23 Verbs to Use for the Word g

I only hope he won't hold a g-g-grudge against me when he sees the mark of all my f-f-fingernails down his face.

[Footnote g: Two sess.

exclaimed Toby, with a violent effort, "he's going to carry the scratches I g-g-gave him on his f-f-face for a w-w-while.

Clusters of heads showed black for a moment in some darksome entry, cried "U-g-g-hh!" with a hateful sound, and vanished ere the steel-clad veterans of the Duke's guard could come upon them.

And you drop your 'g's' just as bad as I do.

In this volume we not only find the "remarkable g," the tail of which is relied upon as a link in the chain of evidence to prove the forgery of two documents, but yet another instance of the use of dissimilar styles of writing by the same individual two hundred or two hundred and fifty years ago, and also a well-preserved pencil memorandum of the same period.[ii]

Another lesson gave them the soft guttural g, but did not sound it jee; and the aspirate, but did not call it aitch.

"I know it was a bullet, for it went zo-o-zip-tsing-g!

(Mrs. Crull could not remember to pick up the "g's," except under Miss Pillbody's eye, and then not always.)

for it was so Father Wills pronounced s-l-o-u-g-h.

"Looka those beauties, pulling 6 g's," he said.

What a pity that all classes of adult men were not pursuing their g's and p's with equal simplicity of emulation and purity of purpose.

"Had he not read the Divisional G 245/348/24 of the 29th inst.?

Once, when he was sick, he said, "Mamma, do you think I could have said G any sooner than I did?" "I have never felt certain about that, Willy," she said.

For a few days he went about the house, shouting "G!

In a moment of dead silence, just before the crash that accompanied the descent of the curtain, he had scored for the C trumpet, muted and pianissimo, a phrase in the rhythm of the first three bars of the Marsellaise, but going up on the open tones and sustaining the high G, so that it carried also, a suggestion of The Star Spangled Banner.

A Bacchy is a poetic foot consisting of one short syllable and two long ones; as, th=e wh=ole w~orld,~a gre=at v=ase,=of p=ure g=old.

Below the eye-hole e, through which I view the glass-screen g, is a thin piece of glass set at an angle of 45°, which reflects the fiducial lines and gives them the appearance of lying on the screen, the frame being so adjusted that the distance from the thin piece of glass to the transparency and to the glass-screen g is the same.

"Yes." "'Sieur Frowenfel', dat de wrong g-way.

The Signorina Baci-Roventi alone, black-browed, muscular, and five feet ten in her shoes, would have been almost a match for him alone; but she was backed by Signor Pompeo Stromboli, who weighed fifteen stone in his fur coat, was as broad as he was long, and had been seen to run off the stage with Madame Bonanni in his arms while he yelled a high G that could have been heard in Westminster if the doors had been open.

"V has the sound of flat f, and bears the same relation to it, as b does to p, d to t, hard g to k, and z to s. It has one uniform sound.

"Zig-a-zig, ziz-zig-zig-a-zig, zig-g-g, zig-g-g, zig-g-g-g." Puzzled at first, she soon recognized what it was.

(I knew a certain T who called out a certain G because G had said T's rooms were not properly carpeted.)

23 Verbs to Use for the Word  g