120 collocations for chills

I had heard tales to chill the blood, of whole ships' crews stricken and dying like flies.

He shivered as if with cold; and the little Pilgrim felt that there breathed from the depths of darkness at their feet an icy wind which touched her hands and feet and chilled her heart.

The aspect of the neighbouring land, so barren, rugged and inhospitable, chilled the feelings, and gave to the scene a sombre hue which the weather itself might not have imparted.

No cold Can chill its ardor!

The summer had passed, that summer which was to have brought back the sealers; and autumn had come to chill the hopes as as the body.

If The Babe sees a paper he will go to our hotel, and" "If we're hanging by that thread to eternity, God help us," I replied bitterly, for the grim humour of my brother's speech chilled my marrow.

hide that bleeding Wound, it chills my Soul!

And I've got a home on the other side, hallelujah Jordan's River is chilly and cold, hallelujah Chills the body but not the soul, hallelujah

This damp wind chills my very bones.

Then cold doubt crept in; something of the monstrosity of the proceeding chilled his enthusiasm for occult research.

220 Nor this, nor that, is standard right or wrong, Till minted by the mercenary tongue; And what is conscience but a fiend of strife, That chills the joys, and damps the scenes of life, The wayward child of Vanity and Fear, The peevish dam of Poverty and Care? Unnumber'd woes engender in the breast That entertains the rude, ungrateful guest. POET.

No stiff, silent formalism chills youthful spirits.

All this solitary, passionate labor had produced only books, blackened paper, that would be scattered to the winds, whose cold leaves chilled his hands as he turned them over.

It is not desireable to dilute the gastric juice, nor to chill the stomach with large amount of cold liquid.

As yet the trembling year is unconfirmed, And Winter oft at eve resumes the breeze, Chills the pale morn, and bids his driving sleets Deform the day delightless; so that scarce The bittern knows his time, with bill engulfed, To shake the sounding marsh, or from the shore The plovers when to scatter

And now, indeed, Beltane became aware of a cold wind, foul and noisome, a deadly, clammy air breathing of things corrupt, chilling the flesh with swift unthinking dread; and, halting in disgust, he looked about him left and right.

shalt thou groan distrest, Grief swell thine eyes, and terrour chill thy breast.

A single apprehension chills my brain.

But though the storms Have chilled our forms, And we've been pinched together, The dark, blue day Is passed away; We've reached the warm spring weather!

In his latter days, distress and disappointment probably chilled the fire of his eye, and the advance of age destroyed the animation of his countenance.

And common sense will point out, that, while purity of air is essential, a temperature must be secured which shall not chill the patient.

The seventeenth century is only womansee the tapestries, the delightful goddesses who have discarded their hoops and heels to appear in still more delightful nakedness, the noble woods, the tall castles, with the hunters looking round; no servile archaeology chills the fancy, it is but a delightful whim; and this treatment of antiquity is the highest proof of the genius of the seventeenth century.

High mountains, in the neighbourhood of a place, make it cooler, by chilling the air that is carried over them by the winds.

At this proposition, there came among us a very uncomfortable silence; for not only did it chill the warmth of our hopes; but seemed like to provide us with a fresh terror, who were already acquainted with too much.

When you are waiting for it to boil you should scald your teapot so that its coldness may not chill the hot water when you come to the actual making of the tea.

120 collocations for  chills