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[ UK /mˈa‍ɪlɔːd/ ]
NOUN
  1. a term of address for an English lord

How To Use milord In A Sentence

  • ‘Thank you, milord.’ she said, bowing her head with gratefulness
  • The place looked comfortable enough -- a small, unpainted, two-room affair, with a lean-to at the back for a kitchen, a porch added only the preceding spring, so that milord might have a view of the thymy valley below, with its green fields and distant hills, while he smoked and meditated. Ida Hauchawout
  • They are trained with the battle tactic that you discovered, milord.
  • I will pay what I can, milord, though I have no money.
  • I really can't say how sorry I am for what that boy did, I didn't think he would be trouble, milord.
  • So, please, milord, I beg you to help me fulfill his wish.
  • That was a great call, milord… at least I think it was.
  • I'm afraid if I wake her, milord… she may hurt me.
  • She was found behind the fortress walls, milord.
  • Teach me likewise to number the days of this world's greatness, of which I have so great a share; and teach me to look upon them as vanity and vexation of spirit. "] [Footnote 70:" Je vis Milord Rochester comme il sortoit de conseil fort chagrin; et, sur la fin du souper, il lui en echappe quelque chose. The History of England, from the Accession of James II — Volume 2
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