From the north side of the gorge a mountain range rises more loftily into the majestic Berceau and Grande Montagne, and, stretching away to the north and north–west, form the great shield to Mentone from the east and north–east winds.
From hill to hill the Berceau de Dieu broke into flames.
The Berceau de Dieu was as one vast furnace, in which every living creature was caught and consumed and changed to ashes.
Your statement respecting the Berceau coincided with my own recollection, in the circumstances recollected by me, and I concur with you in supposing it may not now be necessary to give any explanations on the subject in the papers.
On the 20th of March, Mr. Stoddart wrote to his agent at Boston to put the Berceau into handsome order to be restored, but whether he did that of his own accord, or after previous consultation with you or myself, I do not recollect.
In your berceau I will walk; but if you are destined to reside in golden palaces, you must expect little of Uncle's company.
She did so, and found a berceau wide enough for two carriages to go abreast and above two miles in length, extending from the gardens to the forest of Compiègne, completely finished.
The battle between the American frigate Boston and the French corvette Berceau was one of the most gallant of the struggle, the Berceau fighting until resistance was hopeless.
The green nest of the Berceau seemed to overflow with the singing of birds and the blossoming of flowers.
A LEAF IN THE STORM, By Ouida The Berceau de Dieu was a little village in the valley of the Seine.
In the primitive homesteads of the Berceau de Dieu filial reverence was still accounted the first of virtues, yet the simplest and the most imperative.
Down in the Berceau there were gossips who would have said, with wise shakes of their heads, "Tut, tut!
In the hollow below lay the Berceau de Dieu, with its red gables and its thatched roofs hidden beneath leaves, and its peaceful pastures smiling under the serene blue skies of France.
She had been born in the Berceau de Dieu; had lived there and wedded there; had toiled there all her life, and never left it for a greater distance than a league, or for a longer time than a day.
This "Berceau de la Liberté" is in form an elegant pavilion of the style current with Louis XIII.
One would fain believe that this is indeed the identical berceau de Henri IV.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "berceau" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.