271 collocations for honours

For so he honours his father most truly; for he longs and strives to be like that Father; to be good as God is good, holy as God is holy, beneficent and useful even as God is infinitely beneficent and useful; being, in one word, perfect, as his Father in heaven is perfect.

So now will I abide with thee and love and honour thee, and be thy son indeed.

I fear GOD, and honour the King, I wish to do no ill, and to be benevolent to all mankind.'

If to honour his memory may be thought to belong to any one community more than to another; surely, my Brethren, we shall not fail to assume to ourselves so pleasing a duty, so honourable a distinction.

She puts into my hand her holy book of heavenly language, and asks me to read its words before God, to unite with the angels and saints in honouring God.

Let us obey him for obedience' sake, and honour him for very honour's sake, as the young emigrant in foreign lands obeys and honours the parents whom he will never see again on earth; and let us look forward, like him, to the day when him whom we cannot see on earth we may, perhaps, be permitted to see in heaven, as the reward- -and for what higher reward can man wish?of faith and obedience.

O first begin with me, and Mercy slay, And thy thrice honoured Son, that now beneath doth stray.

These messages he committed to the embassy, honouring right worshipfully those reverend men.

I love ye, I honour ye, the first and best of all men, And where that fair opinion leads, 'tis usual

To do a man good in any way, you must sympathise with himthat is, know what he feels, and reflect the feeling in your own mirror; and to be a good doctor, one must love to heal; must honour the art of the physician and rejoice in it; must give himself to it, that he may learn all of it that he canfrom its root of love to its branches of theory, and its leaves and fruits of healing.

The boy searched for a matchbox and lighted these candles, not because he needed more light than he already had; but because he thought that this was one way to honour the dead.

THE GUINEA-HEN so kindly condescending to honour my poor house THE YOUNG GUINEA-COCK Mamma, there are still others coming!

"And you honour women for their sake?"

" "Did the Duc de Guise honour your festival with his presence?

The ladies participated in honouring the Hungarian hero.

Then about the mound The warriors rode, and raised a mournful song For their dead king; exalted his brave deeds, Holding it fit men honour their liege lord, Praise him and love him when his soul is fled.

Mrs. Sinclair to Mr. Rollo Russell January, 1900 I loved and honoured my dear lady more than any one I ever served.

I am a young Man, I confess, yet I honour the grey Head as much as any one; however, when in Company with old Men, I hear them speak obscurely, or reason preposterously (into which Absurdities, Prejudice, Pride, or Interest, will sometimes throw the wisest) I count it no Crime to rectifie their Reasoning, unless Conscience must truckle to Ceremony, and Truth fall a Sacrifice to Complaisance.

And as I loved and honoured those great Princes living, and lamented over them when dead, so I would gladly raise them up a Monument of Praise as lasting as any thing of mine can be; and I chuse to do it at this time, when it is so unfashionable a thing to speak honourably of them.

"There is no harm in drinking with reasonable moderation[10]; and we may honour the guest who, warmed by wine, talks of such noble deeds and instances of virtue as his memory may suggest.

Such feelings do you honour, and no man need be ashamed of desiring to receive a parent's blessing.

The gentlemen snapped the stems of their glasses to honour the sacredness of the toast, and there was such a shouting and pledging as might well have turned a girl's head.

This intercourse of our affections I her to serve, she thus to honour me Bewrays the truth of our elections, Delighting in this mutual sympathy.

Come, daughter, let us now depart To honour the worthy valour of the shepherd With our rewards.

This feast was "instituted to honour all the saints, known and unknown, and, according to Urban IV., to supply any deficiencies in the faithful's celebration of saints' feasts during the year.

271 collocations for  honours