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How To Use Souse In A Sentence

  • These obscene harpies, who deck themselves in I know not what divine attributes, but who in reality are foul and ravenous birds of prey, (both mothers and daughters,) flutter over our heads, and souse down upon our tables, and leave nothing unrent, unrifled, unravaged, or unpolluted with the slime of their filthy offal. Paras. 20-39
  • You can't beat freshly cooked mackerel and my gran used to souse the excess to snack on until I showed up with another bagful. Seaside recipes: knickerbocker glory and cobb egg
  • Sweat soused him all over.
  • If I be not ashamed of my soldiers, I am a soused gurnet. The first part of King Henry the Fourth
  • We could have beans and fatback, or how'bout some of that souse like your mama used to fix. NOBODY'S BABY BUT MINE
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  • Police said they kept the soused Englishman in custody as much for his own safety as that of the public.
  • Yet I had ordered duck pie, alamode beef and soused hog's face as well, apart from the kickshaws.
  • I swiftly become as soused as a herring.
  • Without Kate there to rein him in, Wills was soused by midnight. William and Kate
  • And hell, many people need booze to say hello to someone they like, so it's not surprising some of us need to be soused to let loose in bed.
  • In all probability, his sudden "souse" into the water had astonished Bruin himself; -- from that moment all his thoughts were to provide for his own safety, and, with this intention, he was endeavouring to get back to the surface of the snowdrift, when Alexis first caught sight of his snout. Bruin The Grand Bear Hunt
  • souse herring
  • Police handcuffed the soused man and took him to the station for questioning.
  • He soused a dog in the pond.
  • A boned and stuffed quail, on a chestnut and cinnamon risotto with soused figs?
  • He came over, already a little soused, and we just sort of chatted.
  • Unlike soused herring, pickled herrings are raw when put into the vinegar and pickling spices.
  • The sunlight is soused into the woods.
  • Also unlike soused herring, pickled herring is eaten cold-more like Swedish sushi than anything else, I suppose.
  • My savarin with rum and muscatel tasted like a stale doughnut soused in wine.
  • Crew cut lads fresh from college would put aside their childish experimentations with wine and beer, join a respectable company, and start the business of learning how to belt hard liquor from the seasoned souses at work.
  • If that is not a great lesson for the young, as well as for the old, then write me down as a soused gurnet. Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great - Volume 11 Little Journeys to the Homes of Great Businessmen
  • The diamond ring was soused into the fishbowl of water.
  • A total freak of a song, and so soused in psychedelia it's a surprise to find it was made in 1977. Readers recommend: fantasy songs
  • Souse, griskins, blade-bones, thigh-bones, spare-ribs, chines, belly-pieces, cheeks, all coming into use one after the other, and the last of the latter not before the end of about four or five weeks.
  • These obscene harpies, who deck themselves, in I know not what divine attributes, but who in reality are foul and ravenous birds of prey (both mothers and daughters) flutter over our heads, and souse down upon our tables, and leave nothing unrent, unrifled, unravaged, or unpolluted with the slime of their filthy offal. (p. 156) ... Selections from _Letter to Noble Lord_
  • And what on earth do you mean in coming in here soused? we asked Archy as he zigzagged from the door to the desk. Archy has a Seizure
  • Play the polka to pump up your beer party, and save the waltz for when you're soused.
  • A little over an hour into his twenty-second-birthday party at Boujis, a soused James Middleton was photographed being bundled into a cab with a similarly smashed Kate—all while Carole Middleton angrily warned the paparazzi to keep their distance. William and Kate
  • Last night 2 soused cowpunchers had a real slugging knocking down rolling on the floor fight in the joint next door.
  • Of what value dignity, if you're already a drunken souse and there's nothing else to lose?
  • Eat the soused herrings cold with plenty of brown bread and butter.
  • In Europe, thread-like baby eels, or angulas as they are called in Spain are fried, soused with a healthy dose of lemon, and served as a delicate tapas.
  • Special occasions often call for pudding and souse, the first a spicy mashed sweet potato encased in pigs belly, and boiled pig's head served with a ‘pickle’ of onions, hot and sweet peppers, cucumbers, and lime.
