792 collocations for kiss

He might have kissed her lips, her look into his eyes was almost an invitation, but, having steeled himself to be scrupulously fair, he refrained and contented himself with kissing her hand.

Ever and anon the red-hot breezes kissed the honest old man's innocent cheek, and slobbered grate capsules of odoriferous moisture, which ran in little silvery streams from his reclinin' form.

I stooped over him and kissed his forehead, which was moist and cool.

He might have kissed her lips, her look into his eyes was almost an invitation, but, having steeled himself to be scrupulously fair, he refrained and contented himself with kissing her hand.

Now the Saints keep and bless thee, young sir, sweet Jesu love thee ever!" and fain would he have knelt to kiss my Beltane's feet.

Shaking at that quiet form, sobs that were full of voice tearing raw from her throat, she fell to kissing the sunken face, enclosing it, stroking it, holding her streaming gaze closely and burningly against the closed lids.

How he kissed his mother, and thanked her!

He kissed his two children again and again, and his wife clung to his arms.

An old permits a man to kiss a girl who is standing under mistletoe. establishes many peculiar idioms in a language.

You take your satchel or travelling bag, kiss your wife in a hurry at the door, and jump aboard of the cars; the whistle sounds, the locomotive breathes hoarsely for a moment, and you are off like a shot.

But now of a sudden and as one that dreamed, he beheld a tender face above him with sad-sweet eyes and lips that bent to kiss his brow, felt soft arms about himtender arms that drew his weary head upon a gentle bosom to hide and pillow it there; felt that enfolding embrace tighten and tighten in sudden shuddering spasm, as, sighing, the lady Abbess's white-clad arms fell away and her proud head sank beside his in the dust.

Lette, here's a young Rogue has a mind to kiss thee.

Why they made it, just as the man that wrote this-here says, and you can kiss the Book on that.

Why do I tremble thus because the moon is gone?" "Nay, my beloved," quoth Beltane, kissing those slender fingers that trembled upon his lip and were so coldso deadly cold, "dear Helen, it will shine forth again bright and radiant as ever.

" Elizabeth advanced, striving to quell the antipathy she felt to kiss the stern featured, old woman, and touched her lips to the wrinkled forehead.

Let me kiss off that falling tear: We only part to meet again.

He had kissed the pretty little mouth that he had so often watched with longing.

"Remember, Betty, you and Bob are to spend the holidays with us," said Mrs. Littell, as she kissed her good-bye.

Then Ambrose clasped those quivering hands and kissed those wide and troubled eyes and spake thereafter, slow and soft: "Now shall I live henceforth in thee, my son, glorying in thy deeds hereafter.

The barricade was torn aside, and the people swept forward, falling on their knees, grovelling at Paul's feet, kissing the hem of his garment, seizing his strong hands in theirs.

The whole company kneeled on the shore and kissed the ground for joy, returning God thanks for the great mercy they had experienced during their long voyage through seas hitherto unpassed, and their now happy discovery of an unknown land.

" Then Parson Dorrance kissed her hair where his hand had lain a few moments before, and said, "Now I must go.

We all remained a space apart until Mrs. Washington had kissed her son, as something too sacred for our intrusion.

Ford kissed his sister, but that operation hardly checked him for an instant in his voluble narrative of the stirring events of his first morning on the bay.

That night, when Amelia kissed her father, she put a bill for a hundred pounds into his hands, adding, "Andand, mamma, don't be harsh with Georgie.

792 collocations for  kiss