How To Use Corsair In A Sentence

  • French corsairs settled on the western part of the island in the 17th century and Spain recognized the French claims to the area in 1697 in the Treaty of Ryswick.
  • From beneath his cloak, their follower drew a rusting corsair sabre and menaced the horse with it.
  • The British finally solved the Corsair's landing problems by training its pilots to fly a curved landing approach, which allowed them to keep the deck visible until just before touchdown.
  • If there were any corsairs docked, they were well disguised…
  • That other "corsair" -- as the Spaniards called him -- that other charming and heroic shape in England's chequered chronicle of chivalry and crime -- famous in arts and arms, politics, science, literature, endowed with so many of the gifts by which men confer lustre on their age and country, whose name was already a part of History of the United Netherlands, 1590-99 — Complete
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  • Gigabyte only lists a couple of DDR2 2 meg chips on their compatible list but the pair of Corsair chips I just bought work fine in "ganged" mode (dual channel, don't ask me why they had to change the name). Epinions Recent Content for Home
  • Many people think that was his name because it's piratical, and so it was appropriate that he called his yacht Corsair. Morgan: American Financier
  • Mousemaid Mariel undertakes a quest for vengeance against the searat Gabool and his Rodent Corsairs, who imprisoned her father and left her to drown at sea. Fred's Head from APH
  • Xtreme Systems honcho Charles 'Fugger' Wirth teamed up with Corsair, Gigabyte and Intel to break the 3DMark05 world record, stealing it back from Bit-tech.net Feed
  • ‘Or at least a hundred pirate corsairs,’ Garcia added.
  • And then I had the greatest piece of good fortune, for my corsair ran afoul of a fleet of the roya of Ibra, out on maneuvers. THE CURSE OF CHALION
  • That other "corsair" -- as the Spaniards called him -- that other charming and heroic shape in England's chequered chronicle of chivalry and crime -- famous in arts and arms, politics, science, literature, endowed with so many of the gifts by which men confer lustre on their age and country, whose name was already a part of England's eternal glory, whose tragic destiny was to be her undying shame—Raleigh, the soldier, sailor, scholar, statesman, poet, historian, geographical discoverer, planter of empires yet unborn—was also present, helping to organize the somewhat chaotic elements of which the chief Anglo-Dutch enterprise for this year against—the Spanish world-dominion was compounded. PG Edition of Netherlands series — Complete
  • She was an outlaw; men called her a "corsair," and spoke of Semmes the captain as though he had been some ruffianly Blackbeard sailing the black flag with skull and cross bones for his grisly ensign. Recollections of a naval life : including the cruises of the Confederate States steamers, "Sumter" and "Alabama",
  • The Goshawk was probably enough to discourage most pirate corsairs from attacking, but a cruiser was another matter.
  • Through my policy, which he arraigns, instead of the Thebans invading this country with Philip, as all expected, they joined our ranks and prevented him; —instead of the war being in Attica, it took place seven hundred furlongs from the city on the confines of Bœotia; —instead of corsair issuing from Eubœa to plunder us, Attica was in peace on the coast-side during the whole war; —instead of Philip being master of the Hellespont by taking Byzantium, the Byzantines were our auxiliaries against him Does this computation of services, think you, resemble the casting of accounts? III. On the Crown
  • In fact, in a span of less than a decade, Barbary Coast corsairs plundered nearly 500 merchant vessels, commandeering the ships and selling the crews and passengers into slavery.
  • But what of the people of the town of Baltimore in Ireland, all carried off by "corsair" raiders in a single night? THE ASTUTE BLOGGERS
  • He became the Kayia or lieutenant to Yusuf on the galley of that corsair's command and seconded him in half a score of engagements with an ability and a conspicuity that made him swiftly famous throughout the ranks of the Mediterranean rovers. The Sea-Hawk
  • But there were many other significant players in the multiservice campaign: carrier-based aviators in Hellcats, Corsairs, Avengers, and Helldivers; long-range patrol bombers from the Aleutians; Mustang pilots from Iwo Jima; and almost everything in the Army Air Forces inventory from Okinawa. Whirlwind
  • On the 18th of June the Surveillante captures an English corsair, which is a joy, but they learn from her the fall of Charleston and the surrender of Lincoln, which gives food for thought. Rochambeau and the French in America. I. From Unpublished Documents. II
  • Cutthroats, corsairs, and hot-shot pilots we got coming out of our ears.
  • Il etait un corsair sous Louis Quatorze, pendant le dix-septieme siecle. Catpewk Diary Entry
  • Were I you, I would sooner set off to the Hyeres islands in a caique, on the chance of being captured by an Algerian corsair and sold to the Letters of Two Brides
  • Still, even if you hadn't, it might have come to the same thing in the long run, for the corsair is a large one, and might have taken us even if you had made her out as she rounded the point. ' When London Burned : a Story of Restoration Times and the Great Fire
  • Corsairs made repeated raids on enemy airfields, shipping, and equipment during various battles of the island-hopping war.
  • I watched the pilot of the Corsair in front of me drop his napalm bombs.
