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Example sentences for "berry"

Lexicographically close words:
berline; berm; bernicle; berried; berries; berrying; berserk; berserkers; berserks; bersetzt
  1. Son of the Duc de Berry and grandson of Charles X.

  2. One fruit may puzzle strangers, it is the red berry of the cultivated service berry tree, and makes excellent preserve.

  3. The brilliant red berry of the white bream-tree also lends colour to the wayside hedge, as well as the deep rose-coloured fruit of the barberry.

  4. The hedges show also the crimson-tasselled fruit of the barberry, no less ornamental than the service-berry tree.

  5. Descending a story, we find the cocoa berry already in a fair way to become edible, and giving out an odour something like chocolate; here the process consists in sorting and preparing the vast masses of cocoa for grinding.

  6. De berry chile you say she witched hes hed 'leptis fits all its life an' Cheerity ain't dun nuffin' but take it medicine to kwore it.

  7. I have resolved to send Berry there, with full powers to do all manner of things, early next week.

  8. Berry is always unfortunate, and when I asked what had happened to Berry on board the steamboat, it appeared that "an Irish gentleman which was drunk, and fancied himself the captain, wanted to knock Berry down.

  9. Berry has this moment come back from Edinburgh and Glasgow with hopeful accounts.

  10. Berry has always got something the matter with his digestion--seems to me the male gender of Maria Jolly, and ought to take nothing but Revalenta Arabica.

  11. I have also detached Berry from here, and have sent him on by train at a few minutes' notice to Edinburgh, and then to Glasgow (where I have no doubt everything is wrong too).

  12. Berry I shall continue to send on ahead, and I shall take nothing on trust and more as being done.

  13. Without him, and with a larger salary to Berry (though there are objections to the latter as first man), I could have done a hundred times better.

  14. A telegram from Berry at Edinburgh yesterday evening, to say that he had got the bills, and that they would all be up and dispersed yesterday evening under his own eyes.

  15. Berry has not got into any particular trouble for forty-eight hours, except that he is all over boils.

  16. Berry then died of drink, leaving to Lincoln the sole responsibility for the debts of the partnership.

  17. Early in 1833 Berry and Lincoln sold out to another adventurer.

  18. Berry and Lincoln next acquired, likewise for credit, the stock and goodwill of two other storekeepers, one of them the victim of a raid from Clary's Grove.

  19. A decoction of one part of the Avignon or Persian berry in ten of water affords a brown-yellow liquor bordering upon green, having the smell of a vegetable extract, and a slightly bitter taste.

  20. One pound of silk requires a pound and a half of the berry cake.

  21. The stems and the leaves dye yellow; and among the dyes of organic nature, they rank next to the Persian berry for the beauty and fastness of colour.

  22. I wonder if Bill Berry is still around," said Ned.

  23. We'd better go slow, where Bill Berry is concerned," Bob said.

  24. I heard Bill Berry had a job down here somewhere.

  25. Bill Berry had enlisted the youth's aid in getting Jess out of the way, on the pretense that only a harmless trick was to be played on the keeper.

  26. I am almost certain Bill Berry stole that diamond ring from the bath house, and I'm going to tell Professor Snodgrass what I know about it.

  27. Jerry and his chums turned expecting to see Bill Berry confronting them.

  28. They found the claim, with the aid of Jim Nestor, though they had a close race with Noddy Nixon and Bill Berry to get formal possession.

  29. Noddy wouldn't be so bad, if we could know when he's coming so as to avoid him, but combined with Bill Berry the two are the limit.

  30. The storehouse is a good place," Bill Berry replied.

  31. But the boat might belong to some of the berry pickers, and they hunted for it until they found it.

  32. The natives then make use of a berry for cleansing it and precipitating the impurities.

  33. This is a berry about the size of a small nutmeg, which grows in clusters upon a large tree of rich dark foliage.

  34. The vessel which is intended to contain the water, which is generally an earthen chatty, is well rubbed in the inside with a berry until the latter, which is of a horny consistency, like vegetable ivory, is completely worn away.

  35. The berries are about the size of a very large pea, and grow in clusters of from ten to fifteen together, and one berry is said to be sufficient to cleanse a gallon of water.

  36. II know the shrub and the berry well, but it has no English denomination.

  37. I have seen in a work on Ceylon the miserable little acid berry of the rattan, which is no larger than a currant, described as a fruit; hawthorn berries might, with equal justice, be classed among the fruits of Great Britain.

