600 collocations for hunts

My husband hunts deer on the Koyukun mountains.

I'd been down there hunting up a man reported, by a wharf-rat of my acquaintance, to have just returned from a two years' whaling voyage.

I had hunted the fox with themvery little to my credit; and shot wildfowl in their company with better success.

As this was to be dangerous work, on account of the Indians, who were riding all over that section of the country, and as I would be obliged to go from five to ten miles from the road each day to hunt the buffaloes, accompanied by only one man with a light wagon for the transportation of the meat, I of course demanded a large salary.

Here the Shoshones winter flockwise, weaving baskets and hunting big game driven down from the country of the deep snow.

" "What?" cried Frank, startled; "then perhaps he may not be hunting wild animals after all.

'Tis you must tend the flocks this morn, And scare the small birds from the corn. Not a soul at home may stay: For the shepherds must go With lance and bow To hunt the wolf in the woods to-day.

So the people got together an expedition to go and hunt the lions, and Livingstone joined them.

But slaveholders are just now too busy seeking to destroy this Republic to have any time to hunt fugitives; and when they have more leisure, my opinion is they will find that occupation gone.

Her thoughts are ever with him, and they fly the mountain o'er When in the shaggy forest he hunts the bristly boar.

I'm going to hunt eggs.

They offered no explanation of their whereabouts during the trouble, but Bennington surmised shrewdly that they had hunted a dry place.

Has he just come here hunting trouble?" 20 It should be understood that before this the men in Milligan's had reached a subtly unspoken agreement that red-haired Donnegan was not one of them.

"It was good sport to see the dogs when we were hunting a bear with them.

He never sits up late but when he hunts the badger, the vowed foe of his lambs; nor uses he any cruelty but when he hunts the hare; nor subtilty but when he setteth snares for the snipe or pitfalls for the blackbird; nor oppression but when, in the month of July, he goes to the next river and shears his sheep.

There were besides knights who, having hunted all their lives, believed that they were to continue the same occupation in another world.

Some robbers were hunting wild beasts: the ardour of the pursuit brought them to this mountain.

The next day was spent in hunting jack-rabbits, coyotes, elks, antelopes and wild turkeys.

Wilt thou hunt the prey for the lion? or fill the appetite of the young lions?

Oh my God, thought I, can the American People, who at this very hour are pouring out their blood in defence of their country's liberty; offering up as a sacrifice on the battle field their promising young men, to preserve their land and hearthstones from English oppression; can they, will they, continue to hunt the poor African slave from their soil because he desires that same liberty, so dear to the heart of every American citizen?

Now if they were hunting cruel, man-eating tigers, or animals that destroy property, it would be a different thing.

I am of opinion, however, from what I afterwards heard, that the step was not an altogether popular one in the eastern and northern states, although it certainly was so in the southern; it being argued in the public prints there, that as dogs had been used in hunting down fugitive negroes from time immemorial, the mere fact of bloodhounds being used instead of mastiffs was a peccadillo unworthy of name.

From the tepee I started forth again to hunt food for my aged parents.

But now, if thou art set to hunt this treasure up, and hast a mind to run thy head into a noose; why, I am not so old but that I too can play the fool, and we will let St. Malo be, and make for Carisbrooke.

He had come to the ranch to hunt a wild horse, not to play valet to a foreman.

600 collocations for  hunts