14 Verbs to Use for the Word doubling

It should not be forgotten that the presence of an "assisting clergyman" entails the doubling of the fees.

Henceforth Sundays are divided into: (1) Sundays of the first class, which exclude all feasts; (2) Sundays of the second class, which exclude all feasts save doubles of the first class; (3) The ordinary Sundays, which exclude all but doubles of the first or second class, feasts of our Lord, and their octave days.

The Breviary of St. Pius V., published in 1568, gives three classes of doubles: doubles of the first class, doubles of the second class, and doubles per annum.

In metaphysics this earth can only be regarded as a chain of seven globes, its three astral globes in coadunition having their three spiritual doubles.

"All that we could have gained by imitating the doublings, the evasions, the fictions, the perjuries, which have been employed against us, is as nothing when compared with what we have gained by being the one power in India on whose word reliance can be placed.

Meeting on the 6th of November at Versailles, they opposed in mass the doubling of the third (estate); the committee presided over by Monsieur, the king's brother, alone voted for the double representation, and that by a majority of only one-voice.

In the swamps on the mainland into which this crop was afterwards extended, the use of the plow permitted the doubling of the area per hand; but the product of the swamp lands was apparently never of the first grade.

On one of the evenings on which we experimented in the vain attempts to photograph a 'double,' I dined with Madam C. and her friend at a neighboring restaurant.

To play a mixed double you must be able to lob.

2. Before ing or ish, the y is retained to prevent the doubling of i: as, pity, pitying; baby, babyish.

The paper remained unchanged, and some of its subscribers seem to have resented the doubling of the tax upon them, by charging readers an extra penny for each halfpenny with which it had been taxed.

Henceforth Sundays are divided into: (1) Sundays of the first class, which exclude all feasts; (2) Sundays of the second class, which exclude all feasts save doubles of the first class; (3) The ordinary Sundays, which exclude all but doubles of the first or second class, feasts of our Lord, and their octave days.

Their numbers were reduced, so that there now stand in the new Breviary only seventy-five doubles, sixty-three semi-doubles, and thirty-six movable feasts.

And very often if in watching a mixed double you are inclined to think the man is doing little work, or that he is playing badly, it is because his partner is getting him no "plums."

14 Verbs to Use for the Word  doubling