The we'pon has a great name, and it desarves it, and ought of right to be carried by some known and sure hand, for the best repitation may be lost by careless and thoughtless handling.
I felt awful bad for a day or two, but a feller must be a sap-head if he can't make up his mind to give a gal the mitten when he thinks she desarves it.
A feller that will let money, or a stuck up name, or the handsomest gal that ever trod shoe leather set him agin his own father and mother, desarves tu be kicked tu death by grasshoppers.
She was a going on to give poor marm an awful drubbing, but I always think a feller must be a mean shote that 'ill stand mum and hear any body call his mother names, whether she desarvesthem or not.
Well, Martin has his own luck; but he desarves it, he desarves it.
I think, says I, too, Minister, that that are uncommon handsum cider of yourn desarves a pipe, what do you think?
It is a good frame That desarves a good name, Say!
Tha desarves teein to a cart tail an' hidin' throo th' streets, tha low-lived villain!
Plaise sir, I knows well enough as I desarves a bit of it.
She's young an' handsome, and she desarves it all.
Out of eleven she's all that's left, an' she desarves it all.
Any man as would blow the brains out of a poor old woman in cold blood, as the Flint did, desarves the worst that can be done to him.
However, it's a subject that desarves consideration.
Now how can he marry her except you take a good farm for him, and stock it dacently, so that he may have a home sich as shedesarves to bring her to?
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "desarves" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.