17 Verbs to Use for the Word birthplaces

More people often visit the birthplace of Burns near Ayr than of Shakespeare at Stratford-on-Avon.

=Accommodation Obtainable.="The King's Arms," "The Bull," "The George and Dragon," etc. Westerham as a small country town is not very remarkable in itself, although not devoid of interest, but as containing the birthplace of General Wolfe it becomes a place worthy of a pilgrimage.

"I have thought sometimes I would not like to die before I have seen my birthplace once more.

It leaves its birthplace as soon as it is able, and finds out its own kith and kin, and identifies itself henceforth with them.

Just now they have found his birthplace and precious relics.

There the genteel male population forsake their birthplace at an early age; and since war no longer exists to supply their place with the irresistible military, the importance of a single man, however small his attractions, however advanced his age, is considerable; while a tolerably agreeable bachelor under sixty is the object of universal attention, the cynosure of every lady's eye.

He had a certificate, properly endorsed, giving his birthplace as Cincinnati.

You have to be reminded that you do not know his birthplace or his history.

We traverse the regions to which both the comparison of languages and the Biblical records assign the original birthplace of mankind,the country of the Euphrates and the plateau of Eastern Asia.

In front of the town-hall is a good statue of Blake, the famous Cromwellian admiral, whose birthplace, much modernised, will be found in Blake Street.

It pleased her to point out her own birthplace.

It was they themselves chiefly that, by degrees, shaped a story for her: How, having lost her way, she had been taken up by a coach, and carried to a strange remote part, where she could not give the people any notion of her parents' residence; how she was conducted to a distant town, where certain worthy persons brought her up, and loved her; how they had lately died, and at length she had recollected her birthplace, and so returned.

He was born at Montpelier and was fond of revisiting his birthplace; troubadours whom he there met accompanied him to Spain, joined in his expeditions and enjoyed his generosity.

On his own Dalmatian soil, Docles of Salone, Diocletian of Rome, was the man who had won fame for his own land, and who, on the throne of the world, did not forget his provincial birthplace.

At the head of this curious old street, which curves downward from the Cathedral to the river, stood the birthplace of Cuthbert Collingwood, who was to become Admiral Lord Collingwood, and second in fame only to Nelson himself.

Caesar, engaged upon the siege of Gergovia, encountered an obstinate resistance; whilst Vercingetorix, encamped on the heights which surrounded his birthplace, everywhere embarrassed, sometimes attacked, and incessantly threatened the Romans.

Though Ferrari travelled much, and learned his art in several schools, he, like Luini, can only be studied in the Milanese districtat his birthplace Varallo, at Saronno, Vercelli, and Milan.

17 Verbs to Use for the Word  birthplaces