18 Verbs to Use for the Word smiths

" "We don't know at all if Hapgood's Emily is our Emily, even if they did both marry Smiths," insisted Mr. Clark stoutly, his obstinacy reviving.

A.F. WILDING MISS EASTLAKE SMITH AND MR.

Therefore, his purpose was not fully accomplished when he had dressed the dead smith in the clothes of the Orléans prince.

He got a smith to turn the shoes, and when they came upon his track, he went east

He put no veto on any request of this kind, holding the smiths and mechanics of the government amenable to comply with any order.

How can people be called equal when the Browns won't know the Smiths!

When Sir Edward Stanley led the war-smiths of Lancashire and Cheshire to Flodden Field, the men of Wigan are mentioned as going with the rest.

He had struck that path from the road on the night when he met the smith on the cliffs.

They returned to the city of the Jews, ordered the smiths to make a big trap and commanded the citizens to furnish the sulphur.

" "What may that be, pray?" queried the smith sullenly.

"That will do, and is sufficient for me; I have often seen smiths, and other artists, look with one eye only, to make their work the truer."

The duchess looked in, said nothing, and sent a smith to take the hinges of the door oft.

Then Jehovah showed me four smiths.

He could not do anything against Jupiter and Pluto, for they were stronger than he; but he went down into the smithy of Vulcan, underneath the smoking mountains, and slew the giant smiths who had made the deadly thunderbolts.

When they saw their leader fall, the crowd gave another angry shout; but the stranger placed his back against the tent near which he stood, swinging his terrible staff, and so fell had been the blow that he struck the stout smith that none dared to come within the measure of his cudgel, so the press crowded back, like a pack of dogs from a bear at bay.

I mean to beat the Smiths at plums, Jim Galway at alfalfa, even rival Bob Worther at pumpkins and peonies.

"I told the wire-smith to bring the cage up to the house so he could fit the two halves rigidly together.

Where the foot is shelly and brittle even a good smith sometimes finds himself unable to firmly attach the shoe without verging closely on causing the condition we are now describing.

18 Verbs to Use for the Word  smiths