60 collocations for d

2. D flat piccolos and C flute.

A short time after his father said to him, "I will wed your wife.

Nor did he turn aside from other maids, But loved the woman-faces and dear eyes; And sometimes thought, "One day I wed a maid, And make her mine;" but never came the maid, Or never came the hour, that he might say, "I wed this maid."

For one may wed a cousin.

Go, therefore, thy work here is done, goget thee to thy knightly lovers, wed this Duke who seeks theedo aught you will but go, leave me to my hammers and these green solitudes.

He did not wed, however, until he was forty-three, and then he wed an eighteen-year-old girl, who was, they say, a very good woman, and who did her best to make her husband very happy.

The king prescribes that each lover shall then lead his forces in mortal battle and that the victor shall wed the princess.

According to Chrysander, a certain J.C. Schieferdecker, who is famous for nothing else, wed the daughter, and "got the pretty job" ("erhielt den schönen Dienst").

Mahomet-ben-Soltan, you shall never wed the young girl.

The freckled IRIS owns a fiercer flame, And three unjealous husbands wed the dame.

"No, I don't d-doubt, n-nor I don't th-think much about 'em; they're t-too deep for me, and I ler-let 'em alone.

150 No! petrified by dulness and disdain, Beyond the feeling of another's pain, The tear of pity ne'er bedew d his eye, Nor his lewd bosom felt the social sigh!

"I cannot wed my country's foe," she faltered.

"If she will consent, I will wed her forthwith.

" "Well, for God's sake," retorted Pap Himes testily, "why don't you wed the gal and be done with it?

Hed his hand up luk thet.

ah, weary soul, In all the world alone I stand, With none to wed their hearts to mine, Or link in mine a loving hand.

But since it was decreed, auspicious King, In Britain's right that thou shouldst wed the main, Heaven, as a gage, would cast some precious thing, And therefore doom'd that Lawson should be slain.

" "But Venice cannot wed the heiress!"

" "But thou wilt acknowledge if she will have her way she must leave the castle; for thou art bent upon thy waythou wilt not listen to reason; so, see to it, and wed her straightway ifif thou canst."

To what a person, of what eminence, Ripe expectation of what faculties, Manners and vertues you would wed your Kingdoms?

You talk of letters, but of them the laird Has never brought a single one to me; But when I've seen him I have never cared How soon he went, for he told me that ye Were either dead or faithlessso he said I'd better wed the live, than mourn the dead.

Thet's how I hed the damn luck ter meet up with this Sanchez I was a speakin' 'bout.

She then bids Anfrize and Filene plead their cause, which they do, and she declares in favour of the latter's suit, commanding at the same time that the unsuccessful Anfrize shall wed the forlorn Lycoris.

"D-a-m' nig-ger!" grinned the sentinel, approvingly, looking at us to see if we also enjoyed the incident.

60 collocations for  d