  38. Doan' you see how berry different dey are behavin'.

  39. Dat soun' berry like da voice o' some un go drown,--berry like.

  40. You know berry well he not got de power to swim,--him feet only half web.

  41. Pose we 'tick up de mass dis berry instam ob time?

  42. It was, however, thought better to keep the Due de Berry in safety.

  43. The Duc de Berry was assassinated in 1820, but his widow gave birth to a posthumous son the Duc de Bordeaux, or, to fervid Royalists, Henri V.

  44. There a large buck lifted its antlered head among the berry bushes and stood for a moment at startled gaze.

  45. Hamilton Burton was looking at the percolator in which the Bolivian coffee was bubbling as restively as the fires of the volcano at whose base it grew from berry to lush plant and came again to berry.

  46. Then I bought them off of Bill Heffers, an' Henry Berry an' Ben Best--for seven dollars.

  47. Leafy shoot and berry (cut across) of the larger Cranberry, Vaccinium macrocarpon.

  48. The orange is a berry with a leathery rind.

  49. Sir Graham Berry wrote later in this year 'for opinions upon a Bill of reform of the Upper House in his Parliament,' to which Sir Charles replied 'that I disliked Upper Houses so much as not to be in favour of reforming them.

  50. The Alaskan thimbleberry is the most delicious berry that grows.

  51. Berries and berry blossoms grew in a profusion and variety which I have never seen equalled within the same limits in lower latitudes.

  52. We wanted to know about this berry affair," said Jack.

  53. On the rocks lay the overturned berry kettles, the berries scattered in all directions and many of them crushed under foot.

  54. As soon as Bangs and his cronies had disappeared Randy and Jack went back to their berry picking.

  55. But as it was a long climb to the berry patches, and Goshmeelee couldn't be sure that they would be ripe, even if she found them, she decided not to cumber herself with the family, but to leave it at home.

  56. It makes you brown as a berry in March, red as a rose in June, and blue as a plum in November.

  57. Since meeting Captain Cummings in the berry patch she had been careful to be cordial with him, and this evening was particularly gracious.

  58. It has a berry externally resembling the strawberry; the arbute tree.

  59. For surely no judge of art could possibly assert that the miniatures of the Grunani Breviary or of the Brera Graduals as miniatures are inferior to those of the Psalter of St. Louis, the Berry Bible, or the Prayer-book of Margaret of Bavaria.

  60. It seems to have been one of the rich presents made by the Due de Berry to Jacques de Nemours.

  61. The Wilson is the great berry of commerce.

  62. There is no richer berry in existence than the Windsor Chief, yet the fruit, when merely red, is decidedly disagreeable.

  63. The large size and richness in flavor of the European berry has been bred into and combined with our smaller and more insipid indigenous fruit.

  64. It now has a companion berry in the Marlboro--a variety but recently introduced, and therefore not thoroughly tested as yet.

  65. Expectations were raised to the highest pitch by profuse blossoming in May, but not a berry could be found the ensuing June.

  66. It rarely fails to give us fruit in May, and my children, with the unerring taste of connoisseurs, follow it up until the last berry is picked.

  67. Its delicious flavor is its chief recommendation, as it should be that of every berry for the home garden.

  68. In the case of Brinckle's Orange, its exquisite flavor is the chief consideration; but this fastidious foreign berry is practically beyond the reach, of the majority.

  69. It is not a suitable berry for the home garden if no other is grown, for the reason that it matures its entire crop within a brief time, and thus would give a family but a short season of raspberries.

  70. Well, I've just as much right to it as you have," declared Christina, who did not believe in letting her good deeds waste their sweetness on the desert air of a berry patch.

  71. And that was some comfort to the homely young person who, with a pail only half full, and without prospect of either wealth or beauty, was wending her way down the green tangle of the berry patch.

  72. Christina stepped over the warm yellow stubble singing, and climbed the hill to the old berry patch, where the briars grew more riotously every year.

  73. The fruit is a berry shaped like a Gooseberry, and covered with minute clusters of short bristles.

  74. The fruit is a red berry as large as a gooseberry.

  75. Berry Foster is in fine trim, and I don't like cutting it so fine as to leave the last two events to clinch things.

  76. In the high jump Berry Foster was first, with Jim Weston second and Paul Hughes third.


  77. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "berry" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    berry; fruit; grain; hayseed; kernel; nut; orange; pit; seed; stone; virginity