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How To Use Felloe In A Sentence

  • It was a smoking furnace down there, and soon the felloe and spokes would be injured by the flames and heat. Nan Sherwood at Pine Camp or, the Old Lumberman's Secret
  • But the Señorita must be waked at once and take the road with Dicco, moving towards the best, or weakest, bars of the cage; for, though the net was spread, the great spider himself was not yet amove down its spokes and round the felloe. Ambrotox and Limping Dick
  • He had knocked one felloe off the rim and was hitting at the spokes. Laramie Holds the Range
  • A fine old felloe," said I-- "full of fun, well informed, convivial, age about sixty, well preserved, splendid face -- The Lady of the Ice A Novel
  • But the Señorita must be waked at once and take the road with Dicco, moving towards the best, or weakest, bars of the cage; for, though the net was spread, the great spider himself was not yet amove down its spokes and round the felloe. Ambrotox and Limping Dick
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  • Then the wheelwright lays his axe to its roots that he may fashion a felloe for the wheel of some goodly chariot, and it lies seasoning by the waterside. The Iliad of Homer
  • Psychologist Avenue, led us directly to a semicircular civic center at the water front, from which the principal avenues radiated toward the outer wall like the spokes of a wheel from the hub toward the felloe. Lost on Venus
  • Actually, it is YOU and your ATHEIST and WRONG CHRISTIAN felloe travelers who are dysfunctional! True Christians™ don't do science - The Panda's Thumb
  • You do not disrespect and hate felloe democrats ... and figure that in the end it won't matter - they will vote DEM anyway. Clinton's new job: Persuading diehard fans to back Obama
  • It will be an evil day for the world when the nave shall leave its place and contend for that of the felloe. Debate on Woman Suffrage in the Senate of the United States, 2d Session, 49th Congress, December 8, 1886, and January 25, 1887
  • Never, over nave or felloe, did thy axe (_q. _ hammer?) strike such a stroke. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 54, No. 333, July 1843

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