How To Use Carum In A Sentence
- Habetur quoque ibi domus plena furnis paruis, in quibus per custodes domus tam hyeme qu鄊 鎠tate fouentur oua gallinarum, anatum, aucarum, et columbarum, vsque ad procreationem suorum pullorum, et hijs intendunt, pro certo pretio accipiendo � mulierculis illic oua ferentibus. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
- But total meeting has a few harum-scarum people forget transhipment of through cargo, the cold looked for them easily.
- Besides, had not her own cousin, -- though a remote and distant one to be sure, the black sheep, the harum-scarum, the ne'er-do-well, -- had not he come down out of that weird North country with a hundred thousand in yellow dust, to say nothing of a half-ownership in the hole from which it came? THE ONE THOUSAND DOZEN
- He took a vacation to Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina, with “an attractive companion,” and made another trip home, where my grandfather noticed what he called a “sweet reasonableness” interrupted only by a moment of high tension “due possibly to the three harum-scarum children who were visiting.” Into the Story
- Et est valde grandis regio Iaua, habens in circuitu ambitum leucarum duarum millium. The Voyages and Travels of Sir John Mandeville
- The fruits of _Carum carui_, a hardy biennial British plant, popularly known as caraway seeds, supply a volatile oil, which is carminitive and aromatic. The Commercial Products of the Vegetable Kingdom Considered in Their Various Uses to Man and in Their Relation to the Arts and Manufactures; Forming a Practical Treatise & Handbook of Reference for the Colonist, Manufacturer, Merchant, and Consumer, o
- Such encounters were relatively common in the harum-scarum chaos of an early solar system that teemed with veering planets and asteroids. The Loneliest Planet
- She told me a harum-scarum tale of running through a forest in the middle of the stormy.
- Once you get above chapter book level, it seems like almost all new fiction for kids is (or wants to be) thrilling, exciting, harum-scarum, suspenseful, non-stop, etc. Archive 2009-05-01
- Italicarum, tom.i. part ii.p. 1 — 181, collated from the most ancient Mss. and illustrated by the critical notes of The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire