365 Verbs to Use for the Word treasured

"I found de treasure!"

The newly discovered continent of America was an appanage of Spain, and her great galleons were wafted lazily to and fro, bringing her all the treasures of the western hemisphere.

Go now, dig ye a pit and therein hide such treasure as ye will and thereafter arm ye at points, for in the hour we march.

Every pass, however, possesses treasures of beauty all its own.

Dr. Schermerhorn came aboard with a chest which the men think holds treasure.

Now, let us carry our treasure.

The king forgot not a single day to visit the mountain that contained his beloved treasure, and to be satisfied of his safety with his own eyes.

Hence those superstitious notions now existing in our western villages, where the spriggian are still believed to delude benighted travellers, to discover hidden treasures, to influence the weather, and to raise the winds.

In the same month came £100, "from two servants of the Lord Jesus, who, constrained by the love of Christ, seek to lay up treasure in Heaven".

'That will with-sufficient- safety guard our treasure.

There are few persons who reside on the Atlantic ocean and rivers of North America who are not familiar with the name of Black Beard, whom traditionary history represents as a pirate, who acquired immense wealth in his predatory voyages, and was accustomed to bury his treasures in the banks of creeks and rivers.

He applied himself to gathering the treasure, and became a rich merchant.

On Slade's showing, Handy Solomon and his worthy associates thought they had a chest full of riches when they got the doctor's treasure; believed they owned the machinery for making diamonds or gold or what-not of ready-to-hand wealth.

In the palace there built for the King Hyrieus, they so laid a stone, that it might be taken away, and in the night they crept in through the hole they had thus contrived, to steal the king's treasures.

I will open The countless treasures of the realm; my warriors, A thousand thousand, armed with shining steel, Shall overrun thy kingdom; I myself Will crush that head of thine beneath my feet.

Beneath this stone lies a treasure which is to be yours, and no one else may touch it, so you must do exactly as I tell you.

So the other man took the treasures and returned home with his wife.

"Now what's up?" asked Teddy, as he came into the room where the girls had left their treasure.

He not only captured the Persian camp, but also secured the King's treasures and took his family prisoners.

It was in at a country hotel, then, that the young Southern pedestrian turned for temporary rest and a meal, and pitiless was the cross-examination instituted by the inevitable lank, middle-aged gristly man, before he could reconcile it with his duty as a cautious public character to reveal the treasures of the larder.

So the first party discovered that hastened to his cave at the tidings, thinking to seize his treasure, and had their heads broken for their pains.

Of course the snow on the lower tributaries of the rivers is first melted, then that on the higher fountains most exposed to sunshine, and about a month later the cooler, shadowy fountains send down their treasures, thus allowing the main trunk streams nearly six weeks to get their waters hurried through the foot-hills and across the lowlands to the sea.

His companions did not know its contents, but guessed that the monarch had given to him some treasures of gold or silver.

There, too, the countess kept her treasures.

"Thine for a space are they Yet shalt thou yield thy treasures up at last; Thy gates shall yet give way, Thy bolts shall fall, inexorable Past.

365 Verbs to Use for the Word  treasured