85 Verbs to Use for the Word kettles

And please fill the kettle before you go upstairs, and leave it on the stove.

" Diggory relighted the gas-jet which he had turned out after boiling the kettle, and proceeded, with the assistance of "Rats," to gather up the remains of the feast.

The only notice the Colonel took of him was to set the kettle on the fire.

They carried a kettle, an axe, some quinine, a box of the carbolic ointment all miners use for foot-soreness, O'Flynn's whisky, and two rifles and ammunition.

Tonnison had got the stove lit now and was busy cutting slices of bacon into the frying pan; so I took the kettle and walked down to the river for water.

Mrs. Railton hung a kettle on a hook above the fire, and then turned with a start as a girl came into the porch.

But every boy in the street thinks he has a right to throw stones at me; and tie tin-kettles to my tail; and chase me when I have had the good luck to find a bone; and to set big dogs upon me to worry me when I am faint from hunger and haven't much pluck; and worse than all, chase me and cry "Ki-yi," when I am almost dying of thirst!

After putting on the kettle, she should then proceed to the dining-room or parlour to get it in order for breakfast.

Signor Logotheti, who never wept before for anything less than the loss of a paras, melted; the padre of the convent, my attendants, my visitors, and I verily believe that even Sterne's foolish fat scullion would have left her fish-kettle to sympathise with the unaffected and unexpected sorrow of this barbarian.

At last, moving slowly, he placed a kettle of water on the fire, and then threw into it a large piece of buffalo meat.

" For the preparation of this luxury Diggory mounted a form and lit one of the gas-jets, over which he and Jack Vance took it in turns to hold the kettle until the water boiled.

" She laughed, and putting her hand in my side-pocket, took out my handkerchief to lift off the kettle with.

At the mouth of the tent stood a large iron kettle, filled with human flesh cut up.

We borrowed a kettle from our Indian friends.

Before they got kettles from the whites, the Blackfeet often boiled meat in a green hide.

Ali seized the kettle and poured it on the stomach of Ou Ali, who sprang up with a bound.

Hovering over the fire sat the iron tea-kettle, with its slender throat and pointed lips, now warmed to song by the blazing logs, now rattling its lid with increasing fervor.

One of the natives, nick-named King Peter by the men, tried to snatch a kettle from the hand of the man who was carrying it, and on this action being resented, he struck the man with a nulla-nulla, stretching him senseless.

For a few days I practiced my new craft by trying to mend two kettles and a frying-pan, remaining in my little camp.

The term will cover building houses, making kettles, laying out streets, planning rooms, dressing hair, as well as making patterns for cushion covers and cathedral windows....

What shall I do with them?" He looked around and saw upon a pyre a copper kettle with four handles, and in it were his forty calves.

The idea, so potent at Anvik, of having a tea-kettle in reservewell, the notion lost weight, and the kettle seemed to gain.

About five yards on the right, Mr. Petulengro was busily employed in erecting his tent; he held in his hand an iron bar, sharp at the bottom, with a kind of arm projecting from the top for the purpose of supporting a kettle or cauldron over the fire.

They immediately stacked their arms, made fires, and were preparing their kettles for cooking, when a horse observed some of the concealed party, and, frightened at the uniform of the regulars, began to snort.

The following course was taken,Two crotched sticks were driven down at one end of the yard, and a small pole being laid on the crotches, they swung a large iron kettle on the middle of the pole; then made up a fire under the kettle and boiled the hommony; when ready, the hands were called around this kettle with their wooden plates and spoons.

85 Verbs to Use for the Word  kettles