Do we say stolen or stollen

stolen 2344 occurrences

It is your business to provide money, and to see that it is not stolen.

She had been to see an old friend of hers, a member of the Board, and this lady had given her the same amount of money that Miss Sniffen had" "Stolen!" burst out Miss Crilly.

As soon as I had dressed for going on shore, and had packed up the things that we had used on our voyage, in order that they might not be stolen during this time of excitement, I obeyed the last call of my impatient sister to come at least to see the last rays of sunrise; and went on deck, where I was at once riveted by the beautiful scene that was spread before my eyes.

But there was one way in which a Jew might illegally be reduced to servitude; it was this, he might he stolen and afterwards sold as a slave, as was Joseph.

Have the Southern slaves then been stolen?

but that according to Hebrew Law they have been stolen.

But there was one way in which a Jew might illegally be reduced to servitude; it was this, he might be stolen and afterwards sold as a slave, as was Joseph.

Have the Southern slaves then been stolen?

but that according to Hebrew Law they have been stolen.

It is known that he owns a fleet of flatboats, and one of them is usually seen waiting near Duff's Fort when horses are stolen, and it is always gone before the dawn of the next day; but there is no proof of this, either.

"Do you mean to tell me that a man of half Alston's intelligence doesn't know that those men never have a horse that they haven't stolen?" William Pressley said nothing more; he suspected that his uncle had been drinking a little more heavily than common.

They have stolen that, of course.

True it is that we have no national music, like our neighbours the Welsh, the Irish, or the Scotch; for our music, like out language, is a mere riccifamento, stolen from every nation in Europe.

Lest when the birds their various colours claim, Stripp'd of his stolen pride, the crow forlorn Should stand the laughter of the publick scorn.

She showed them of the betrayal of her lord, and how his raiment was stolen from the hollow stone.

Then the King restored to his friend the fief that was stolen from him, and gave such rich gifts, moreover, as I cannot tell.

They were stolen separately, many of them by black men, some of whom were accompanied by Spaniards, as they were going from one village to another, or were at a distance from their abodes.

Cupid, if lovers are thy care, Revenge thy vot'ry on this fair; Do justice on her stolen charms, And let her prison bemy arms.

" That night his pack was stolen from him.

Once, about sixty or seventy years ago, the Bloods and Piegans had a quarrel so serious that men were killed on both sides and horses stolen; yet this was hardly a real war, for only a part of each tribe was involved, and the trouble was not of long duration.

This too, though the author himself did not always respect the rule, has been thought worthy to be copied, or stolen, with all its faults!

Yet no few, who have since made English grammars, have copied the text literally; as they have, for the public benefit, stolen a thousand other errors from the same quarter.

He might not know where to say we got our treasure, but he could say we had stolen a Chilian vessel.

It was a relief to get rid of the prisoner, and the only harm which could come of his disappearance was that he might report that his ship had been stolen by the men who were sailing her, and that some sort of a vessel might be sent in pursuit of the Arato, and, if this should be the case, the situation would be awkward.

They minded the fate of Hans Pulitz, who had kept back a belt of gold, and had gotten himself flung by the heels with no more than the stolen belt upon him, into the kennels where the Duke's blood-hounds howled and clambered with their fore-feet on the black-spattered barriers.

stollen 5 occurrences

All the Spices and drugs that are brought to Mecca, are stollen from thence as Contrabanda.

This has nothing to do with good manners or ill manners; but, in the words of the old law-book before cited, "is when a theefe hath stollen and is followed with hue and crie and taken, having that found about him which he stole;that is called ye maynour.

Thus when the careless nymph at last goes off to seek her desperate lover, Daphne in the original remarks: Oh tardi saggia, e tardi Pietosa, quando ciò nulla rileva; a passage in translating which Fraunce cannot resist the application of a homely proverb, and writes: When steedes are stollen, then Phillis looks to the stable.

STOLLEN Sift two pounds of flour into a bowl and set a sponge in it with one cake of compressed yeast, one teaspoon of salt, one pint of lukewarm milk and one tablespoon of sugar.

Rendered Butter Savarin Schnecken Sour Cream Kolatchen Spice Roll Stollen Tea Cakes, Russian Topfa Dalkeln (Cheese Cakes)

Do we say   stolen   or  stollen