... so as to form a communication with the southernpart of the island and Granite House; then the making of an enclosure...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...The four frames which formed thesails had been firmly fixed in the centre beam, so as to form a certainangle with it, and secured with iron clamps...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...To avoid much lecturing, only two examples aregiven at any length, in the form of stories...
James W. Donovan 「Don't Marry」
...Trifling as it may appear, the tidy dress, the tastyevery-day apparel, the ladylike appearance, andgeneral style of man or woman, go a longway to form character...
James W. Donovan 「Don't Marry」
...Marry at home or at church, in good form, withoutdisplay; marry according to the best usageof the best people, and you will reap somebenefit from the sensible conclusion...
James W. Donovan 「Don't Marry」
...Ruin appeared impending andinevitable, though no one could tell in what precise form it would come...
George Grote 「The Two Great Retreats of History」
...But it was now necessary for all the generals to form a Boardand act in concert...
George Grote 「The Two Great Retreats of History」
...It arrested everything, baggage, treasure, and wounded; and the evil wassufficiently great, in this long series of disasters, to form an epoch...
George Grote 「The Two Great Retreats of History」
...o man faces death in so shocking a form without feeling the effects...
Various 「Astounding Stories, August, 1931」
...Several times we havethought him dead, only to have him show up with some new form ofdevil's work...
Various 「Astounding Stories, August, 1931」
...Each of you holds that his form of government is better thanthe other, and will cause less suffering and misery than the others'...
Various 「Astounding Stories, August, 1931」
...Ishould like to obtain it in book form...
Various 「Astounding Stories, August, 1931」
...The long auburn tresses not only covered her shoulders, butsuch was their length and abundance, concealed her all round beneath theirmasses, so that except the feet nothing of her form was visible...
Miguel de Cervantes 「The History of Don Quixote, Vol. I, Complete」
...Whatever Becquer may have owed to Heine, in form orsubstance, he was no servile imitator...
Gustavo Adolfo Becquer 「Legends, Tales and Poems」
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