15 Verbs to Use for the Word sorrel

Glaze the larded side of the beef with this, and serve on sorrel sauce, which is made as follows:Wash and pick some sorrel, and put it into a stewpan with only the water that hangs about it.

She rode a fine sorrel, with the easy seat of a skilled horsewoman.

While some of the men were busy in gathering sorrel from the rocks, and Greene was surrounded by the natives, with whom he was trading, Pricket, who was lying in the stern of the boat, observed one of the savages coming in at the bows.

Then the observant boy ran on to open the other gate, and with many jerks and clucks, Miss Annie induced the sorrel to break into a gentle trot.

The word means a "mettlesome sorrel.

We may also here mention sorrel and the common mushroom, which were used in cooking during the Middle Ages.

" Thereon he mounts the sorrel, Froben's own, Returning thence to where his duty calls.

And then he would put a poultice made of grass upon the place, and once walked almost as far as Chaldron to pluck sorrel for a soothing mash.

Say-So, the Pecos horse, jammed close to the side of the black stallion; Snow Johnson, rider of Prince John, pushed the big sorrel ahead with his nose at the roan's tail; Dash-Away hugged against the heels of Prince John.

McNutt slapped the sorrel with the ends of the reins so energetically that the mare broke into a trot, and before the girls had come within speaking distance of their uncle, the agent was well out of sight and exulting in the possession of eleven dollars to pay for his morning's work.

Edi, too, sat quite ill-humoredly before his plate, as if he had to swallow sorrel instead of little golden apples; for he felt much troubled that his father had heard of his inattention in the school.

No, 'tis the sorrel!

" They went to the negro church in the spring-wagon, Lawrence driving the jogging sorrel, and Miss Annie on the seat beside him.

" "We've got to," Jones asserted; "try the sorrel.

Nor does it better matters when the man behind the spectacles explains that to eat sheep-sorrel is deleterious; to feed younkers Indian turnip is cruel; to suck the sap of the young grapevine in spring produces malaria; to smoke rattan is depraving, and to stuff one's stomach with paw-paws and wild-grapes is dangerous in the extreme.

15 Verbs to Use for the Word  sorrel