They haue cages made of canes so bigge as the vpper most holde of the barke, in the which may be foure thousand duckes at once.
Or as we once sported vpon a countrey fellow who came to runne for the best game, and was by his occupation a dyer and had very bigge swelling legges.
A great mountaine as bigge as a molehill, A heauy burthen perdy, as a pound of fethers.
Care I for the Limbe, the Thewes, the stature, bulke, andbigge assemblance of a man?
Alas the day I know not, there is no womans gowne bigge enough for him: otherwise he might put on a hat, a muffler, and a kerchiefe, and so escape Fal.
If it bee too bigge for your Theefe, your Theefe thinkes it little enough: So euerie true mans apparrell fits your Theefe.
Well, we shall then know more, & Buckingham Shall lessen thisbigge looke.
If it be too little for your theefe, your true man thinkes it bigge enough.
A Randeuous, a Home to flye vnto, If that the Deuill and Mischance looke bigge Vpon the Maydenhead of our Affaires Wor.
No: if I mistake In those Foundations which I build vpon, The Centre is not bigge enough to beare A Schoole-Boyes Top.
I, and it doth confirme Another staine, as bigge as Hell can hold, Were there no more but it Iach.
Come all to ruine, let Thy Mother rather feele thy Pride, then feare Thy dangerous Stoutnesse: for I mocke at death With as bigge heart as thou.
I knew that Mr. Biggemust have been killed, and that I was now in charge.
He may not see it again,' Mr. Bigge said, and I understood and felt shivery all over.
Some one told the story how five Chinamen had attacked Bigge whilst he was trying to blow in a gate or something like that, and how he settled the whole lot of them with his revolver.
Mr. Bigge wasn't there, but the top was covered with the twisted rails and smoking burning planks of the projecting end of the bridge--I knew it was the bridge because the stump of the semaphore was still fixed to a rail.
Train aft,' Mr. Bigge shouted down through the sighting-hood, and round we slewed.
They haue also great beanes as bigge as chestnuts, and very hard, with a shell in the stead of a huske.
The stemme or straw seemeth to be almost as bigge as the litle finger of a mans hand, or litle lesse.
They haue very faire wheate, the eare whereof is two handfuls in length, and as bigge as a great Bulrush, and almost foure inches about where it is biggest.
There is another kind of fish as bigge almost as a herring, which hath wings and flieth, and they are together in great number.
Some of them were as bigge as a mans thigh aboue the knee, and weyed about fourescore and ten pound weight a peece.
The double Marigold, being as bigge as a little Rose, is good for shew.
Was not the Race and Theatre bigge enough To have inclos'd thy follies heere at home?
But Willyam, who had seen hys prowesse great, And feered muche how farre his bronde might goe, Tooke a strong arblaster, and bigge with fate From twangynge iron sente the fleetynge floe.
Sidenote: A peece of virgin gold so bigge as a twopennie wheaten loaf.
They entred with their frigat into a gut vnder the shore, whereas fell from a high rocke which was more than one hundredth fatham by estimation, a stream of water which was as bigge as the bodies of two men together.
That stately woman who is now passing along the piazza is beautiful Helen, although she is called Mrs. Bigge in these degenerate days, and Bigge himself is really the Menelaus of the old Trojan story, although he deals now in cotton.
The Commissioner Bigge recommended the bounty should be entirely abolished, distillation permitted, and supplies purchased by tender.
Saint Colombs is a bigge parish, and a meane market towne, subiect to the Lordship and patronage of the Lanhearn Arundels, who for many descents, lye there interred, as the inscriptions on their graue stones doe testify.
If heates of holyer loue and high desire, Make bigge thy fair brest with immortall fire, What needes my virgin lord fly thus from me, Who only wish his virgin wife to be?
Each biggewith businesse thrusts the other, And seems to say, Make haste, my brother.
When we came within that gate we were within a very faire Court yard, in compasse twise so bigge as Pauls Church-yard.
They haue also Lamps in their churches, one in the middle of the church of exceeding greatnesse, and another in another part of the church of cleane golde, or double gilded, full as bigge as a barrel.
All kind of greene foule: Others as bigge as Bustards, yet not the same.
There is likewise a tree in some part of the Countrey, that beares a Nut as bigge as a small peare.
The white thorne affords hawes as bigge as an English Cherrie, which is esteemed above a Cherrie for his goodnesse and pleasantnesse to the taste.
There be diuers kinds of beasts, as namely blacke lyouns in great abundance, and apes also, and monkeis, and battes as bigge as our doues.
In this countrey also are found canes of an incredible length, namely 60 paces high or more, and they are as bigge as trees.
Also there are mise as bigge as our countrey dogs, because cats are not able to incounter them.
The Nairi and their wiues vse for a brauerie to make great holes in their eares, and so bigge and wide, that it is incredible, holding this opinion, that the greater the holes bee, the more noble they esteeme themselues.
Mr. Bigge says that up to his time no ships had arrived disabled; more than this, no disasters had occurred to any in Bass Straits, where serious mishaps so frequently happened.
On this point Bigge says, "A great improvement has undoubtedly arisen in the transportation of convicts from the appointment of naval surgeons to the superintendence of the ships taken up for this service.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "bigge" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.