Usa "pease" in una frase
pease frasi di esempio
pease
1. Pease to 40s
2. the quarter; that of middling rye, pease, or beans, to 32s
3. Horticulture seemed, however, to have been abandoned in the deserted kitchen-garden; and where cabbages, carrots, radishes, pease, and melons had once flourished, a scanty crop of lucerne alone bore evidence of its being deemed worthy of cultivation
4. Danglars threw himself upon his goat-skin, and Peppino, reclosing the door, again began eating his pease and bacon
5. As for Peppino, he examined the paper attentively, put it into his pocket, and continued eating his pease
6. There was hot bread and honey, a bowl of pease porridge, a skewer of roast onions and well-charred meat
7. “She thinks I’m some great lout with pease porridge between his ears
8. There was pease porridge besides; buttered turnips; carrots drizzled with honey; and a ripe white cheese that smelled as strong as Bennis of the Brown Shield
9. O ’twas clear she thought herself fitted only to cook La Haute Cuisine; therefore, to show her Displeasure with our humble Kitchen, she left the Spits unclean’d, the Fowls unsinged, the Roasts half raw, the Potts unscour’d, and she made sure to comb her Hair o’er the Pottage of Pease
10. They took her from the Bow, then crept aboard, and ramm’d her Rudder with a Wedge of Wood ere she e’en knew that they’d arriv’d, whereupon they’d scramble up the Decks and oft’times take the Ship without a Shot being fir’d! The Spanish studded their Hulls with Nails ’gainst these Invaders and e’en smear’d their Decks with Butter! Why, oft’ they’d spill dried Pease across ’em to make ’em more Slippery! But it avail’d ’em nought
11. THE MONKEY AND THE PEASE
12. A Monkey was carrying both her hands full of pease
13. Then she flew into a rage, swept away all the pease and ran off
14. After awhile the Cook began to clean pease, turnips, and onions, and threw out the refuse
15. I will get you the kind of guns that fire one hundred bullets at once, as though pouring out pease
16. ” He says of himself that he has “passed through all the ranks,” and that when he shall have served out his term in the army, he is to receive from the Emperor an unlimited bank account, clothes, uniforms, horses, equipages, tea, pease and servants, and all sorts of luxuries
17. Mary Pease Collins, by C