87 Verbs to Use for the Word tin

A good PASTE for TARTS. Take a pint of flour, and rub a quarter of a pound of butter into it, beat two eggs with a spoonful of double-refin'd sugar, and two or three spoonfuls of cream to make it into paste; work it as little as you can, roll it out thin; butter your tins, dust on some flour, then lay in your paste, and do not fill them too full.

"I shan't play any more to-night; I've got no more tin." "Oh, go on; I'll lend you some," answered Fletcher.

She opened a tin of sardines and came back to the fire with it in her hands.

Look here"He held up a tin and scanned the label triumphantly: "Chow de Bruxelles, what?

Make a little shell-paste, roll it, and line your tins, prick them in the inside, and so bake them; when you serve 'em up put in any sort of sweet-meats, what you please.

If oily, it must be cooled by standing tin in very cold water.

Well grease some shallow jam sandwich tins.

"Show us"Mac had taken the shut tin, and now held it out"show us how you got the lid off.

Farmer Hall said he'd go to jail afore he'd pay, at fust, but arter five men 'ad spoke the truth and said they 'ad see Bob's youngsters tying a empty mustard-tin to its tail on'y the day afore, he gave way.

And if ye'll wait a bit it's mesilf that'll run and fetch some of the nate, saft sthraw, that ye can fill the tins, and 'twill do ye betther; indade, and it's none but a hathen that could endure the likes of that!"

The second shot brought the tin down with a great clatter, and a flood of white paint spread all over the trim little pathway.

Have you got any?" "We have plenty of two-pound tins, but we are sold out of the smaller ones," she answered, then made a mental note that in future she would buy all small tins, because they sold so much more easily.

Then, after making a tin-cupful of tea, I sat by my camp-fire reflecting on the grandeur and significance of the glacial records I had seen.

She went on with surprising clearness, explaining to me the degree of relationship which we bore to each other, and traced my pedigree till it joined her own; continued our mutual genealogy back to the Damnonii of Cornwall, hinting that our ancestors of that period were large mining proprietors, who sold tin to the Phoenicians!

It is indeed certain that the Carthaginians frequented the Cornish coastas the Phoenicians had done before themfor the purpose of procuring tin; and there is every reason to believe that they sailed as far as the coasts of the Baltic for amber.

To tave ut fruh tin!

The North American housewife keeps a few tins of sardines and cans of preserves on hand for emergencies.

The Chinaman is careful when he throws out empty tomato-cansturning back the tin to make it impossible for the yellow cat again to fasten his head in one of the inviting traps, and the cook would imperil the hope of the return of his soul to the flowery Orient before he would put butter in the bottom of a can to entice the animal into trouble.

Have ready a very hot greased tin, pour in and bake in a hot oven until golden brown.

A very moderately skilled mechanic can unsolder a tin, empty out the fish and oil, put in what he pleases in place, weight judiciously, and then refasten with fresh solder.

In the second place Adair might have upset the tin and trodden in its contents when he went to get his bicycle in order to fetch the doctor for the suffering MacPhee.

And once, when goaded to a desperate stand, I wrung a sirloin from thy grudging hand, Did not thy boy, a cheeky little brute With shifty eyes, mislay the thing en route, Depositing at my address the bones Intended for the dog of Mr. Jones? I sometimes think that never runs so thin The milk as when it leaves the milkman's tin; That every link the sausageman prepares Harbours

Also he discovered tin for them; but that was an accident.

Each guest of course brought his own plate, knife, fork, spoon, and drinking tin.

She set the tin down, looked round, a little embarrassed, and stirred the fire, which didn't need it.

87 Verbs to Use for the Word  tin