76 examples of mie in sentences

THE LYGHTE O, SYNGE UNTOE MIE ROUNDELAIE AN EXCELENTE BALADE OF CHARITIE THOMAS DAY THIS DESOLATION OF AMERICA (1777), ll. 29-53, 279-299, 328-335, 440-458, 489-501 GEORGE CRABBE THE LIBRARY (1781), ll. 1-12, 99-110, 127-134, AND A COMMONLY OMITTED PASSAGE FOLLOWING l. 594 THE VILLAGE (1783), BOOK I, ll. 1-78, 109-317; II, 63-100 JOHN NEWTON

158, 174, &c.] [Footnote 14: "Prego V. Signoria the si contenti, se piace al Serenissimo Signor Duca, Clementissimo ed Invitissimo, the io stia in prigione, di farmi dar le poche robicciole mie, the S.A. Invitissima, Clementissima, Serenissima m' ha promesse tante volte," &c. Opere, vol.

[Footnote 6: This tomb, Tancred says, in an address which he makes to it, "has his flames inside of it, and his tears without:" "Che dentro hai le mie fiamme, e fuori il pianto."

Diceva Orlando al Re: Le mie promesse Tutte ho servate, quante mai ne fei; Ma se quel che or mi chiedi io promettesse E s'io il giurassi, io non l'attenderei; Così poria spiccar mie membra istesse E levarmi di fronte gli occhi miei, E viver senza spirto e senza core, Come lasciar

Diceva Orlando al Re: Le mie promesse Tutte ho servate, quante mai ne fei; Ma se quel che or mi chiedi io promettesse E s'io il giurassi, io non l'attenderei; Così poria spiccar mie membra istesse E levarmi di fronte gli occhi miei, E viver senza spirto e senza core, Come lasciar

Mie-Mie, the Little Italian.

Mie-Mie, the Little Italian.

Mie Mie, the Little Italian.

Mie Mie, the Little Italian.

Walpole writes to Lady Ossory: 'They' (the Gloucester people) 'hanged him in effigy, and dressed up a figure of Mie-Mie' (his adopted daughter), 'and pinned on its breast these words, alluding to the gallows:"This is what I told you you would come to!"' From Gloucester he went to Ludgershall, where he was received by ringing of bells and bonfires.

Walpole writes to Lady Ossory: 'They' (the Gloucester people) 'hanged him in effigy, and dressed up a figure of Mie-Mie' (his adopted daughter), 'and pinned on its breast these words, alluding to the gallows:"This is what I told you you would come to!"' From Gloucester he went to Ludgershall, where he was received by ringing of bells and bonfires.

But Mie-Mie, as the little Italian was called, was far more favoured.

But Mie-Mie, as the little Italian was called, was far more favoured.

He had a carriage fitted up for her expressly for her journey; made out for her a list of the best hotels on her route; sent his own confidential man-servant with her, and treasured up among his 'relics' the childish little notes, in a large scrawling hand, which Mie-Mie sent him.

He had a carriage fitted up for her expressly for her journey; made out for her a list of the best hotels on her route; sent his own confidential man-servant with her, and treasured up among his 'relics' the childish little notes, in a large scrawling hand, which Mie-Mie sent him.

He left a fortune which was not contemptible: £33,000 of it were to go to Mie-Mieby this time a young ladyand as the Duke of Queensberry, at his death, left her no less than £150,000, Miss was by no means a bad match for Lord Yarmouth.

Even the rod of the pedagogue and the imprisonment of the school-room (for it has been the misfortune of "Le mie Prigioni" to be doomed to serve as a "class-book" to beginners in modern languages) have proved unable to diminish the sympathy felt for the Spielberg prisoner.

d' ogni mia virtute? Ove son or le mie purpuree veste?

Ove son or le mie compagne oneste?

Ove son or le damigelle mie?

But Guasti, conscientiously collecting fragments of Michelangelo's verses, gives six lines, which he found at the foot of the epistle: Vo' sol del mie morir contento veggio: La terra piange, e'l ciel per me si muove; E vo' men pietà stringe ov' io sto peggio.

Fromm howrr to howrr I oftt beweepe ourr love, Wyth all the happie sorowe of the dove, And fancie, as itts sylentt waterrs flowe, Mie bosome's swetestt joies mustt thos bee mientt wyth woe.

"You are at once right and wrong, ma mie" replied Henry with his usual promptitude.

The poem is a contention between an upland and a lowland shepherd, and begins in genuine pastoral fashion: Come Titan del seno dell' aurora Esce, così con le mie pecorelle

It is more correctly expressed by ne voilà pas, the barbarism resulting from the consideration of voilà as a verb and the introduction of the euphonic t and the il of impersonal verbs (Littré, "voilà," 10°), MA MIE.

76 examples of  mie  in sentences