Example sentences of "'d with " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Deaf 'd with the clamours of their own dear groans ,
2 Nay , would I were so anger 'd with the same !
3 In Beaumont and Fletcher 's The Maid 's Tragedy , Melantius , approving his sister 's marriage to his best friend , tells her : ‘ Sister , I joy to see you , and your choice/You look 'd with my eyes when you took that man ’ ( i. ii .
4 The glass for this could , Miller suggested , be of inferior quality for the top , but the front should be ‘ glaz 'd with new Castle Glass ’ .
5 One , seldom more than three feet high and called by Ray the Dwarf Red Rose , had small flowers and rounded buds which before opening appeared ‘ as if they had been clipp 'd with Scissars ’ .
6 [ Philip Leapor ] informs me she was always fond of reading every thing that came in her way , as soon as she was capable of it ; and that when she and learnt to write tolerably , which , as he remembers , was at about ten or eleven Years old , She would often be scribbling , and sometimes in Rhyme ; which her Mother was at first pleas 'd with : But finding this Humour increase upon her as she grew up , when she thought her capable of more profitable Employment , she endeavour 'd to break her of it ; and that he likewise , having no Taste for Poetry , and not imagining it could ever be any Advantage to her , join 'd in the same Design : But finding it impossible to alter her natural Inclination , he had of late desisted , and left her more at Liberty
7 I remember I saw , two or three Years before my Acquaintance with her commenced , a Book about the Size of a common Copy-Book ( but something thicker ) fill 'd with Poems of her writing , that much pleas 'd me .
8 Of some induc 'd with gaudy Knights to roam
9 Too dearly purchas 'd with a thousand Pound .
10 Too dearly purchas 'd with a thousand Pound
11 The Soul unstain 'd with Envy or with Pride ,
12 Pleas 'd with itself and all the World beside ,
13 They look decay 'd with Posset , and with Plumbs ,
14 When-e'er you mow 'd I follow 'd with the Rake ,
15 And cap 'd with Ice the distant Mountains shine ;
16 And the brown Bowls were crown 'd with simp'ring Ale ;
17 Sarah Hare , the youngest daughter of Sir Thomas and Lady Elizabeth Hare of Stow Bardolph , Norfolk , was very specific regarding the simplicity of her grave-clothes and coffin , making her wishes abundantly clear in her will of 1743 : ‘ … my coffin to be made of the best Elm lin 'd with a thinn lead with a flap of lead sawder 'd down over me , not to have a nail or any ornament that is not absolutely necessary , except a plate with my coat of arms and with this inscription : They that humble themselves shall be Exalted . ’
18 If order 'd with 4 p r Of Handles & 20 Yds of Lace & c the Price is advanced in Proportion .
19 They'are rear 'd with no mans ruine , no mans grone ,
20 ‘ Not honour 'd with a human shape . ’
21 Nigel , the old Charmer , and I were half-nelson 'd with mirth .
22 Some Tories " rais 'd an Opposite Mobb , who offering to disturb the Rejoycings round the Bonfire , a Scuffle ensu 'd , in which the Aggressors were repuls 'd with some broken Heads and bloody Noses " .
  Next page