Get Free Checker
[ US /ˈɡeɪɫ/ ]
[ UK /ɡˈe‍ɪl/ ]
NOUN
  1. a strong wind moving 45-90 knots; force 7 to 10 on Beaufort scale

How To Use gale In A Sentence

  • The name Breizoz reflects the Celtic origin of the galette and crêpe, as well as the modern setting for this crêperie.
  • She could feel underclothes, linen drawers, silken chemise, a farthingale with its stiffened hoops. Ill Met By Moonlight
  • The fledgling stiffened, feathers bristling as though roused by a gale.
  • He is like the showy orchis, or the lady's-slipper, or the shooting star among plants, -- a stranger to all but the few; and when an American poet says cuckoo, he must say it with such specifications as to leave no doubt what cuckoo he means, as Lowell does in his "Nightingale in the Study:" -- The Writings of John Burroughs — Volume 05: Pepacton
  • Firstly the village can be found on the east side of a great headland protruding out of Loch Carron, and therefore enjoys a position that protects it from sea gales.
  • At the Fallowfield lead mine, near Hexham in Northumberland, it is associated with witherite; and at Bromley Hill, near Alston in Cumberland, it occurs in veins with galena. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 3 "Brescia" to "Bulgaria"
  • Played in horrible conditions with gusting gales and sweeping rain this was never going to be a pretty affair.
  • When referring to the disease, Galen accepts that the term belongs to 'other writers'. 'Diabetes' as described by Byzantine writers from the fourth to the ninth century
  • Il a également souligné qu'il ne s'agissait pas de «faire un coup marketing» et que «pas un euro ne sera fait sur ce clip». Videos.antville.org
  • Always a late riser, I'd wake up around eleven every morning to brunch at a deliciously set table where my ‘roomie’, as I called her, would regale me with the tale of her day so far.
View all