17 Verbs to Use for the Word escapade

An article had appeared in the latter on Don Pedro Cevallos, which stung the Tories to the quick by the free way in which it spoke of men and things, and something must be done to check these escapades of the Edinburgh.

However, I do not know but that in the unregenerate days of my own youth I might not have attempted an escapade like yours.

In his next he details with much amusement a scandalous escapade of Victor Hugo's, a husband's discovery, and Madame Hugo's forgiving manner.

When a man so spat, he stopped laughing abruptly, straightened his face, and stared emptily at the rusty stove until further inquisition developed some other preposterous escapade in Bob's jail career.

Venus meanwhile had discovered the escapade of her boy and locked him up till his wound from the hot oil was healed.

The pony trotted forward briskly, and the boys would have thoroughly enjoyed this escapade, except for the fears of their friend's safety.

From there she essayed another escapade only to fall into our hands.

That Jack Reddin, a dare-devil farmer with love for any sort of a chase in his blood, should pursue her to the bitter end is intelligible enough, but why Edward Marston, a rather anæmic minister, married her and then forgave her escapades with Reddin has me bothered.

Her relations had forgiven her Canadian escapade, but they meant to guard against her doing something of the kind again.

I have mentioned an escapade of this period, connected with the last flogging my father gave me, but of which that was only the secondary cause, determining the moment but not the movement.

"Won't his father pardon the last escapade?" asked a third, with a laugh.

But however much a man of such talents preaches decency, he will, nevertheless, sometimes feel himself tempted to transgress the boundaries of propriety and decorum, since from time immemorial genius has reckoned such escapades among its prerogatives.

And now "the sun rose clear o'er trackless fields of snow," and our solitary procession jingled merrily on, while, yielding to the lulling sounds of the bells, our little breathing bundles sank motionless and warm into our laps and retrieved in happy slumbers the early escapades of the day.

Mary Coombe's little gurgle of amusement had a note of cruelty in it, for she alone of all these women had guessed why the Rev. Angus Macnair should have taken Esther's escapade so much to heart.

The Doctor and Lydia sat near me, and questioned me on my adventures, as they ware pleased to term my escapade.

The greatest problem which we had to face, in arranging this little escapade, was how we should keep you silent after your release.

Old Brull made up his mind to tolerate these escapades of his son

17 Verbs to Use for the Word  escapade