78 Verbs to Use for the Word out

"I have been keeping a look-out for Mr. Henshaw," he said, as they strolled off down a secluded walk, "but so far have had a chance of speaking to him only once, when I ran across him in the hotel.

" I damaged my hat slightly against the roof, and I am afraid Matilda's dress suffered a little, but we managed to enter their dug-out.

Walt Disney's Pinocchio doll cut outs.

"Can't leave that lay-out," he went on.

I was faced with making a dug-out, and it was raining, of course.

The Starfish, as it were, turns itself inside-out!

And afterwards we went all of us to the edge of the cliff, and sent back the look-out to fill such crevices in his stomach as remained yet empty; for we had passed him already some sound hunks of the bread and ham and cheese, to eat whilst he kept watch, and so he had suffered no great harm.

" "There go flukes," cried the look-out, as the whale dived and tossed its flukesthat is, its tailin the air, not more than a mile on the lee-bow; "she's heading right for the ship.

DISNEY, WALTER E. Mickey Mouse presents a Walt Disney silly symphony cut-out: The three little pigs.

It occurred to me, with one of those brilliant flashes of genius which you have so often remarked in me, my dear Howard, that I would drive down, at any rate, part of the way; so I sent some of the traps direct and got this turn-out as far as Preston with me.

He paused, however, for three days, as it was absolutely necessary for him to obtain a fit-out of fresh uniforms before rejoining, and at Galata he found European tailors perfectly capable of turning out such articles.

So learned was she in all the devices of the pantry and kitchen, that many a young woman in the parish would have given half her setting-out, and her whole store of printed cookery-books, to know by heart Tira Blake's unwritten lore of rules and recipes.

They landed on the Island Eustatia, without opposition, and took the look-out.

Ain't goin' to buy any thin' out o' that winder, be ye? Trash, trash, trash!

The danger is so great and damage so serious that, at Philadelphia, Mr. Plush, the electrician to the Telephone Company, has devised this exceedingly pretty cut-out.

" "I wonder," said another reflectively, "why we don't have dug-outs like this in our line?"

Or perhaps it would be truer to say they looked like civil engineers discussing the working-out of an undertaking regarding which there was interest but no uneasiness.

Here they enjoyed as good a look-out as the little island afforded, not only of its own surface, but of the surrounding ocean.

A heavy rain-storm had just taken place, and my brother insisted that Johnnie was the right man to fill up the "wash-outs" in and about the corrals.

" "Yet whist is a restful game in itself," said Bradford, cheerfully; "an evening of whist, with even fairly intelligent partners, I've always found a great smoother-out of nerves and wrinkles.

Captain Savage said, "Yer see it don't cost me nuthin' fur a blow-out, as you might say.

The first wife died, and he was persuaded to marry a Texas widow, and now had to buy the first carriage he ever owned, and furnish a fine turn-out and driver for the lady, who wore much jewelry and fine clothes, and spent money freely.

If the splendour of some intense passion had never suddenly glorified the spread-out ether of time in which our spirits float, should we feel such a strange yearning on looking at a sunset, with its tender preliminary flush, and then the rapid suffusions of scarlet and growth of gold?

there she blows!" hailed the look-out from the mast-head, as a school of whales hove in sight, about three miles astern, one afternoon, when they had been four months on the whaling grounds.

"I'd begun to think Mike had handed you a real knock-out that time.

78 Verbs to Use for the Word  out