225 Verbs to Use for the Word mood

Wholly without care, whimsical and generous to a degree, if it suited her mood, Louise Merrick possessed a nature capable of great things, either for good or ill.

Dear Roger, when your jo puts on her gloom, Do ye sae too and never fash your thumb: Seem to forsake her, soon she'll change her mood; Gae woo anither, and she'll gang clean wood.

Example: "To is a preposition, governing the verb sell, in the infinitive mood, agreeable to Rule 18, which says, The preposition TO governs the infinitive mood.

That gave the substitute time to come down from the box and go hurrying ahead into the tunnel-mouth; he went so fast (for he knew the emperor's moods) that the attendants found it hard to keep up; most of them were half a dozen paces in the rear.

He is almost always in love with some lady who is unkind and cold, and for her he wanders at times in dark array, expressing his sombre mood in the device and motto which he paints upon his shield.

Nobody else understood his moods, his humors, his whims; she knew his tastes with ominous exactness.

Dave did not share the cheerful mood of the Doctor and the crew; it was his turn to look worried.

He caught their mood instantly.

The Gold Dust maverick seemed to reflect the girl's own uneasy mood.

We should give no play to imagination here; for imagination is not judgmentit only conjures up visions, inducing an unprofitable and often very painful mood.

The little fat green one at the end of the row is Lamb's Essays of Elia: he so well fits some moods, and certain minutes of the day, that gentle writer.

His companions very quickly felt his sullen, ugly mood, and left him to his own thoughts.

There were girls, half- hidden behind the statues, each one trying, as he passed her, to divine his mood and to pose attractively.

NOTE IX.A future contingency is best expressed by a verb in the subjunctive present; and a mere supposition, with indefinite time, by a verb in the subjunctive imperfect; but a conditional circumstance assumed as a fact, requires the indicative mood: as, "If thou forsake him, he will cast thee off forever.

He always respected her moods, and saw clearly enough that some inward trouble was weighing upon her.

The pieces are introduced by short comments; these serve the same purpose as the strain played by the pianist before the singer begins to sing; they create a mood, give a point of view, throw light on the meaning of what follows.

The Ramblin' Kid's attitude, whole appearance, matched perfectly the mood of his horse.

" "And you will observe her moods?" asked Lawrence.

5.The common doctrine of L. Murray and others, that, "Conjunctions connect the same moods and tenses of verbs, and cases of nouns and pronouns," is not only badly expressed, but is pointedly at variance with their previous doctrine, that, "Conjunctions very often unite sentences, when they appear to unite only words; as in the following instances: 'Duty and interest forbid vicious indulgences;' 'Wisdom or folly governs us.'

To the lone sea he brought his agony To face it boldly, and his spirit, quick To wear new moods, caught a despondent gloom From the dark omen that oppressed his soul.

The discovery that Paula was gone and simultaneously that he need not have lost her obliteratedor rather reversedthe morning's mood completely.

The letter being folded and despatched by a servant, Mr. Jefferson was at liberty to indulge his restless mood.

This sadness now seems to me a part of all peoples who preserve the moods of the ancient peoples of the world.

And one of these wordshow it brings to me the very mood of a gray October day!

" Sanpeur, Alone of all the men who came within Her circle, varied not at smiles or frowns, And when he would not humour passing mood, And when she felt within her wayward heart The silent protest of his calm reserve, Although a longing she had never known Awoke in her,her pride, in arms, cried truce To striving spirit, and she laughed the more.

225 Verbs to Use for the Word  mood