15 collocations for olds

I do anatomise and cut up these poor beasts, to see these distempers, vanities, and follies, yet such proof were better made on man's body, if my kind nature would endure it: who from the hour of his birth is most miserable; weak, and sickly; when he sucks he is guided by others, when he is grown great practiseth unhappiness and is sturdy, and when old, a child again, and repenteth him of his life past.

The Red One's son, so fierce and bold, In combat with his hero old The king-like Goll of valorous might A stormy billow in the fight

"I declare," said Mrs. Fitzgerald, "that oldest daughter of yours, Mrs. Blumenthal, bears a striking resemblance to the cantatrice who was turning everybody's head when I was in Rome.

"Wouldn't ol' Dan be jest ravin' ef he knew this?

But five years old the eldest of the three Oh! who could rob such babes of liberty! Doom'd was the Count within that tow'r to die, Him Pisa's vengeful bishop did oppose; With covert speech and false aspersions sly He stirr'd the people, till they madly rose, And shut him in this prison strong and high; His former slaves are now his fiercest foes.

why I am as old a one-Goddite as himself.

The Red One's son, so fierce and bold, In combat with his hero old The king-like Goll of valorous might A stormy billow in the fight

The Latin words, the sentiment of which had been traditional in the Church from time immemorial, had to her a sacred fragrance and odor; they were words apart from all common usage, a sacramental language, never heard but in moments of devotion and aspiration,and they stilled the child's heart in its tossings and tempest, as when of old the Jesus they spake of walked forth on the stormy sea.

[Footnote 2: In the sense of having preceded Arabic in this region, for in itself, and in its original area, Arabic is as old a language an any other variety of Semitic.]

WALSH, JAMES J. Education, How Old the New.

"Wouldn't ol' Dan be jest ravin' ef he knew this?

But 'e's a hexpert, 'e is, an' we 'olds the road.

Does it not seem to you that yonder are the bones of sea lions, or of seals of some sort, lying hereaway as if men had been at work on the creatures?" "No doubt on't at all, Captain Gar'ner; as much out of the way as this island isand I never heard of the place afore, old a sealer as I ambut, as much out of the way as it is, we are not the first to find it.

Young Robin just saw two packages roll to the ground as the cob dashed off; then he was holding on with all his might to old David's belt as the cob galloped away with half-a-dozen of the robbers trying to cut it off.

> Sentences: "However old a union, it still garners some sweetness."

15 collocations for  olds