127987 examples of got in sentences

Perhaps, though, you've got some cousin that looks arter your bills?" The flute-player exchanged knowing glances with the seamstresses.

Hope you got wind of it in time, and made all safe.

But a sudden thought struck him, and he asked eagerly, "But the money,haven't you got it still?" "No,paid it over yesterday.

This person was last seen in a dressing-gown, square-cut night-cap, and odd slippers, dancing up and down the state-room floor with a cup of gruel, making wild passes with a spoon at an individual in a berth, who never got any of the contents.

Can Grande, the great dog, has been got up out of the pit, where he worried the stewardess and snapped at the friend who tried to pat him on the head.

The captain has got his ship aground in shoal water where she can't sink, and no harm done.

In this view, I do not see anything so fit to talk about, or half so interesting, as that which relates to the innumerable majority of our fellow-creatures, the dead-living, who are hundreds of thousands to one of the live-living, and with whom we all potentially belong, though we have got tangled for the present in some parcels of fibrine, albumen, and phosphates, that keep us on the minority side of the house.

Nay, we have got so far, that the very word heresy has fallen into comparative disuse among us.

I trust you know, or will learn, a great many things in your profession which we common scholars do not know; but mark this: when the common people of New England stop talking politics and theology, it will be because they have got an Emperor to teach them the one, and a Pope to teach them the other!

The next morning we got talking a little on the same subject, very good-naturedly, as people return to a matter they have talked out.

I got three pamphlets and innumerable squibs flung at my head for attacking one of the pseudo-sciences, in former years.

The board gives way as soon as you touch it; and before you have got by, the bag of sand comes round whack on the back of your neck.

Now you think you've got him!

What feats could she relate of wonderful dresses got out of impossibly small patterns of silk!

"Now, there never was anything so lucky as, that, just before all these wedding-dresses had to be fixed, I got a letter from my sister Martha, that works for all the first families of Boston.

Does he think they belong to the stock of traditions in possession of the Anglo-Saxon race,that Grimshaw got them from Bagshaw, and Bagshaw from Bradshaw?

He says of himself: "My mind is something like a piece of steel; it is very hard to scratch anything on it and almost impossible after you have got it there to rub it out.

The wheel was put over hard to port (we got that out of the books) and the craft was run in behind Craney Island and anchored.

It was not long before the sun got low, and with the late afternoon something of a wind whipped up from the bay, and the wide, low-shored river rolled dark and unfriendly.

He explained that when we got up there, our ropes fell short and we drifted helplessly past because the blundering captain of the schooner had anchored her too far away from us.

There's mony to be got, and meat I take it, What think ye of a morise? Prig.

Van-d. I ha' giv'n you her twice: now keep her better, and thank Lord Hubert, that came to me in Gerrards name, And got me out, with my brave Boyes, to march Like Caesar, when he bred his Commentaries, So I, to bread my Chronicle, came forth Caesar Van-dunk, & veni, vidi, vici, Give me my Bottle, and set down the drum; You had your tricks Sir, had you?

We got little new peeps at the southerly hills, in the fresh breaks between trees and buildings that we went by.

This was what he had got so far as to do by the time we moved in,as if he stretched his very neck to find out the last there was to learn about it, and whether nowhere in it were really yet any human life.

We had at last got an Irish girl from "far down,"that is their word for the north country at home, and the north country is where the best material comes from,who was willing to air her ignorance in our kitchen, and try our Christian patience, during a long pupilage, for the modest sum of three dollars a week; than which "she could not come indeed for less," said the friend who brought her.

127987 examples of  got  in sentences