59 Verbs to Use for the Word pike

What privat Gentleman That onely trailes a pike, that comes from England Or Fraunce, but brings gold with him which he leaves here

He marches as if he were at plough, carries his pike like a pike-staff, and his sword before him for fear of losing from his side.

For bringing 100 pikes of any measurable ware from Aleppo thither, there is found but 82 pikes in Babylon, so that the 100 pikes of Babylon is of Aleppo l2l pikes, very litle lesse.

If they would use no other bucklers in war but shields of brawn, brandish no swords but sweards of bacon,[202] trail no spears but spare-ribs of pork, and instead of arquebuss pieces discharge artichoke-pies: toss no pikes but boiled pickrels, then Appetitus would rouse up his crest, and bear up himself with the proudest.

Shortly after his arrival he celebrated Mass in the house of an Irishman named William Davis, who had been transported for making pikes for the insurgents in the days of '98, and then, on the first opportunity that presented itself, he sought the authorization of the colonial governor to exercise the functions of his sacred ministry.

Cock all your Musketts, Soldiers, now, And gentlemen be ready to bend your pikes; The prisoner's comming out.

Full of scorn was Hiawatha When he saw the fish rise upward, Saw the pike, the Maskenozha, Coming nearer, nearer to him,

And you, fellows, who have been so bold as to lift a pike without an order have a care they do not burn your hands.

Legendre, the butcher, raised his pike as if to strike him, while he reproached him as a traitor and the enemy of his country.

And I have caught pikes with four or five hooks in their mouths, and tackle which they had broken only a few minutes before; and the hooks seemed to have had no other effect than that of serving as a sort of sauce piquante, urging them to seize another morsel of the same kind.

Mode.Scale and clean the pike, and fasten the tail in its mouth by means of a skewer.

From Malin Head to Cape Clear all Ireland was in a wild buzz of excitement, and every fighting kern and galloglass clutched his pike with a sense of coming triumph.

Here's one has served now under Captain Cupid, And crackt a Pike in's youth: you see what's come on't.

Also he had nineteene and a halfe pikes of cloth, which cost in London twenty shillings the pike, and was worth 9 or 10 crownes the pike, and he payed for the same twelue larines a pike.

We have here the methods, to dress pikes à la sauce Robert, to make blackcaps (apples baked in their skins); to make a Wood Street cake; to make Shrewsbury cakes; to dress a leg of mutton like a gammon of bacon; to dress eggs à la Augemotte; to make a dish of quaking pudding of several colours; to make an Italian pudding, and to make an Olio.

To make taffaty tarts To make fresh Cheese To make Sugar Cakes or Jumballs To hash a shoulder of Mutton To dresse Flounders or Plaice with Garlick and Mustard A turkish dish To dresse a Pike To dresse Oysters To dresse Flounders To dresse Snailes To dresse pickle fish To fricate beef Pallats A Spanish Olio To make a Spanish Olio.

I'd as soon think of eating a watchman's pike.

In fact, they got into such close quarters with them that the enemy could not employ their pikes or long swords.

Ormond was anxious to take the field in the north before the insurrection spread further, before they had time, as he said, to "file their pikes."

" In 1463 is another curious sumptuary law prescribing with great care the apparel of knights, bachelors, gentlemen and their wives, making it criminal for tailors to make cloths not according to this fashion, and for shoemakers to make boots or shoes having pikes more than two inches long.

"Yes; and they said you'd hit the pike about dark last night, to chase a crazy man.

"What an odd-looking fish he islike a pike!" said O'Flanagan; "I wonder what his MS. is like."

My veteran knew the pikes and the by-paths, and we fraternised with the warmth usual among foemen who at last have become friends.

Also he had nineteene and a halfe pikes of cloth, which cost in London twenty shillings the pike, and was worth 9 or 10 crownes the pike, and he payed for the same twelue larines a pike.

The men seemed to think that for the time there was nothing more to be done, laid their pikes against the wall, and assumed, Harry thought, a more friendly aspect.

59 Verbs to Use for the Word  pike