38 Words to use with taking

At Trinity College, Cambridge, from his taking his B.A. Degree to his taking charge of the Cambridge Observatory as Plumian Professor CHAPTER IV.

With this conduct of the French Government it will be proper to take into view the public audience given to the late minister of the United States on his taking leave of the Executive Directory.

Fancy reading of my own disappearance within a few days of its taking place, in the middle of the Atlantic!"

he cried, "prithee take care, Beltane,seethou hast displaced the bandage, thy wound bleedeth amainso will I bind it up for thee" But Beltane, nothing heeding, turned and strode back into the green and there fell to donning his armour as swiftly as he mightalbeit stealthily.

For a schoolgirl's friendship is like the seed of grass, blown hither and thither; while only one or two of a sowing take root in some hidden corner and grow.

I follow sins beyond the moment of their acting; I find in all that the last consequence is death; and to my eyes, the pretty maid who thwarts her mother with such taking graces on a question of a ball, drips no less visibly with human gore than such a murderer as yourself.

So dismal a thing is this commonly judged, that those that at their departure out of this life, are piously and virtuously disposed, do usually reckon the taking care for the relief of the poor Ministers' widows, to be an opportunity of as necessary charity as the mending the highways, and the erecting of hospitals.

The numbers seen by us were indeed incredible; the stem of every grass-tree (xanthorrhoea) which plant grows abundantly upon the hills, was covered with them, and on their taking wing the air appeared, as it were, in perfect motion. (*Footnote.

" How under these extraordinary circumstances did the Peerage take sides, old blood and new blood, the governing families and the so-called "backwoodsmen," they who were carving their own names, and they who relied upon the inheritance of names carved by others?

Not until the Peace Conference had disclosed the situation did a change in policy take place.

Hewell, he's a taking sort of fellow; everybody likes him who knows himreally knows himand speaks well of him.

But w'at could he do but say yas? "'Den it is unde'stood, is it,' says Mis' Polly, w'en he had spoke, 'dat I am ter take cha'ge er de house?' "'All right, Polly,' says Mars Sam, wid a deep sigh.

[Footnote 7: Is this a misprint for 'so you must take husbands'for better and worse, namely? or is it a thrust at his mother'So you mis-take husbands, going from the better to a worse'?

Nay, I'll ru-ru-run; faith, you shall not n-n-need to b-b-b-bid him ta-t-take m-me away; for Re-Re-Redcap will r-ru-run rarely.

I was in a vein of profound meditation on the news I had just received, and absorbed to that extent that I kept on my course along the sidewalk in front of the prison, walking towards the sentry, and did not hear his challenge till it had been repeated three times, when I heard his rifle rattle as it came down to the take aim, and suddenly became conscious that I had heard a sound, the meaning of which must be "Qui vive?"

10 Did I for this take pains to teach Our zealous ignorants to preach, And did their lungs inspire; Gave them their texts, show'd them their parts, And taught them all their little arts, To fling abroad the fire?

On the 8th he reached Hong-Kong, where he found little to detain him; the most important matter being the formal taking possession, in the Queen's name, of the recently ceded peninsula of Kowloon.

I remembered my success with the monkey on poor little Madam Archfield's backnay, perhaps 'twas the same, my familiar taking shape.

I found Humayun's pony taking shelter under a rock, so, mounting it, I galloped after Peterson, gave him the order, and then closed the Levies on their right.

Smith and Trumbull were to follow the take shore until they came in sight of our last camp.

A careful examination of note-taking shows that there are rules or principles, which, when followed, have much to do with increasing ability in study.

Such a taking song; so simple, and yet so pretty, and so thoroughly distinctive.

The proud look of an Iroquois taking spoils disappeared from the face of the youngest, giving way to uneasy anguish.

Grief may weaken the selfish and the weak; it may make children of the foolish and drivellers; by grief the inefficient may come to the fulness of their inefficiency;but out of the bitter cup the strong take strength, though it may be with shuddering.

Call upon him at any hour from two to five, he insists on your taking tiffin: and such a tiffin!

38 Words to use with  taking