115 adverbs to describe how to winds

The weather continues fine, with southerly winds. 21st

The shipping is exposed to strong westerly winds.

It was the fairest of summer forenoons (to me, I mean; by the almanac it was only the 5th of April), and one of the fairest of quiet landscapes: broad fields rising gently to the horizon, and before me, winding upward, a grassy lane open on one side, and bordered on the other by a deep red gulch and a zigzag fence, along which grew vines, shrubs, and tall trees.

Strong easterly winds.

She had wound herself tightly around him and was clasping his waist with all her force, as though trying to break his vigorous body in two.

It stands on a gentle hill, in the midst of thick woods overhanging the Wye, which winds along the valley at a great depth beneath.

Clara smiled; and immediately chose the pale woodbine, or convolvulus, which so carelessly winds in and out among the bushesthis is an emblem of loving tenderness.

Then she got more scared, wound her arms tight around me, and we both sank.

For about half a mile this was our road also, but after that distance, the Ges route branched off to the right, and the views of Argelès, and the rest of the valley from it, as we wound upwards, were particularly lovely.

The bright broad river's gushing tide Sleeps, winding onward, far and wide, And we are half-way, struggling o'er To yon unknown and silent shore.

I say fairly because when one has to get up three or four times to see whether the accumulated rattle of rifle fire is going to lead to a battle, or turn out only to be merely "wind up," it rather disturbs one's rest.

By an ancient path, which winds considerably, one may ride to the summit, where is a small oblong plain with the foundations of ancient buildings.

A Wet wind off northeast.

Although they had looked down the stern slopes to the lower Rockies, they did not see the girl who followed the loosely winding trail.

[Parallel belief in magic sympathy between the animal shape of a were-wolf and his or her ordinary human shape: by wounding the wolf you simultaneously wound the man or woman.]

One cold night when I sat comfortably at my fireplace, listening to the wind outside, and feeling all the ease of a man at peace with himself, my mind took flight to my snowy field sides and I thought of the trees there waiting and resting through the winter.

I know it's like my cheek to talk to you like this," he wound up, abruptly and desperately.

The Padre rejoined them ten minutes later, very badly winded, but bringing a case of Woodbines along with him.

My path now wound steadily downward at a slope of perhaps one in eight along the hillside, obliging me to turn my back to the mountains, while my view in front was cut off by a sharp cross-jutting ridge immediately, before me.

The river Loire winds beautifully beneath the terrace.

At certain points in the course of the Colorado of the West you can drop a plumb line six thousand feet before it will reach the bosom of the current; and you can only gain the water level by turning backward for scores of miles and winding laboriously down some subsidiary cañon, itself a chasm of awful grandeur.

One such drops below the plunging slope that the Kearsarge trail winds over, perilously, nearing the pass.

Meantime, I will wind up my business in readiness to join you.

He seemed rather stupid than calm; yet as he mechanically wound his queue into place once more above the shaven forehead, his fingers moved surely and deftly.

From beneath the sternly and too starched white shirtwaist and the unwilted linen cravat wound high about her throat and sustained there with a rhinestone horseshoe, it was as if a wave of color had started deep down, rushing up under milky flesh into her hair.

115 adverbs to describe how to  winds  - Adverbs for  winds