Take chili pods, bruise them well in a marble mortar, strain off the juice.
When boiled pretty thick, put in your flowers, and stir, but be careful not to bruise them.
Boil any quantity of potatoes, bruise them, and pour on them boiling water until a pretty thick mixture is obtained, which is to be passed through a sieve; then mix whiting with boiling water, and add it to the potato mixture.
Having picked off from their stalks the ripest and soundest morella cherries, bruise them well, without breaking the stones, and let the whole stand twenty-four hours in an open vessel.
Have ready, picked from the stalks, two gallons of red currants, taking care not to bruise them.
When you are ready to Tun it, have four Gallons of Black-currants, bruise them in a stone mortar, that they may the more easily part with their juyce to the Liquor.
Cut some ripe plums to pieces, put them into a preserving pan, bruise them with a spoon, warm them over the fire till they are soft, and press them through a cullender.
Wash some roots of sorrel quite clean, bruise them in a mortar, and steep them in white wine vinegar for two or three days.
Bruise them well, and let the whole stand twenty-four hours, stirring it occasionally during that time.
Take four pounds of unpicked Orange Flowers, bruise them in a marble mortar, and pour on them nine quarts of clear Water.
Take the Leaves of Campanula, bruise them, and rub them upon the warts.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "bruise them" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.