23 Verbs to Use for the Word knew

"Beltanedear my lord, now dost thou know who is Fidelis, and thou didstlove Fidelis!"

" "Want ter know," said the auditor, as a sort of musical rest in this monotone of talk.

It is by the seeming insignificance thereof, by the seeming non-necessity, by the seeming humbleness of its circumstances, by the seeming smallness of its results, issuing merely (as far as Scripture tells us, and therefore as far as we need know, or have a right to imagine) in the giving of a transitory and unnecessary physical pleasure.

for they tell you they would fain know of a balm for the many griefs they endure; they would be taught to avoid the many sins they commit; and, oh!

Oh, for the veils of my far away youth, Shielding my heart from the blaze of the truth, Why did I stray from their shelter and grow Into the sadness that followsto know!

"Don't you s'pose if a dog's really good t' begin with, an' some one that loves him lots learns him all the things a' racin' dog's got t' know, that he'd turn out so wonderful that everybody in Alaska 'ud know how great he wasmebbe everybody in the world?" The Woman smiled.

O good sir, if I had known your mind before; for my father hath already given the induction to a chaplain of his ownto a proper manI know not of what university he is. ACADEMICO.

" "Now, father has been telling you that," exclaimed Caddy, looking confused, "and I don't thank him for it either; I hear of that everywhere I goeven the Burtons know of it.

"My mother made a point of having her know.

Those who know the East know, where the system of 'squeeze,' which is commission, runs through every transaction of life, from the sale of a groom's place upward, where the woman walks behind the man in the streets, and where the peasant gives you for the distance to the next town as many or as few miles as he thinks you will like, that these things must be so.

"Who be ye, I 'd like t' know?" said the man D'ri.

With respect to a vast number of our most common verbs, he himself never knew, nor does the greatest grammarian now living know, in what way he ought to form the simple past tense in the second person singular, otherwise than by the mere uninflected preterit with the pronoun thou.

Of course there would have been no profit or entertainment in discussing these recondite subjects with a savage such as Verty had appeared to be upon their former interview, when, with his long, tangled hair, hunter's garb, and old slouched hat, he resembled an inhabitant of the backwoodswhat could such a personage know of divine philosophy, or what pleasure could a lady take in his society?no pleasure, evidently.

Talk about your scorchers, I think Andy would run a mileI know I would if I thought the murderous thing was going to be turned on me," growled Jerry, who, as the reader must already have noticed, was a very persistent fellow, and hard to convince, especially when on his favorite subject of a fair deal for every living creature.

It is ridiculous for the rider of a bucking horse to shout 'Whoa!''I know,' said the Soldier, 'because I have done it.'

And from its Earth, enrich'd with such a Prize, Let Wells of Milk and Streams of Wine arise: So will thine Ashes yet a Pleasure know, If any Pleasure reach the Shades below.' The Poet here written upon, is an easy gay Author, and he who writes upon him has filled his own Head with the Character of his Subject.

" "Nay, and ye needn't think itye mid know as I wouldn't do sich a thing," returned her lord with equal heat.

"Yes, it will breakhe fault'ring cried, "For me will life resign "Then trembling know thy father died "And know the guilt was mine!"

We shall all un-know about these things in God's goo-good time.

But no one was near to hear him, and he continued lowly"thou dost know, surely, that man cannot look on thee without loving?"

"Tell us," begged Ethel Blue, who was expending special care on digging up this contribution to the garden as if to make amends for the unkindness of the scientific world, and Ethel Brown repeated the poem beginning "When beechen buds begin to swell, And woods the blue-bird's warble know, The yellow violet's modest bell Peeps from last year's leaves below.

MARGARET Our land doth no such usage know.

Seven lines ending know, head, king, word, attempts, me, friends.

23 Verbs to Use for the Word  knew