25 Words to use with by
* Stage By-play.
These rash acts raised much passion of horror and amazement in the by-standers, for Othello had borne a fair reputation, and till he was wrought upon by the arts of a villain, which his own noble nature never gave him leave to suspect, he was a loving and a doting husband.
Henry got the Persimmon to bring him a copy of their by-laws.
But the Freudian material per sethe sex materialis it not merely the by-product of a certain state of society?
" Once outside the tavern he led me by many curious by-paths till I found myself on the river-side just below the Court-house.
But space was not plentiful within the walls, therefore they had to build the houses close together, with gables facing the narrow by-lanes.
Father, as you are princely in your birth, Famous in your estate, belov'd of all, And (which ads greatest glory to your greatnesse,) Esteemed wise, shew not such open folly Such palpable, such grosse, such mountaine folly; Be not the By-word of your neighbour Kings, The scandall of your Subjects, and the triumph Of Lenos, Macrios, and the hatefull stewes.
Your calm and clear way of looking at things keeps you from getting on the by-roads into which speculation as well as arbitrary imaginationwhich merely follows its own bentare so apt to lead one astray.
EXPERIENCES BY MEANS OF DOING.
Such libels private men may well endure, When states and kings themselves are not secure: 10 For ill men, conscious of their inward guilt, Think the best actions on by-ends are built.
An old man who had led a sinful life was dying, and his wife sent for a near-by preacher to pray with him.
The owner of the jacal in the mean time informed his guest through the interpreter that he had sent to a near-by ranchito for a man who had at least the local reputation of being quite a hunter.
But in this iron age of ours, we respect riches alone, (for a maid must buy her husband now with a great dowry, if she will have him) covetousness and filthy lucre mars all good matches, or some such by-respects.
She threw it on a near-by table and disappeared into the wardrobe room beyond.
The embankment had scarcely been completed when, on March 11, 1864, a storm of rain came on and nearly filled it up to the by-wash, when the bank began slowly to subside.
"He then led me about all the by-places in the house, and shew'd me fifty little backdoors, dark closets, and narrow passages in alterations and contrivances of which kind he had busied his head most part of the vacation; for he was scarce ever without some notable joyner or a bricklayer extraordinary, in pay, for twenty years.
What is this hidden difference in men by which one remains in the by-eddies of life, and another sweeps out on the crest of the rising tide of history?
REGULATOR OF ORGANIC RHYTHMS There are certain other singular by-effects of the gland in its relation to the periodic phenomena of the organism like hibernation, sleep, and the critical sex epochs of both sexes.
As he passed the door he drew all the latter part of his body together, exactly like a dog that fears a kick in the by-going.
It is the height of folly to refuse the present hour of happiness, or wantonly to spoil it by vexation at by-gones or uneasiness about what is to come.
In fact, it was not one of the regular meets, but what they called a by-meet, and not known to everybody.
Billy the Butcher was one of his by-names.]
This young cleric was amanuensis to the Duke of Gloucester, she learned, and was notoriously a by-blow of the Duke's brother, dead Lionel of Clarence.
It is true that a few of the sterner natures among them mingled menaces against the Bravo with their prayers for the dead, but these had no other effect on the matter in hand, than is commonly produced by the by-players on the principal action of the piece.
It is thought that many a headland, and various islands, that have contributed their shares in procuring the accolades for different European navigators, were known to the adventurers from Stonington and other by-ports of this country, long before science ever laid its eyes upon them, or monarchs their swords on the shoulders of their secondary discoverers.