423 Verbs to Use for the Word rose

"What, father," said I, "could have given rise to so strange an opinion?"

At this distance, the stream divides, the right hand channel leading to the two chains of ponds and Mud Lake, where it takes its rise; and the left to Round Pond, and little Tupper's Lake, and a dozen other nameless sheets of water, laying higher up among the mountains.

As I did so, I saw the Sun rise, from behind the horizon.

" "Do you remember the scene in Shakespeare where Bolingbroke and Gaunt pluck the roses?" "Quite well.

To dream of being pricked with briars, says the "Royal Dream Book," "shows that the person dreaming has an ardent desire to something, and that young folks dreaming thus are in love, who prick themselves in striving to gather their rose.

The monkey brought her a rose.

"I am not sending you roses because I think you are short of bouquets, but just because there are certain things a red rose can say, that I can not.

Lefty craned his neck from the door, studying the roadbed, but at that moment the locomotive topped the little rise and the whole train lurched forward.

" He took a rose and approached.

Khaled filled with confusion withdrew to his tent, not knowing what to do, nor what would be the end of the passionate love which he suddenly felt rise within him.

Her mother did not believe her in the least, but bade her rise and consider it an idle dream.

I'd have a nice little farm in the country, and I'd grow roses, and breed sheep and pigs, and" "And lose all your brass in a couple of years!"

There, over a doorway on the south, is a shield, with the arms of Henry VII., and two figures kneeling before the Blessed Virgin, attended by an angel holding a rose.

But the chief part of the gratification you receive from smelling a rose, arises from some past scene of delight of which it reminds you; as, of the days of your innocence and childhood, when you ran about the gardenor when you were decorated with nosegaysor danced round a may-pole, (this is rather a free translation)or presented a bunch of flowers to some little favourite.

Evidently, the rain had swollen the lake, and caused this premature rise; for, at the rate the ravine had been filling, it would not have reached the entrance for a couple more days.

But I haven't seen the roses yet, and a pair of ear muffs wouldn't be uncomfortable in this cutting breeze.

"I love youred roses," she said, "but you are not enough.

It gratified him to see that, among the shower of bouquets she was constantly receiving, his was the one she usually carried; nor was she unobservant that he always wore a fresh rose.

Historians say he owed his rise, not so much to his mental abilities, as to the graces of his person and his excellence in dancing, which captivated the Queen to such a degree, that he arose gradually from one of her Gentlemen Pensioners to the highest employment in the law, which he, however, filled without censure, supplying his own defects by the assistance of the ablest men in the profession.

I only wonder if Sophie is going to try and polish it," answered Emily, glancing at her friend, who stood a little apart, watching the rise and fall of the axe as intently as if her fate depended on it.

and even then she gave me a rose, with the same coquetry, I doubt not, that had once made Colonel Jere Lansdale quick to think of his pistols when another evoked it.

She witnessed the rise of the great evangelical revival, which, beginning with the Holy Club at Oxford, gradually spread over the United Kingdom and the English colonies in America.

By such a redistribution of what he wrote we can trace the rise, the culmination, and alsoit may bethe decline and fall of his genius.

A moment afterward he cut all the roses of the garden.

"I picked a rose in my garden fair" sang Ada.

423 Verbs to Use for the Word  rose