Do we say come or cum

come 104451 occurrences

Anyhow, France will come out of the whole affair honourably and having done all that a strictly neutral power can do."

W. replied, saying he would do what he could, and added that we were to have two large dinners and receptions,one with the Comedie Francaise afterward and one with musicwhich one would they come to.

We had asked our guests at nine-thirty, as the princes said they would come at ten.

They were all delighted to come to Paris, and knew perfectly well the state of things, what an abyss existed between all the Conservative party, Royalists and Bonapartists, and the Republican, but the absence of a court didn't make any difference in their position.

The evangelist must come close, in sympathy and counsel, to the personal and individual life of those whom he would help.

We are not in the least infallible; we come face to face with fierce temptations; we have heart-breaking sorrows; we are burdened with anxiety and perplexity.

And this is his reward for his fidelity and tenderness: In the hour when I come to die, when one does not ask for father or mother, or husband or wife, or brother or sister, or friend or child, but only for the strong comfort of the man of Godin that hour, I say, if I be at all able to make my wishes known, I shall send for that man to come to me.

Like the Elizabethan divines, they must rule the living word, which shall echo for a century yet to come.

How old Ethan Allen and General Stark, "Old Put," and the other glorious names that enrich the pages of our revolutionary history, would open their eyes in astonishment, if they could come back from "the other side of Jordan," and sit for a little while on their own tombstones in sight of the railroads, and see the trains as they go rushing like a tornado along their native valleys.

Why doesn't he come to New-York, where he can get plenty of the article, either in the sense of the Tap or in that of the Rap? * * * * *

A REWARD of $800 will be given to the man who, on the | | morning of the murder, was seen to ascend the steps and pick | | up a piece of paper lying there, and then walk away with it, | | if he will come forward and produce it.

"My husband, Sir Henry Studley, is very unwell, and I want you to come to see himcan you?will you?"

Sometimes it will not come at all for two nights, or even three.

Oh, if only, if only my husband could come with me!

' He read aloud: 'Wish to see you at once if possible come up today M.' 'Who is 'M'?' 'Mitchell, of course.

The next morning Aylmer at his hotel received a little note asking him to come round and see Edith, while the others were out.

'I shall regard it all as an unfortunate aberration; and if you regret it, and change your mind, you will be free at any time you like to come back and nothing shall be ever said about it.

* Aylmer had come back to London in the early days of September and was wandering through his house thinking how he would have it done up and how he wouldn't leave it when they were married, when a telephone message summoned him to Knightsbridge.

" At last the time had come for Mary to leave for Africa.

Now her dream was going to come true.

"When you go down to station, Mr. Vetsburg, so right away she ain't so disappointed I don't come, tell her maybe to-morrow I." "I don't tell her nothing!" broke in Mr. Vetsburg and moved toward her with considerable strengthening of tone.

Come, Babe; get into your jacket.

Come kiss your hubby.

They don't come no ace-higher.

Years may elapse before there shall be a similar series and it may be that the next to come will be equally sensational, perhaps more so.

cum 1114 occurrences

Persoon, in his description of areca catechu, makes the following observation: E fructu ab extima pellicula libero, simul cum foliis piperis betle, addito pauxillo calcis ex ostreis, fit masticatorium, quod Indiani continue volvunt in ore, ut malus anhelitus corrigatur, et dentes ac stomachus roborentur.

CHAPTER VIII Christmas EveA lull in hateBriton cum Boche.

CHAPTER VIII CHRISTMAS EVEA LULL IN HATE BRITON CUM BOCHE Shortly after the doings set forth in the previous chapter we left the trenches for our usual days in billets.

ften clash with those of the one she was about to enter, and a compromise could be effected by the abandonment of marriage cum manu.

Now this, the abandonment of marriage cum manu, means simply that certain legal consequences of the marriage ceremony were dropped, and with them just those parts of the ceremony which produced these consequences.

The sacramental part was absent, and the survival of the features of marriage by purchase, which we may see in the form of coemptio, was also absent; but in all other respects the marriage ceremony was the same as in marriage cum manu.

Marriages cum manu became unusual: the wife remained in the potestas of her father, who in most cases, doubtless, ceased to trouble himself about her, and as her property did not pass to her husband, she could not but obtain a new position of independence.

Quis dicere audeat ut vestimentum cum debere contemni?

Erat in exercitu maximus tumultus, Cum carorum cernerent alternari vultus.

Flebant omnes pariter, senex et adultus, Turbae cum militibus, cultus et incultus.

Quis non plangeret, cum videret flentes Tot honestos nobiles, tam diversas gentes, Cum Thuringis Saxones illuc venientes, Ut viderent socios suos abscedentes.

Quis non plangeret, cum videret flentes Tot honestos nobiles, tam diversas gentes, Cum Thuringis Saxones illuc venientes, Ut viderent socios suos abscedentes.

Specivsa dehinc miracula prouiat; Antiphaten, Scyllamque, et cum Cyclope Charybdim.

Diligat illa senem quondam: sed et ipsa marito, Tum quoque cum fuerit, non videatur, anus.

Cum volet illa dies, quae nil nisi corporis hujus Jus habet, incerti spatium mihi finiat avi.

"Et ideo patet," says the Bacon of the thirteenth century, "quod scripta, principalia de sapientia philosophiae non possunt fieri ab uno homine, nec a pluribus, nisi manus praelatorum et principum juvent sapientes cum magna virtute."

The contrary effects of Swift's song, "Here we go up, up, up," and the smile-provoking melody of "Hey diddle, diddle," cum multis aliis, are too well known to be enumerated or disputed.

Krishna Kurwar managed the plant, under the GM-cum-Publisher, Madkaikar.

What seems to have irked Salgaocar was Sunaparant's highlighting, on its front-page, the news of the nomination of Vasant Pilgaonkar (a family friend and close aide-cum-adviser of Ravi Naik) as the Goa Public Service Commission chief.

(For more information please contact the late 'eighties and early 'nineties language-loving journo clique and primitive Margao based correspondents-cum-teachers)

Then two months later, from April 15 to 23, came the big hockey tournament for women for the Shantilal Cup, with me in charge of the north zone as the selector-cum-manager.

Thus, the phrase, "[Greek: Kai hysteræsantos oinou]," "And the wine failing," is rendered by Montanus, "Et deficiente vino;" but by Beza, "Et cum defecisset vinum;" and in our Bible, "And when they wanted wine.

and use of Had I wist, With, for and, (see Cum:) added to adv. of direc., with emphat.

Mr. Bromley who had always believed, believed more firmly than before, and sent tidings of his belief to Plum-cum-Pippins and thence to Babington.

"Themistius vero, et Boethius, et Averrois Babylonius, cum Platone, sic numeros extollunt, ut neminem absque illis posse recte philosophari putent.

Do we say   come   or  cum