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How To Use Courser In A Sentence

  • A well-caparisoned knight's courser had inexplicably taken their place, and stood munching the trampled grass. IRONCROWN MOON: PART TWO OF THE BOREAL MOON TALE
  • Protestants: Horse-coursers jades will bound, curvet and shew more tricks, then a horse well mettled for the rode or cart. A Coal From The Altar, To Kindle The Holy Fire of Zeale In a Sermon Preached at a Generall Visitation at Ipswich
  • ` ` From the Lord Protector, '' he said; and Master Avery Mitchell, the feodary, * who had been closely watching for this same courser-man for several anxious hours, took from his hands a scroll, on which was inscribed: Historic girls; stories of girls who have influenced the history of their times,
  • According to him the great discourser only "seemed to wander," and he seemed to wander the most English Men of Letters: Coleridge
  • That winter-shaggy warhorse was no courser, but only a Sothoii - or someone with a prince's purse - could own its equal.
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  • Like grouse shooters, fox hunters, lampers, hare coursers, badger baiters and of course meat eaters, anglers do what they do simply because they enjoy doing it.
  • Jaime Lannister trotted onto the field on a chestnut courser with a tawny mane, clad in golden armor that flashed and glittered in the sun. Trial of Seven
  • The numbers of hares killed by coursers each year is entirely speculative as far as I can see.
  • Once in a winter, a hunter went to hunt with his courser.
  • The _Table Talk_, edited by Mr. Nelson Coleridge, shows how pregnant, how pithy, how full of subtle observation, and often also of playful humour, could be the talk of the great discourser in its lighter and more colloquial forms. English Men of Letters: Coleridge
  • Of courser, that is exactly what every government should be doing. The Case for Fair Trade
  • I work mainly in traffic and the dog section, but I could be sent to deal with illegal hare coursers or a burglary in rural areas.
  • The specialist team of six police officers had become experts in tackling illegal hare coursers and much of the work was based on intelligence received.
  • But truth to tell, Dominic Iglesias had not only grown very weary of discourse and discourser, but somewhat impatient also. The Far Horizon
  •   With well-timed croupe the nimble coursers veer; Childe Harold's Pilgrimage
  • I suppose Miss Veronica is grown a reader and discourser. Life Of Johnson
  • Seeing would have been enough, but for a certain number there was hearing too, with the report of it for all; and it is not surprising that fame of the marvellous discourser should, in mere virtue of his extraordinary power of improvised speech, his limitless and untiring mastery of articulate words, have risen to a height to which writers whose only voice is in their pens can never hope to attain. English Men of Letters: Coleridge
  • Then army met army and breasts fell under hoof, whilst spear and sword ruled the day and forearms and wrists grew weak and the coursers seemed created without legs; 395 nor did the herald of-war cease calling to fight, till arms were aweary and day took flight and night came on with darkness dight. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • He is described by Clarendon as "a man of grave aspect, of a presence that drew respect, and of great parts and ability, but passionate and supercilious and too voluminous a discourser in council. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 3 "Brescia" to "Bulgaria"
  • She lived her full complement of days, ending them at her own farm in the southwest horse country, where she bred some of the finest coursers and palfreys outside of the large established studs.
  • Now she was tolerating him too much, crabby on account of his art, using courser language, waxing indifferent. Bear Circuit
  • Then, with a low obeisance, the feodary presented her the scroll which had been brought him, post-haste, by Launcelot Crue, the courser-man. Historic girls; stories of girls who have influenced the history of their times,
  • Perhaps this simplicity eluded me when attempting to prepare a complex three-courser that would speak to Norman Dubie's poetic flights of fancy. Poetry And Food
  • How the members of any pleasant evening-company might astonish or amuse each other by narrating together the contradictory views the same voluble discourser has unfolded to them successively during the passage of one hour! so easily we bend and conform, and deny God and ourselves, to gratify the guest we converse with. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 74, December, 1863
  • Jerdon's courser Rhinoptilus bitorquatus Phasianidae Ceylon junglefowl Gallus lafayetii Capitonidae Yellow-fronted barbet Megalaima flavifrons An asterisk signifies that the species 'range is limited to this ecoregion. Deccan thorn scrub forests
  • Like grouse shooters, fox hunters, lampers, hare coursers, badger baiters and of course meat eaters, anglers do what they do simply because they enjoy doing it.
  • She lived her full complement of days, ending them at her own farm in the southwest horse country, where she bred some of the finest coursers and palfreys outside of the large established studs.
  • And next, the courser-man, in secrecy, unscrewed one of the bullion buttons on his buff jerkin, and taking from it a scrap of paper, handed this also to the watchful feodary. Historic girls; stories of girls who have influenced the history of their times,
  • For information on how to enrol and pay for these courses and to find out what other coursers are available in this excellent facility right in the heart of the village call us on the same number.
  • Illegal hare coursing is a threat to populations because farmers cull them rather than have hare coursers on their land.
  • In her ground-breaking work on the medieval warhorse, Ann Hyland notes the importance of ‘destriers [warhorses], coursers, rounceys, palfrey and packhorses’.
  • He was already dreaded for his prowess in argument, his dictatorial manners and vivid flashes of wit and humour, the more effective from the habitual gloom and apparent heaviness of the discourser. Samuel Johnson
  • Damas, are called an orgulous knight, and full of villainy, and not worth of prowess your deeds, therefore I will that ye give unto your brother all the whole manor with the appurtenance, under this form, that Sir Ontzlake hold the manor of you, and yearly to give you a palfrey to ride upon, for that will become you better to ride on than upon a courser. Le Morte d'Arthur: Sir Thomas Malory's book of King Arthur and of his noble knights of the Round table
  • But if you're looking to start the party fashionably early (We always are), Ammo gets the ball rolling on Sunday, July 11th with a notable three-courser. Bastille Day In Los Angeles
  • It was a sturdy vehicle, black and drawn by two coursers.
  • A few years ago we had a major invasion of hare coursers from the North East.
  • The men nearest Steve were all turned toward the discourser to Chloe, who sat on The Long Roll
  • Not requiring long grass or thick bush for cover, their methods are those of a courser, relying on speed and dogged endurance in the chase.
  • We ate prawn cocktails and plaice and chips and cheesecake and drank champagne and watched the hare coursers do their business.
  • Identifying megadiverse countries instead of regions is spatially courser and concentrates biodiversity over a larger percentage of the globe: collectively the 17 nations cover about 40 percent of the world's non-glacial land area. Bill Chameides: Where Nature Does Her DNA Banking
  • The sobriety of the scene was indeed somewhat enlivened by the presence of Sir Piercie Shafton, who, to show that his skill in the manege was not inferior to his other accomplishments, kept alternately pressing and checking his gay courser, forcing him to piaffe, to caracole, to passage, and to do all the other feats of the school, to the great annoyance of the Lord The Monastery
  • [331-364] when by the streams of icy Hebrus Mavors kindles to bloodshed and clashes on his shield, and stirs war and speeds his furious coursers; they outwing south winds and west on the open plain; utmost The Aeneid of Virgil
  • Since I didn't want to bury myself in the kitchen all night, I felt a three-courser would suffice. Poetry And Food
  • Coursers had none of the ponderous, muscle-bound massiveness that characterized the chargers of heavy foreign knights and made them look so clumsy and unwieldy.

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