23 Verbs to Use for the Word yews

He drew the good yew bow quickly, and quickly loosed a shaft; so short was the time that no man could draw a breath betwixt the drawing and the shooting; yet his arrow lodged nearer the center than the other by twice the length of a barleycorn.

That's all we ask o' yew.

"I tell yew, Tommy," regaining her accustomed confiding amiability, as she lifted the corner of her apron to wipe her eyes, "Miss Ellie will feel some kind o' bad, tew.

They was a-arguin' the p'int as to whether they'd bury yew in a shroud or yer Sunday suit.

Industrious man, thou art a prize to me, The best of masterssurely born for thee; Thou keeper art of this my rural seat, Kept at my charge to keep my garden neat; To train the woodbine and to crop the yew In th' art of gard'ning equall'd p'rhaps by few.

"Dew yew know what'll happen tew yew ef yew don't git out

Angy, ef ever I ketch yew fishin' yer winter bunnit out of a charity barrel ag'in, I'llFifteen dollars!"

He never kissed yew good-by!" Angy turned, her small, slender feet sinking deep into one of the woolly stars, her slim figure encircled by the light from the upper hall window.

We know that yew," resting her eyes on Abe's face, "will prove ter be the 'angel unawares' that we been entertainin', but we don't want yew ter waste yer money on a cart-load o' silk dresses.

"I hope he'll appreciate yew as I allers done.

We'll miss yew a lot; but" "Here's the apple-picker right over your head," interrupted Blossy tartly, and Abe felt himself peremptorily dismissed.

My dream-ship's cargo is wealth untold, Rare blooms that the old home gardens grew, Sweet pictured faces, and loved songs trolled By lips long laid 'neath the churchyard yew; Or wondrous wishes not yet come true, And fame and glory that is to be; Hope holds the wheel all the lone watch through, Where my dream-ship sails o'er the silver sea.

"Much obliged fer yew a-wakin' me up, boys," as he drew on his boots.

"O Mother dear, I am dying, I fear; Prepare the yew, and the willow, And the cypress black: for I get no ease By day or by night for the cursed fleas, That skip about my pillow.

Their bows were of a wood resembling yew, and almost as large and strong as those of France and England; the arrows of small twigs which grow from the ends of the canes, massive and very solid, about the length of a mans arm and a half; the head is made of a small stick hardened in the fire, about three-eighths of a yard long, tipped with a fishes tooth, or sharpened bone, and smeared with poison.

Then yawns the bursting ground!two imps obscene Rise on broad wings, and hail the baleful queen; Each with dire grin salutes the potent wand, And leads the sorceress with his sooty hand; Onward they glide, where sheds the sickly yew 20 O'er many a mouldering bone its nightly dew; The ponderous portals of the church unbar, Hoarse on their hinge the ponderous portals jar;

Of course I didn't 'spect nuthin' o' yew when yew was jist a bachelor, an' we'd sort o' lost sight er each other fer many a year, but arter yew got connected with the Hum by marriage sorter" "Connected with the Hum by marriage!" broke in Samuel with a snort of indignant protest.

Her feet falling noiselessly, she entered the grass-grown courtyard, where stood the ancient spreading yew, the "dule-tree," under which the Glencardine charters had been signed and justice administered.

" Shakespeare also refers to the custom of sticking yew in the shroud in the following song in "Twelfth Night" (Act ii.

Even Miss Abigail's, "Yew were a stranger an' we took yew in" did not sober him.

Then came shooting with the cross-bow, and I regretted much that I had only learned the six-foot yew, and that there was not one in the company, nor indeed room to display it if there had been.

At my request, this young lydy will now perceed to assoom the yew and kimplexion of life itself.

No tough arm bends the springing yew.

23 Verbs to Use for the Word  yews