1328 Verbs to Use for the Word ways

Here, there was a continuous bubbling; and, occasionally, a curious sort of sobbing gurgle would find its way up from the depth.

Then, before I could use my rifle, or do anything, there came a sharp crackcr-ac-k; and the window-frame gave way under the weight of the Thing.

I led the way, cautiously, for another fifty yards, or so.

"No wonder you have forced your way into the 8 Senate House: no bars or bolts can hold against you.

The fishing-sage knows the ways and haunts of fish.

Thus it came to me that we were making our way through the riot of a great and ancient garden.

I, myself, later worked my way a short distance, merely to examine the texture of their marvellous colour.

"Well," said a bystander, "I never seen any feller as calm as that who was bein' took the way he didn't want to go.

" As a storm was coming up it was quite dark, and the scouts feared that they would lose the way; besides it was a dangerous ride, as a large party of Indians were known to be camped on Walnut Creek, on the direct road to Fort Hays.

'It's so very hotam I going your way?

It was then young, just emerging, as it were, from nothingness, growing into form, assuming shape, and gathering attributes of fitness for exterior vitality, preparing the way for higher existences than mere inorganic matter.

Still human ingenuity felt its way carefully onward, until the great fact was developed, that steam was in truth capable of moving machinery, was endowed almost with vitality, and could be made to throw the shuttle and spin.

These and a thousand other mighty triumphs of human ingenuity have fought their way onward to their present position, against the fogyism of philosophy, the inertia of the schoolmen.

"God expects us to believe his word when he tells us that he has opened a way for us into the Holiest by the blood of his Son.

'Sir, and your honors,' said Wirt, straightening himself up to his full height, 'I am not bound to grope my way among the ruins of antiquity, to stumble over obsolete statutes, or delve in black letter law, in search of a principle written in living letters upon the heart of every man.'

Cautiously picking my way, I gained the top of the moraine and was delighted to see a small but well characterized glacier swooping down from the gloomy precipices of Black Mountain in a finely graduated curve to the moraine on which I stood.

Civilization is pushing its way even towards this wild and, for all agricultural purposes, sterile region, and before many years even the Rackett will be within its ever-extending circle.

Presently as I sat trying to persuade myself to rise and pursue my way, two men came up to me in a sort of uniform.

It would be doubtless carefully inspected by any curious banter passing that way, but theft or robbery are unknown here.

Through such dinners I hack and saw my way without even gaining a memory of my progress.

There was a solemn sort of feeling stole over me, as this lonely hunter wended his way into the deep solitudes of the prairies, to be alone with nature, communing only with himself and the things scattered around him by the great Creator.

"Ah, but there should be some one to point out the way, and tell us which is our circle, and where we ought to go," he said.

He shall pave the way to a larger view of wealth, influence, and reform; endue man with a keener sense of his own responsibilities, make him a creature of larger desires and of more aspiring wants.

As she prayed, a thought came to her which showed her a way out of her problem.

Nothing daunted, he cut his way through a marsh, making a progress of only twelve miles in about a fortnight.

1328 Verbs to Use for the Word  ways