54 Words to use with adventures

FLAMES OF THE STORM, by W. C. Tuttle. (In Adventure magazine, Nov. 30, 1922)

For upon the element of imagination depends, largely, our classification of works of fiction into novels, romances, and mere adventure stories.

(Adventure series)

(The Spirit of adventure series)

Barnaby True was a good, honest boy, as boys go, but yet was he not ever allowed altogether to forget that his grandfather had been that very famous pirate, Captain William Brand, who, after so many marvellous adventures (if one may believe the catchpenny stories and ballads that were writ about him), was murdered in Jamaica by Captain John Malyoe, the commander of his own consort, the Adventure galley.

The adventure log, by Nina Millen & Hazel Orton.

The Adventure boys and the Island of Sapphires.

Many eighteenth-century comedies are single-adventure plays, or dual-adventure plays, in the sense that the main action sometimes stands aside to let an underplot take the stage.

Adventure islands.

Adventure waits.

The adventure club.

(In Adventure comics, Apr. 1946)

Intrigue for empire, an adventure-mystery.

Adventure north.

In his farceslet no one despise the technical lessons to be learnt from a good farcethere is always an adventure afoot, whose development we eagerly anticipate.

(In Complete adventure novelettes.

An Adventure CHAPTER XIII.

In addition to the adventure element, of which there is an abundance of the usual London kind, a most satisfying kind it is, too, there is a thread of romance involving a wealthy, tired young man who takes the trip on the Elsinore, and the captain's daughter.

Maister Alexander Galloway Person, of Kynkèll, was with us in thir Illis (the Hebridæ), and be adventure liftet up ane see tangle, hyng and full of mussil schellis," one of which he opened, "bot than he was mair astonist than afore, for he saw na fische in it bot ane perfit schapin foule.

'Then why do you grieve when you've got what you like best?' 'You don't understand, Jemima, what a spirit of adventure means.'

At the beginning of this stage we delight in Robinson Crusoe; we read eagerly a multitude of adventure narratives and a few so-called historical novels; but in each case we must be lured by a story, must find heroes and "moving accidents by flood and field" to appeal to our imagination; and though the hero and the adventure may be exaggerated, they must both be natural and within the bounds of probability.

With this reservation only I can call Wolf-lure about the best adventure-novel that the present season has produced.

To him it mattered not whether the adventure partook of romance and espionage, or of intrigue and murder.

Henry was already afoot on the adventure perilous.

" Emboldened by their kindness, I once more step forward with the journal of my last and most considerable voyage, and I shall feel content if the narration of my adventures procures for my readers only a portion of the immense fund of pleasure derived from the voyage by THE AUTHORESS.

54 Words to use with  adventures