  • Rudolf shining his nose-red lamp down the flue at his struggling boss barely suppressing a snicker wondering if the old grog-soused fart just hasn't had too many cookies and tippled too much candy cane schnapps! Santa’s stuck
  • By another law it was ordained, that no one should be allowed, either for dinner or supper, above three dishes in each course, and not above two courses; and it is likewise expressly declared that "soused" meat is to count as one of these dishes. [ The History of England in Three Volumes, Vol.I., Part B. From Henry III. to Richard III.
  • Mrs. Marchand was too soused to ask questions of her boarders or recall much information about them.
  • I ate pigfoot souse, which I hadn't in a couple years.
  • She includes many Caribbean specialities, like souse, and ackee and saltfish, and the glowing photography, by Artie Colantuono, makes even something as plain as yam in butter sauce look like a long-awaited feast.
  • The soused starlet invited a fellow patron to take a hit in the bathroom, but was politely turned down when distinctive white crack smoke billowed from her glass pipe.
  • But the soused Frenchman attempted to make a getaway.
  • My savarin with rum and muscatel tasted like a stale doughnut soused in wine.
  • Compare the surgeon's grace inherent in Gosford Park to the soused baboonery of Prêt-à-Porter (1994), and you glimpse a restless and conflicted intelligence plunging into the combat of cultural intercourse without the benefit of superego. GreenCine Daily: More on Altman.
  • I honour, admire and love my Melebaea; His soul was soused, imparadised, imprisoned in his lady. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Shredded carrots are soused in soy sauce and mixed with sesame seeds, coriander and arame, a Japanese algae seaweed product.
  • Young Powell sprang up, grappled the shell and "soused" it into a pool of water near by. A soldier's story : prison life and other incidents in the war of 1861-'65,
  • One morning before school, I convinced the daughter to get soused on lime vodka.
  • They were always delighted to come with me, and did not mind being soused by a roller now and then when filling my 'pippy' bag. Rídan The Devil And Other Stories 1899
  • If I be not ashamed of my soldiers, I am a soused gurnet. Sir John Constantine Memoirs of His Adventures At Home and Abroad and Particularly in the Island of Corsica: Beginning with the Year 1756
  • The guy at the bar was a souse, a wino.
  • Other popular dishes are dumpling and pig-tail or cow-heel soup, souse, and chicken stew.
  • Soused patrons sit in the flesh-friendly nightclub's back area, coughing up $20 for lap dances as hip-hop songs blare on the speakers.
  • Yet I had ordered duck pie, alamode beef and soused hog's face as well, apart from the kickshaws.
  • We frow water on 'em!" said Baby William, laughing with delight as his grandfather made-believe bite some "souse" off his ears. The Curlytops on Star Island or Camping out with Grandpa
  • But, my writing beverage - just so you all won't think me a souse, is Cafe Francais. ... But Not Least
  • We could have beans and fatback, or how'bout some of that souse like your mama used to fix. NOBODY'S BABY BUT MINE
  • A boned and stuffed quail, on a chestnut and cinnamon risotto with soused figs?
  • So he did his best to endure the scrubbing, and all might have been well had not Davis soused him under. CHAPTER XXX
  • You think I've become an old souse, don't you?
  • Shredded carrots are soused in soy sauce (and possibly sesame oil) and mixed with sesame seeds, coriander and arame, a Japanese algae seaweed product.
  • We have something down South that's similar, called "souse". Scrapple, Food of the ... ?
  • If that many Brits come back from lunch soused, does it affect productivity or performance?
  • a preparation of fried fish which has been allowed to cool and is then soused with a hot marinade of vinegar and other ingredients.
  • So the evening stretched into the wee hours and fishboy got well soused.
  • The London managers, however, have planned to throw out all soused writers from the new place.
  • But suddenly it sounds like a luscious late - luncheon launchpad: seared lamb kidneys glazed with marsala, pumpkin ravioli and parsley garlic pesto with soused leek.
  • He mistakes Vernon for an officious bartender, Irving for an interfering fellow john; meanwhile, he gets more soused and the situation more fraught.
  • Choppy waves soused the seaweed which clung to the rocks.
