How To Use Ottar In A Sentence

  • They were, indeed, like other cottars, a kind of feudal dependents, occupying an acre or two of the land, in return for which they performed certain stipulated labour, called cottar-wark. Robert Falconer
  • The next time I met this student he had completed his studies and was employed as a clerk in the Italian railway station at Chiasso, the frontier town on the S. Gottardo, at an annual salary of 1,080 lire, which is about 43 pounds 4s. Diversions in Sicily
  • Gill's pan-fried sea bass with tabbouleh, preserved lemon, bottarga and lemon oil was less successful, with the flavours clashing a little too violently.
  • The less energetic could take the easy walk to the cable car and ride to the summit of Mount Mottarone.
  • Add two ounces of the juice of lily bulbs, two ounces of honey, two drams of rose water, and a drop or two of ottar of roses. Searchlights on Health: Light on Dark Corners A Complete Sexual Science and a Guide to Purity and Physical Manhood, Advice To Maiden, Wife, And Mother, Love, Courtship, And Marriage
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  • We left them in the clutches of the celebrated Turkish guide, "FAR-AWAY MOSES," who will seduce them into buying a ship-load of ottar of roses, splendid Turkish vestments, and all manner of curious things they can never have any use for. It Never Changes
  • Here, had a cottar encountered me under such circumstances, I would doubtless have been thought a witch or a fairy. Sick Cycle Carousel
  • Also make an emulsion of eight drops of ottar of roses with thirty grains of gum arabic and eight fluid ounces of water; then add three fluid ounces of glycerine, and ten fluid drachms of quince mucilage. Burroughs' Encyclopaedia of Astounding Facts and Useful Information, 1889
  • Stir 1/4 of a pound of Castile soap, and place it in a jar near the fire, pour over it 1/2 pint of alcohol; when the soap is dissolved and mixed with the spirit, add 1 ounce of glycerine, the same of oil of almonds, with a few drops of essence of violets, or ottar of roses, then pour it into moulds to cool for use. Burroughs' Encyclopaedia of Astounding Facts and Useful Information, 1889
  • Starters include bresaola with smoked aubergine and chestnut; crispy fried mushrooms with bottarga or burrata and truffle honey. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was forced to turn off in order to find a house at which to ask guidance, and the cottar who came out to greet him eyed him with sharp attention when he asked for La Musarderie. A River So Long
  • Hewson, an honest cottar, wi 'Shakspeare an' the Arabian Nichts upo 'a skelf i' the hoose wi '' im. Robert Falconer
  • She lifted from the blue silk cushions of the carriage a small half-clipped black poodle with a bow of blue ribbon on its forehead, tucked it under her arm, stepped down to the street, and passed into the courtyard, leaving an odour of ottar of roses behind her. The Eternal City
  • And a seafood triumvirate of bluefin tuna, prawn in parsley purée, and scallop carpaccio with bottarga is too stingily portioned to fully enjoy.
  • All villeins and cottars in the Seven Kingdoms gather to celebrate the successful harvests of the summer seasons and to prepare for the coming winter.
  • The less energetic could take the easy walk to the cable car and ride to the summit of Mount Mottarone.
  • This wasn't a cottar or a herder that stood before him. Dragonfly in Amber
  • Though not free men, they were above the bordars and cottars who held less land, and well above the slaves, who had been numerous in Saxon England.
  • All villeins and cottars in the Seven Kingdoms gather to celebrate the successful harvests of the summer seasons and to prepare for the coming winter.
  • All that could be carried off was taken, all that could not was wasted by the fires they kindled, even onto the humblest grain store-house of the poor cottars.
  • Ottar, earl in Thurso; his heir; son of Moddan in Dale; probably owned Thurso valley; paid wergeld to Sweyn; his lands left to earl Erlend Haraldson, and afterwards went to Sutherland and Caithness in Saga-Time or, The Jarls and The Freskyns
  • All that could be carried off was taken, all that could not was wasted by the fires they kindled, even onto the humblest grain store-house of the poor cottars.
  • I went into a perfumery shop in London to purchase a pot of the ottar of roses, which at that time was very rare and expensive. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 17, No. 102, April, 1866
  • His descriptions seemed steeped in odours, and his every phrase perfumed in ottar of roses. The Surgeon's Daughter
  • He had also freeborn cottars and slaves to farm his land.
  • There is also a whole gorgeous jar of a locally made hazelnut spread, a sort of whole food version of Nutella, with a mobcap and ribbon on top - and a packet of bottarga-which I have read about and longed to try. BBM#3: Piedmont Parcel
  • They were fond of perfumes, and their delightful ottar was the principal favourite. The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 14, No. 380, July 11, 1829
  • Indeed, over the centuries Catholic kings and popes gradually abolished the institution of slavery replacing ancient slavery with the Feudal serf and then replacing the serf and the unfree villeins, bordars and cottars with a free, land-owning peasantry and villeinage. The State's Obligation to Recognize and Protect the Catholic Church
  • We rounded a turn and came upon all at once the tumbled ruins of a cottar's hut, blacked by fire, and trampled down as if by horse's hooves.
  • He was what is called a cottar in Scotland, which name implies that of the large farm upon which he worked for yearly wages he had a little bit of land to cultivate for his own use. Ranald Bannerman's Boyhood
  • He wanted the ottar of roses and not a rose garden, the diamond and not a mountain of carbon. The Last Harvest
  • I'm a man of my hands," said the cottar confidently. A River So Long
  • Hugh knew every cottar and tinker, every farmhouse and manor within four parishes. Dragonfly in Amber
  • The little party of four stood in its dappled shade by the fallen ruins of a mossy old hut, left long ago by some forgotten cottar. Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

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