19 Words to use with ride
Before it's time for the ride home she must rest in a quiet place.
To the girl's observation, that he had a fine evening for his ride homeward, Verty repliedYes, that he had; that he could not go by, however, without coming to see her.
As the roundups of our modern cattlemen "ride circle," so did those velvet-jacketed, silver-braided horsemen gallop forth in pairs from a common center that was the chosen rodeo ground.
Judicial officers, ride circuits.
"All rides end," I said.
Never will the picture of that ride fade from his memory.
Their method consisted in making a healthy man ride horseback constantly, until an irritable weakness of the reproductive organs ensued, and a paralytic impotence followed.
It can't be reason, because your conscience over-rides your reason, and it can't be instinct, generally speaking, because conscience often over-rides instinct.
"After breakfast," Old Heck interrupted, scowling at the cowboy, "Chuck and Pedro had better both ride-line on the upper pasture.
As a fly turns to a maggot, so the corruption of the cunning man is the generation of an empiric; his works fly forth in small volumes, yet not all, for many ride post to chandlers and tobacco shops in folio.
Within two hours I was sentafter the fashion of an old-time courier, 'Ride! ride!
[Slang]; riot, storm; wreak, bear down, ride roughshod, out Herod, Herod; spread like wildfire (person).
"Ride southward," said Lord Berners, and panted as they buckled on his disused armor; "but harkee, Frayne!
We use tuh jump an we use tuh ride stick hosses an limbs offn trees.
We had a very pleasant ride thither, down a beautiful valley, through which the river Wenning runs; had on our right hand a line view of Hornby Castle, now in part gone to decay.
"I'll get a well-padded van so that they won't be badly jolted by the ride down-town.
I have myself seen the half-made riding-habit that was ultimately to clothe some wealthy damsel rejoicing in her morning ride act as the coverlet of a poor tailor's child stricken with malignant scarlet fever.
Ride etiam, quantumque lubet, Democrite ride Non nisi vana vides, non nisi stulta vides.
Saw one fellow ride bang into a pollard-willow, when there was an open gate close to himcut his cheek open, and lay; but some one said it was only Smith of Ewebury, so I rode on.