1946 examples of wots in sentences

Trust me, sir, there is a far more hellish mischief brewing than any man wots of.

But when ye came not, master, by will of Sir Benedict we set out, all three, to find thee, and came to a cave of refuge Walkyn wots of: there do we sleep by night and by day search for thee.

Here were different sights from what one saw in the forest; hedgerows, broad fields of barley corn, pasture lands rolling upward till they met the sky and all dotted over with flocks of white sheep, hayfields whence came the odor of new-mown hay that lay in smooth swathes over which skimmed the swifts in rapid flight; such they saw, and different was it, I wot, from the tangled depths of the sweet woodlands, but full as fair.

I do wonder whether his patron, who, methinks, was Saint Thomas, was given to wearing golden chains about his neck, silk clothing upon his body, and pointed shoes upon his feet; the money for all of which, God wot, hath been wrung from the sweat of poor tenants.

" "A harper am I from the north country," quoth Robin, "and I can touch the strings, I wot, as never another man in all merry England can do.

And now Robin counted out two hundred golden angels to Edward of Deirwold, and he, upon his part, gave his blessing, yet not, I wot, as though he meant it with overmuch good will.

The good man wots not, peradventure, of the license which Magazines have arrived at in this plain-speaking age, or hardly dreams of their existence beyond the Gentleman'shis furthest monthly excursions in this nature having been long confined to the holy ground of honest Urban's obituary.

More sorrow wot I none.

Now it is, and now 'tis not As it ne'er had been, I wot.

If that my fellows that did espy, They will tell it both far and wide; My sinful living if they outcry, I wot not where my head to hide.

To all the woes that him wasted, I wot not few, Then deemedst (him) to have been dead, and dressed for ever.

Come, a buss, prythee, so 'tis my kind heart; and wots thou what now? SIS.

"'Wots the matter with it?' ses Mr. Bunnett.

"'Wots the matter with it?' ses Mr. Bunnett.

There he finds the thumb-piece gone from the latch, to him a well-known sign that Mother Fitch has gone out a-nursing; so, pulling the hidden string he wots of, he lifts the latch within, and the door opens to his hand.

"Wots the little game?"

"] "Wots the matter, Henery?" ses Bill, staring at 'im with 'is mouth open.

"Wots it worth if we tell yer where them papers are, guv'ners both?" "What, you know!" cried Mortlake, while old Mr. Harding spluttered: "Eh, eh?

There's many an isle man wots not of, Where the air is heavy with groans; And the bottom o' th' sea, the wisest say, Is covered with dead men's bones.

" "Wots the row?" said another clerk.

Mr. Editer,As you was so good as to ax from me a contribootion to your waluable peeryoddical, I beg heer to stait that this heer article is intended as a gin'ral summery o' the noos wots agoin'.

There's a gin'ral complaint heer that Mivins has bin eatin' the shuger in the pantry, an' that's wots makin' it needfull to put us on short allowance.

" "She has tree brooches, and a necktie better than your best one wots you keeps to go seeing Susie Duffy in," and Lizer giggled slyly.

She little wots that thisthis adventurer who has so strongly interested her by his nepotic Mrs. Perkins (interrupting).

She little wots that this this adventurer who has so strangely interested her with his hypnotic power is the man who twenty years ago forged her father's name to the title-deeds of Burnington, drove him to his ruin, and subsequently, through a likeness so like as to bewilder and confuse even a mother's eyes, has forced the rightful Earl of Puddingford out into a cruel world, to live and starve as Henry Cobb.

1946 examples of  wots  in sentences