Do we say mold or mould

mold 318 occurrences

There is no visible limit to this wondrous drama in which man's patient mastering of his immediate environment is gradually teaching him to mold to his purpose all the potent forces of the universe.

Spiller's face was crimson, and Robinson's coat sleeve still bore traces of garden mold.

The first is the triumph of romantic poetry in Wordsworth and Coleridge; the second is the success of our first English novelists, and the popularization of literature by taking it from the control of a few patrons and critics and putting it into the hands of the people as one of the forces which mold our modern life.

The customer made garment had found Cissie's body of richer mold than it had been designed to shield.

Unfortunately he did not afterwards take the trouble to improve his subject matter, or the mold in which it was cast.

And those who here monopolize education, those who try to mold the mind of youth, to the exclusion of all others whomsoever, how do they carry out their mission?

constitution, habitude, diathesis^; frame, fabric &c 329; stamp, set, fit, mold, mould.

[Fr.]; as like as two peas in a pod, as like as it can stare; instar omnium [Lat.], cast in the same mold, ridiculously like.

nothing of the kind; no such thing, quite another thing; far from it, cast in a different mold, tertium quid [Lat.], as like a dock as a daisy, very like a whale

text, copy, design; fugleman^, keynote. die, mold; matrix, last, plasm^; proplasm^, protoplasm; mint; seal, punch, intaglio, negative; stamp.

"You're both from the same mold," turning from Carolina Langdon to Congressman Norton, then back to the girl.

A tremendous, almost divine power rests, therefore, in the hands of parentsthe power to mold and fashion and transform the impulses and instincts of their children into whatsoever ideals of life and conduct they themselves possess.

Their boys were stamped from the same mold.

Soon afterward we reached the foot of Monte Rosa, and passed from the glacier to a slope of rocks, whose rounded forms and furrowed surfaces showed that the ice of former ages had moved over them; the granite was now coated with lichens, and between the bosses where mold could rest were patches of tender moss.

She had the wit to perceive that Charlie Benton had emerged from the chrysalis stage, that he had the will and the ability to mold his life after his elected fashion, and that her coming was a relatively unimportant incident.

Then slowly, as he saw the excellence of her, standing there, his face dropped back into its iron mold.

Cupboards used for the storage of food should be well ventilated; otherwise, they furnish choice conditions for the development of mold and germs.

All mold and mustiness should be kept out by thorough ventilation and frequent coats of whitewash to the walls.

Molded grains are also very nice served with fresh berries, either mashed or whole, arranged around the mold.

Serve hot with cream, or mold in cups previously dipped in cold water, and serve with a dressing of fruit juice.

Serve hot with cream, or mold, and serve cold.

Turn the liquid into a saucepan, and boil for a few moments, until it is thick enough to drop from the point of a spoon; then turn into cups previously wet in cold water, and mold.

JELLIED OATMEAL.Cook oatmeal or rolled oats with an additional cup or cup and a half of water, and when done, turned into cups and mold.

This paste, rolled thin and cut into shapes with a cookie-cutter, one half of them baked plain for under crusts, the other half ornamented for tops by cutting small holes with a thimble or some fancy mold, put together with a layer of some simple fruit jelly between them, makes a most attractive looking dessert.

2. "Bitter-sweet milk" has cream of a bitter taste, is covered with 'blisters,' and frequently with a fine mold.

mould 1422 occurrences

Some would have had to stint their families in food had they bought on Bell's terms, and the rest struggled, for the common cause, against the mould that gathered on clothing and spoiled the meal.

He fancied they were some sort of firefolkthat was why they could bend and mould the iron as they wished.

and a green damp mould had covered his cheeks and forehead, and veiled his open eyeballs.

"Reform" Mould. (Mrs W., Dundee.)

Cook very gently till the tapioca is quite clear, and turn into wetted or oiled mould.

Turn out when quite firm and serve with any suitable garnish-cooked beetroot, &c. NOTE.This can be best cooked in double boiler, as it is very ready to catch the pan. Vegetable Mould.

Allow to get nearly cool, but not beginning to set, and then brush over the mould with it.

Get an equal quantity of red, white, and green vegetablessay young carrots, tomatoes, turnips, cauliflower, green peas, French beans, &c. Have each cooked "to a turn" separately, and the carrots and turnips cut into neat shapes, cauliflower in tiny sprigs, &c. Arrange the vegetables as neatly as possible in a mould, and fill up with tomato jelly.

The mould might be decorated with slices of beetroot or hard-boiled eggs.

Royal Pudding Mould Pure Earthenware.

Mould it into cakes, crimp the edges, and bake in a moderate oven.

Butter well a plain mould, and put into it some jam or marmalade.

Put in mould, or when set pile up in rocky spoonfuls.

Lemon Cream Mould.

Put in mould or glass dish, and set in cool place till quite firm.

Beat all thoroughly, and when just about to set pour into a wet mould.

Strain and mould in usual way.

Mix well, grease a tin mould, pour in mixture, and steam for an hour.

Pour into buttered pudding-dish, and bake gently for half-an-hour, or steam in buttered mould for 1 hour.

Porridge Shredded Wheat Biscuits Triscuits Tomatoes (Stuffed) Wheatose EGG DISHES COLD SAVOURIES Brawn Legumes en Aspic Mock Calf's Foot Jelly "Reform" Mould Raised Haricot Pie Tomato and Egg Vegetable

This does not destroy the element in the idea of freedom which is legitimate and practically valuable: we have the power to alter our character; it is formed by us as well as for us; the desire to mould it is one of the most influential circumstances in its formation.

And didst thou think that worldly art Would mould anew this shrinking heart?

They are yet, to a great extent, in the mould of a corrupted public opinion; and, as far from having a clear discernment of moral truth, as were the partially unsealed eyes which saw "men, as trees, walking."

He is a man of large mould, of a robust vigor which gave him a distinct physical preëminence amongst his people, with the effusive good humor which belongs, as a rule, to large men, and a hearty bonhomie which with that simple people was a bond to the most passionate devotion.

As he recovered himself from abandonment to some part of his case or argument to guide and mould the whole, so, going into his library, he could, as completely, for minutes or for hours, banish and forget his anxieties and dramatic excitements, and pass into the cooling air and loftier and purer stimulations of the great minds of other times and countries and of the great questions that overhang us all.

Do we say   mold   or  mould