35 Verbs to Use for the Word sunrises

I did not sleep again, but watched the sunrise behind an avenue of poplars, as we passed through Creil, and the woods of Chantilly shining wonderfully in the early morning light.

"Not until you have callouses on your hands can you succeed or really know how to enjoy a desert sunrise or sunset.

As it happened you saw sunrise and moonrise best from the platform of Morfe Green.

"The poets are not content to describe sunrise and sunset, and now they even disturb the midday siesta.

Thus, in the Papyrus of Ani, [Footnote: British Museum, No. 10,470.] we have a hymn to R[=a] followed by a vignette representing the sunrise, and a hymn to Osiris; and in the Papyrus of Hunefer, [Footnote 2: British Museum, No. 9901.]

The bridle-path was barely visible in the darkness, but we continued ascending to a height of probably 5,000 feet above the sea, and thus met the sunrise half-way.

NORRIS, KATHLEEN. Lost sunrise.

Near the first of January, 1834, I started about sunrise to go to Lewisburg.

They stood facing the sunrise.

And she knew that over her head above the farmer's house stretched wide Paradise, where perhaps God was now imagining a sunrise while angels played low on lutes, and the sun came rising up on the world below to gladden fields and marsh.

The last hundred feet was the river Gambier, over which Patching had introduced a sunrise of the most gorgeous description, at the earnest request of Wesley Tiffles.

She loved the sunrise and the sunset and all the great drama of the open heavens more than anything else in the world, but among a people at once so democratic and so vehemently loyal as the English her freedom was much restricted.

In after years, when his health began to fail and the sweets of success had, perhaps, become a trifle cloying, the tragedian often went through a part in a perfunctory manner.[A] But those early days in Ireland marked the sunrise of his geniusa time no less noble, in its freshness and promise, than the later glory of the noontideand there was in his performance nothing but youthful ardour and devotion.

but so many accounts rendered; to you, being a philosopher, they would, as I have said, mean more; but to me they mean all that great sunrise, the youth of Narcissus.

There was energy, youth, intelligence, beauty, a pair of lovers on the eve of betrothaljust in that misty, golden twilight that precedes the full sunrise of avowed and accepted loveand yet behind it all was walking with stealthy step the shadow of a coming sorrow.

It proved a glorious sunrise and the air was full of pure ozone.

They are supposed to know much about the weather from reading the sunrises, sunsets, stars, moon and tides, and often sit on a hilltop for hours studying the weather conditions.

If you were there, you remember it as you remember a rare sunrise, or a peculiarly delicate May-flower, or that strain in a simple old song which is like orioles and butterflies and dew-drops.

How did it get into your head, little one?" Myrtle's sweet face rivaled the sunrise for a moment.

Nevertheless they venerate the sun, and salute the sunrise with respect.

It was the low tide succeeding sunrise, and the water over the reef was a few inches deep, so that I could see the marine life of the wall, the many kinds of starfish, the sea-urchins, and the curious bivalves which hide with their shell-tips just even with the floor of the lagoon, and, keeping them barely even, wait for foolish prey.

Two other poets of the same age suggest the sunrise.

"Twin trees whose boughs together twine, Two birds that guard one nest, We'll soon be far asunder torn As sunrise from the west.

"Dunno but he 'll tek the hull garrison 'fore sunrise," he muttered.

She prefers to jog along in the old rut, contentedly turning out chromolithographic sunrises such as they give away at the tea stores, contentedly staging the most violent and improbable melodramas; andsturdy old Philistine that she isshe even now permits her children to fall in love in the most primitive fashion.

35 Verbs to Use for the Word  sunrises