  • The corsairs refused to curtail their activities after each war's conclusion, and the states realized that they had created an uncontrollable force.
  • Len Roberto, a member of the Airdales and a volunteer at the air show, says there are only 25 or so Corsairs still airworthy. Christine Negroni: New Thoughts About Old Planes on Memorial Day
  • Behind the high walls, hidden by a long screen of ilexes, you are suddenly back in the eighteenth century, surrounded by the obelisks and mausolea of sea captains and corsairs, exiled aristocrats and shipwrecked plantation owners.
  • They were all brave men at Lepanto on this memorable October day; but few there were like the corsair king, in whom a heart of fire was kept in check by a brain of ice, who, during the whole combat, never gave away a chance, or failed to swoop like an eagle from his eyry when the blunders of his enemy gave him the opportunity for which he watched. Sea-Wolves of the Mediterranean
  • At the Kennedy Center, during "Le Corsaire" 's opening marketplace scene, we saw a stageful of distinct characters, all telling their individual "stories" with wit, finesse and flair, but never play-acting hollowness. Bolshoi Embraces the Pre-Soviet Past
  • For naval aircraft enthusiasts, four of the five Corsairs at Duxford got into the air for formation flyovers and individual passes.
  • The old look out towers had to be manned against corsairs but they also earned their keep as observation points for the lucrative and highly organized hunts for the great shoals of tuna fish.
  • The French adventurers, however, seem always to have restricted the word "boucanier" to its proper signification, that of a hunter and curer of meat; and when they developed into corsairs, by a curious contrast they adopted an English name and called themselves "filibustiers," which is merely the French sailor's way of pronouncing the English word "freebooter." [ The Buccaneers in the West Indies in the XVII Century
  • She brings out the beast in men (The Corsair howls at the moon).
  • Behind the high walls, hidden by a long screen of ilexes, you are suddenly back in the eighteenth century, surrounded by the obelisks and mausolea of sea captains and corsairs, exiled aristocrats and shipwrecked plantation owners.
  • When that gave out they had to take a tow at 60 miles an hour from the Ford Corsair with very dodgy brakes - ‘terrifying’.
  • ‘I'd rather be in my corsair, but thanks for the offer,’ Gualtero said.
  • Corsair's exclusive products, with price tags to more than match, are aimed primarily at quality- and performance-conscious users.
  • This has very strong visual impact, like a corsair.
  • Venue crouched over the skeletal remains of a corsair, his long cobweblike hair matted to his yellowed skull. The Thieves of Darkness
  • The Capricorn Corsair drove through the smooth harbour water before the steady easterly that flowed seaward on summer nights.
  • Could he be a pirate captain, eager to hang my severed head from the bow of his corsair?
  • During the Napoleonic wars Reunion, like Mauritius, served the French corsairs as a rallying place from which attacks on Indian merchantmen could be directed.
  • Tripoli; and as Tunisian corsairs had never depredated upon American commerce, the Mediterranean sea was now opened to the mercantile marine of the United States. Washington and the American Republic, Vol. 3.
  • Such was the case; and when the captain did turn out at breakfast time he had heard the first mate’s version of the affair, and as the felucca had now quite disappeared below the horizon, altogether pooh-poohed Tom's account of having recognised Mohammed's "corsair," even although Charley backed him up by his statement of what he had heard say in conversation with the stranger. Picked up at Sea The Gold Miners of Minturne Creek
  • The war at sea was fought mainly by privateers on all sides, and the 2,800 enemy ships taken by French corsairs represent perhaps the greatest consistent success of the war.
  • So I concealed my case till this year, when I wrote to certain Frankish corsairs and sought news of my daughter from the Kings of the The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • He was appearing with Tommy Trinder, Shani Wallis, a skiffle band, some tumblers called the Five Corsairs and an escape artiste called Zeno. MR STARLIGHT
  • The datal made a sign, whereupon the corsairs dragged her struggling forth. The Sea-Hawk
  • It once was the stronghold of North African corsairs, better known as Barbary pirates, who roamed the Mediterranean several hundred years ago. Activists Fight to Save Crumbling Algiers Casbah
  • The steady southeasterlies requested of the young sorcerer had prevailed nicely enough while the Continentals sailed up from Nis-Gata, but the wind dropped away to nothing within an hour of the corsairs’ joining the armada. Conqueror's Moon
  • Reputations spread through any community, and the pirates and corsairs knew who they wanted to work with, as well as who they did NOT want to work with…
  • European maritime powers paid the tribute demanded by the rulers of the privateering states of North Africa (Algiers, Tunis, Tripoli, and Morocco) to prevent attacks on their shipping by corsairs.
  • In the figure of the beautiful, flamboyant poet and improvisatore Corinne, de Staël created a fictional character who became an international symbol of Romanticism, quite as much as Goethe's Werther or Byron's Corsair. The Great de Staël
  • Added to this, Mint wanted to bring together Corsair pilots, aces, crewmen, and factory workers for a celebration of one of the world's most famous combat aircraft.
  • Walsh was undoubtedly a hero but his experiences were also typical of many other USMC and Navy Corsair pilots - aces or not.

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