537 examples of weel in sentences

Aw think sometimes it's very weel that four ov eawrs are i' heaven,we'n sich hard tewin' (toiling), to poo through wi' tother, just neaw.

You see they're not men that have getten a livin' by idling aforetime; they're workin' men, but they're strange to this job, an' one cannot expect 'em to work like trained honds, no moor than one could expect a lot o' navvies to work weel at factory wark.

I consider th' men are doin' very weel.

At after that, my mother helped us as weel as hoo could,why, hoo does neaw, for th' matter o' that, an' then aw've three brothers, colliers; they've done their best to poo us through.

"Well; yo're weel off.

There's nought for it," continued he, as we came out of the house, "there's nought for it but to keep one's een oppen, an' do as weel as they con, till it blows o'er.

At last the other turned to him, and said, "Jem; does thae know what it is that makes me like thee so weel, owd brid?"

" Ann, who had befriended them in this manner, was the handsome young woman who seemed to be in work; and now, the poor woman who had been telling the story, laid her hand upon her friend's shoulder and said, "Ann, thae's behaved very weel to us o' roads; an' neaw, lass, go thi ways whoam, an' dunnut fret abeawt us, mon.

Aw can go forrud by mysel', weel enough.

" Well, an' heaw han yo getten on?" said I. "Oh, we'n done weel; but we's come no moor," replied he.

"WEEL, I'M THENKIN' IT'S JEST TWA MEENITS SEN THE CLOCK STRUCK TWELVEAN' IT'LL BE ANITHER DAY.

Weel may the keel row That my laddie's in "O who is like my Johnnie, Sae leish, sae blithe, sae bonnie; He's foremost 'mang the mony Keel lads o' coaly Tyne He'll set and row sae tightly,

Tho' he no worth a plack is, His ain coat on his back is; And nane can say that black is The white o' Johnnie's e'e [Footnote 6: Plack = a small copper coin, worth about one-third of a penny.] He wears a blue bonnet, Blue bonnet, blue bonnet, He wears a blue bonnet, And a dimple in his chin O weel

" "I wat weel no," quo' the Laird's ain Jock; "I count him lighter than a flee.

" "I wat weel no," quo' the Laird's Jock; "I'll keep them a'; shoon to my mare they'll be.

But thou's as weel at thy ain ingle-side, Now sitting, I think 'twixt thou and me.

Wi' hikin't up an' doon He'd let the poor thing fall, It waddent haud its tung, Tho' sum aud teun he'd hum, 'Jack an' Gill went up a hill' "Aw wish yor muther wad cum!" "What weary toil," says he, "This nursin bairns mun be, A bit on't's weel eneuf, Ay, quite eneuf for me; Te keep a crying bairn, It may be grand te sum, A day's wark's not as bad Aw wish yor muther wad cum.

As to being hangit, why, that's a matter that happens to mony a deacent man, and it's but a spurl or tway, and a gaspin gurble, an' ae stour heave, and a's ower; ye're dead ere a body's weel certified that the board's awa' from behind youand the night-cap's a great blessing, baith to you and the company.

But, fare thee weel, my only love, And fare thee weel awhile; And I will come again, my dear, Though 'twere ten thousand mile.

But, fare thee weel, my only love, And fare thee weel awhile; And I will come again, my dear, Though 'twere ten thousand mile.

"An' I can weel understan' it.

Weel, there are great masses o' ice that have been formed against them by the melting and freezing of the snows of many years.

"Weel, lads, you've had a lot o' hard work of late, ye may go' and take a run on the ice.

We can comprehend how an audience composed of men and women whose ne'er-do-weel relatives went to the theatre to be stirred by such tragedies as those of Marston and Cyril Tourneur would themselves snatch a sacred pleasure from awful language of this kind in the pulpit.

"I ken him weel," said our student, nodding after him.

537 examples of  weel  in sentences