Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "bound from"

  • At nightfall another ship was chased, which, upon being brought to, also proved to be English, the Nile, bound from Akyab to London.

  • When, at last, the Master obeyed the command, it was discovered that the brig was a Portuguese, bound from Pernambuco to Lisbon.

  • A gun brought the Yankee vessel to, and the Alabama forthwith took possession of the Emma Jane of Bath, Maine, bound from Bombay to Amherst in ballast, and at 8.

  • She gave a bound from Nan's arms, the suddenness of the spring sending the candle to the ground, and causing Nan to miss her footing on the stair.

  • Illustration: SHE GAVE A BOUND FROM NAN'S ARMS] She lifted the cat, who put her paws over the girl's shoulder contentedly.

  • Afterwards they went into one of the Islands to clean, and thence proceeding towards Bermudas, they met with a stout ship called the Morning Star, bound from Guinea to Carolina, which they kept for their own use.

  • He also informed us that fourteen sail of vessels, laden with coal, had lately been taken, bound from Newcastle.

  • They also inform us that Captain Weeks, in a privateer of sixteen guns, bound from France to America, foundered upon the Banks of Newfoundland, and all were lost but one.

  • She is bound from Christiana to Dieppe with a cargo of deals; her hold is full, and her deck piled up and hampered with cargo almost to the level of her gunwale.

  • The ship is the Fusilier, bound from London to Australia; her captain and pilot shout out to the men on board the boat, "How many can you carry?

  • She proved to be the Spanish brig Samaritano of one hundred and seventy tons, bound from Antwerp to Santander, and laden with a valuable and miscellaneous cargo.

  • He also tells the men, that the Providentia was a full rigged ship of 700 tons, bound from Newcastle to the Mediterranean with coals.

  • Wycks, bound from Philadelphia to France, in October and November, 1776.

  • Osborne, bound from London to Philadelphia, in April and May, 1775.

  • On the 18th, between Fuertaventura and Grand Canary, we chased and took a small Spanish ship, bound from Teneriff to Fuertaventura, having several men and women passengers, and laden with a variety of goods.

  • He met a Flemish vessel on the 3d September, bound from Lisbon, from which he had the joyful news of the total defeat of the Spanish Armada.

  • The 16th in the morning we were close by the island of Caia, and had sight of a sail to the northwards, which we learnt from a fisherman to be a Dutch vessel, bound from.

  • It is a small island, but fruitful of all things, with great store of fruit, and gives great succour to the ships homeward-bound from India to Portugal.

  • The 23d there arrived a Dutch junk from Priaman, by which we learnt that Sir Edward Mitchelburne and Captain Davis were upon the coast, and that they had captured a Guzerat ship in the straits of Sunda, bound from Bantam to Priaman.

  • She was a ship of fifty tons, laden with soap and sweetmeats, bound from St Domingo towards Cartagena.

  • We thereupon closed with her and took possession, our prize proving to be the fourteen-gun brig Gironde, bound from Brest to Toulon.

  • In their Way they unhappily met with a Spanish Ship, bound from Porto Bello to the Havana, with a great many rich Goods, viz.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "bound from" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    attended service; bound book; bound bucket; bound coast; bound from; bound ships; bound together; bound train; boundary demarcation; bounden duty; commonly called; deposit their; during life; future navigators; had ceased; luxuriant vegetation; magical ceremony; mile distant; perpendicular direction; places where; purple velvet; spontaneous combustion; sunny days; three words; upper half; where there