73 Verbs to Use for the Word heritages

But tho' of Sayid I'm bereft, From whom the stream of bounty came, Sayid a nobler meed has left Th' exhaustless heritage of fame.

But MacDonald Lindsay claimed no such heritage formally.

There he gave them again their heritage, and confirmed them in their fiefs and rents.

He paid fealty and homage to Arthur, and owned that of him he held his heritage.

Frollo had no mind tamely to watch the Romans lose their heritage.

The poets of that period had received an abundant heritage from the Elizabethans, the Cavaliers, Dryden, and Milton.

The fifty years are not yet ended within which Moltke said we should stand at arms to defend the heritage and the achievements of 1870.

Perhaps the lack of spirituality of the age finds the most ample expression in his pages; but Chaucer's Parish Priest and Fielding's Parson Adams are typical of those persisting moral forces that have bequeathed a heritage of power to England.

Born for like lingering pains, Against his exile coupled with his good I'd gladly change the world's best heritage! II.

That perhaps he could only transmit his heritage by recasting the form of giving.

Nevertheless, when one recalls the spiritual heritage of Germany: when one thinks of Herder, Schiller and Goethe; Tauler, Luther and Schleiermacher; Froebel, Herbart and Richter; Kant, Fichte and Novalis; Mozart, Beethoven and Wagner; one feels that something of the old German heritage must survive.

(3) The truth of humanity, that is, the common life which labors and loves and shares the general heritage of smiles and tears, is the only subject of permanent literary interest.

You know my heritage; you think that's left nothing?

Arthur rendered these brothers their own, and restored them their heritage.

It is to save the spiritual heritage of humanity that we are fighting, and it is that heritage that education must bring to every child and youth, if it fulfills its supreme trust.

Fellow countrymen! is such the tranquillity you desireis such the heritage you would leave to your children?

Thus it is the continual affirmation of the good that keeps the heritage of yesterday and takes the step toward to-morrow.

The Osmanlis, whose nomadic forefathers had fled before the face of the Mongols out of Central Asia, took the heritage which had slipped from the Mongols' grasp, and gathered all threads of authority in Western Asia into their hands.

Especially was this true in those parts of western Europe, such as England, which were remote from the Mediterranean countries which better preserved the heritage of Greece and Rome.

But he remained divinely beautiful, his face lying in blood, surrounded by his royal blond locks, like one of those little bloodless dauphins who, unable to bear the execrable heritage of their race, die of decrepitude and imbecility at sixteen.

"Because you are foolish, I suppose, being born that way and unable to escape your heritage.

He had felt at times the heritage of this strength, shorn of its power by the softness of a wilderness that had been wooed instead of conquered.

We have found in the West a goodly heritage, but there is that in a man's birth place which keeps tight fingers on his soul, and I think that we desire to draw our last breath and lay our bones in our own grey country-side.

Some have entirely forgotten the lost heritage and the mystery of their abandonment; their games absorbed them, they have become gamblers, they have theories of chance, their talk is all of Progress of one sort or another.

We may forget that Joe was quite a politician in his prime, we are even loth to recall that there was ever such a play as "Cato," but so long as the English language has power to charm, the dear old volumes of the Spectator will stand out as a delightful landmark of that literature which forms the heritage of American and Briton alike.

73 Verbs to Use for the Word  heritages