon a cruise in stormy waters.

There was no window inside, only the light that streamed through the door, so that for an instant she could see nothing.

In the auditorium are two rose windowsone representing the heavenly city which "cometh down from God out of Heaven," with six small windows beneath, emblematic of the six water pots referred to in John xi:6.

He might eat in the library, if necessary; though, all the windows of that wing of the house opening outward, there was little danger of being seen by any but the regular domestics of the family, all of whom were to be let into the secret of his presence, and all of whom were rightly judged to be perfectly trustworthy.

COUNTY ATTORNEY: (scoffingly) Oh, windows!

Literally, "a window."

"I was so tired that three miles sounded like ten, and besides that, a little way off from the road I saw dimly a lighted window.

9 adverbs to describe how to  window  - Adverbs for  window