1205 collocations for treats

The author of "America's National Game" is conceded, always, everywhere, and by everybody, to have the best equipment of any living writer to treat the subject that forms the text of this remarkable volume, viz., the story of the origin, development and evolution of Base Ball, the National Game of our country.

"Nice way to treat a man half dead of exhaustion.

They don't treat a slave any better than a pig.

This cool way of treating the matter did not altogether please Grundy, who had rather expected that his adversary would elect to "take a licking."

The rank which a people occupy in the grand scale may be measured by their way of taking their meals, as well as by their way of treating their women.

Kemp scowled at the manager as if he were a valued patron of the hotel and said, "It seems to me that you don't know how to treat people properly when they come here.

I did not let him suspect that I doubted his veracity, but I remarked that it was a rough way to treat friends.

If I were a man in such a case as A. J.'s I should treat my wife as I would a daughter.

Lord ISLAY next spoke to the effect following:My lords, I have attended for a long time to the noble lord, not without some degree of uneasiness, as I think the manner in which he has treated the question neither consistent with the dignity of this assembly, nor with those rules which ought to be ever venerable, the great rules of reason and humanity.

The English Government," he continued with an ingratiating smile, "have now begun to treat our prisoners in England better, and I hasten to return good to you for the evils that our women have suffered at the hands of your Government.

It ought to teach you how you should treat your children.

And I therefore shall confine myself to general questions, and shall treat this case of Portsea, as what it is, alas!

'But do you think I'm treating the poor girl badly?' 'Vincy, even if you adored her it would end unhappily.

Aeschylus also (Ag. 816) has some obscure phrases pointing in the same direction: "A horse's brood, a shield-bearing people, launched with a leap about the Pleiads' setting, sprang clear above the wall," &c. Euripides here treats the horse metaphorically as a sort of war-horse trampling Troy.

Don't get the idea that it is soldierly to treat sacred things with levity.

Oh, my Lord, how could they treat thee so!

"I haven't treated the boy right.

But he refused to make any statement whatever, apparently treating the affair very lightly.

I would always treat any given young person passing through the meteoric showers which rain down on the brief period of adolescence with great tenderness.

The man was sore harassed by the King's Government on one side and the Virginian Council on the other, and he treated every stranger as a foe.

But do not forget this: So much emotion will become your punishment, if you treat love after the manner of a hero of romance, and you will meet a fate entirely the contrary if you treat it like a reasonable man.

" BARRENNESS OF THE IMAGINATIVE FACULTY IN THE PRODUCTIONS OF MODERN ART Hogarth excepted, can we produce any one painter within the last fifty years, or since the humour of exhibiting began, that has treated a story imaginatively?

There with such knowledge did the lady treat Her handsome patient, that he soon grew well; But not before she had, on her own part, A secret wound much greater in her heart.

It was long doubted whether the professor was in earnest, but the world was at length forced to admit, that the great Antonius de Haen certainly believed in witchcraft, and reckoned the knowledge of it, in treating a disease, of great importance to a physicianto the acquisition of which useful knowledge, he dedicated a great part of his time.

And now, feeling that it was not polite to treat a young lady with seeming inattention, because he happened to be earnestly thinking about her, he began to talk to Cicely in his liveliest and gayest manner, and she, not wishing him to think that she thought that there was anything out of the way in this, or in his previous preoccupation, responded just as gayly.

1205 collocations for  treats