  • TAFF (strick struck strangling like aleal lusky Lubliner to merum-ber by the cycl of the cruize who strungled Attahilloupa with what empoisoned El Monte de Zuma and failing wilnaynilnay that he was pallups barn in the minkst of the Krumlin befodt he was pop-soused into the monkst of the vatercan, makes the holypolygon of the emt on the greaseshaper, a little farther, a little soon, a lettera - cettera, oukraydoubray). Finnegans Wake
  • The araguato at the "tail-end" of the bridge, not knowing what had happened, and thinking all was right for swinging himself across, slipped his tail from the branch just at the very same instant that the wounded one let go, and the whole chain fell "souse" into the water! The Forest Exiles The Perils of a Peruvian Family in the Wilds of the Amazon
  • The diamond ring was soused into the fishbowl of water.
  • She suggests a four-stage process: walk into your house; turn the oven up high; prepare two or three ingredients in imaginative combinations (such as poussin, sweet potato and red onions; or cod, courgettes and capers); slap them in the oven, soused with oil and herbs; and retire to a sofa to souse yourself with something even stronger. Sorted For Brill And Whizz
  • On no night did I see more than forty or fifty who might be said to be "soused"; on no night did I see more than a dozen or fifteen who had to be thrown into the accommodation barge with the "dead ones," the helpless ones who were so far gone that they had to be carried up the sides of their ships from the barge which made the last rounds of the fleet. The U-boat hunters
  • Shredded carrots are soused in soy sauce and mixed with sesame seeds, coriander and arame, a Japanese algae seaweed product.
  • Another popular Barbadian dish is pudding and souse, traditionally a special Saturday meal.
  • His most famous souse, Sir John Falstaff, is a bloated, devious, clown.
  • BELLO: SATIRICALLY By day you will souse and bat our smelling underclothes also when we ladies are unwell, and swab out our latrines with dress pinned up and a dishclout tied to your tail. Happy Bloomsday
  • Tambo! shrieked the cannibals from the trees, appalled at so awful a desecration, as they saw their chief tumbled into the tub and the sacred dirt rubbed and soused from his body. Chapter 11
  • And the next night you have to be at an endless reception dinner, listening to too many toasts by too many souses.
  • It is sometimes also known as souse meat, particularly if pickled with vinegar. FAZED
  • souse water on his hot face
  • Well, we got back, and to our joy, we found that the Orderly Sergeant had got "soused" and forgot to mark us absent, so maybe we were not glad that we had those two extra days -- the only crimes you are sorry for in the Army are the ones that are found out. Into the Jaws of Death
  • You'll find flying fish, cou cou (a polenta-like dish of cornmeal and okra), fish cakes, bul jol (a seasoned dish of shredded salt fish), souse (pickled pork) and pepper pot. Canada.com Top Stories
  • She includes many Caribbean specialities, like souse, and ackee and saltfish, and the glowing photography, by Artie Colantuono, makes even something as plain as yam in butter sauce look like a long-awaited feast.
  • Here you are back on your haw-kins, from Blasil the Brast to our povotogesus portocall, the furt on the turn of the hurdies, slave to trade, vassal of spices and a dragon-the-market, and be turbot, lurch a stripe, as were you soused methought out of the mackerel. Finnegans Wake
  • Hast thou no great bag-pudding, nor hog's-face that is called souse? A Select Collection of Old English Plays, Volume 6
  • To gain an Ivy League education while soused suggests a certain intellectual capacity.
  • She includes many Caribbean specialities, like souse, and ackee and saltfish, and the glowing photography makes even something as plain as yam in butter sauce look like a long-awaited feast.
  • He had imbibed a lot of beer in two days and was quite soused.
  • She likes to souse everything she eats in tomato ketchup.
  • He was disheveled, soused with water, bespattered with mud, his round face very pale, and he fixed a wild stare on the company … Archive 2009-01-01
  • BELLO: (SATIRICALLY) By day you will souse and bat our smelling underclothes also when we ladies are unwell, and swab out our latrines with dress pinned up and a dishclout tied to your tail. Ulysses
  • Three times again it soused him under as he tried to climb out upon it. CHAPTER X
  • I've been soused to the guards an 'all the rest of it. CHAPTER VIII
  • Nick, it should be noted, is too soused to walk properly, much less have another drink.
  • The emigrants had great fun at first coaxing their unwary fellows to stand near the windward gangway, and get well "soused" by the water which now and then came dashing over the rails. The Liberian Exodus. An Account of Voyage of the First Emigrants in the Bark "Azor," and Their Reception at Monrovia, with a Description of Liberia--Its Customs and Civilization, Romances and Prospects.
  • They were pouring in from the surrounding villages, going to the fair and getting outrageously soused.

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