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Example sentences for "dide"

Lexicographically close words:
diddest; diddle; diddled; diddler; diddling; diden; dident; didi; didicit; didn
  1. And this was the firste myracle, the Sarazins seyn, that Machomete dide in his zouthe.

  2. In his tyme entred the gode Kyng Edward of Englond in Syrye, and dide gret harm to the Sarrazines.

  3. This Josaphathe was kyng of that contree, and was converted by an heremyte, that was a worthi man, and dide moche gode.

  4. Illustration: Dad and Leopold make a rush for that swimming place 372] Well, sir, you'd a dide to see dad and Leopold make a rush for that swimming place.

  5. And worke thou than as thou dide before, &c.

  6. And knew the estres bet than dide this John'; C.

  7. This song to herkne I dide al myn entente, *For-why I mette I wiste what they mente.

  8. But in this hous if any fals lover be, Right as him-self now doth, right so dide he, 1555 With feyning and with every sotil dede.

  9. And, whan this lettre was forth sent anoon, 2555 And knew how brotel and how fals he was, She for dispeyr for-dide herself, allas!

  10. But than thou shalt understonde that thou may not bringe furthe the label fro the 20 degree of the mone as thou dide before; for-why the sonne is than in the same degree with the mone.

  11. And, certes, al the breeth that wente Out of his trumpes mouthe smelde 1685 As men a pot-ful bawme helde Among a basket ful of roses; This favour dide he til hir loses.

  12. And helples so, that, or that she fer wente, Her cruel fader dide her for to hente.

  13. You'd a dide to see Pa when he put his hand in the breast of his coat, and struck an attitude.

  14. But you'd a dide to see my Sunday School teacher one Saturday night last summer.

  15. It wasn't long before folks began going to church and you'd a dide laughing to see them all stop in front of where Ma was washing and look at her, and then go on to where Pa was hoeing weeds and stop and look at him, and then drive on.

  16. Well, you'd a dide to see the teacher and the school committee, when I started in on Bob Ingersoll's lecture, the one that was in the papers when Bob was here.

  17. Then we went in the spare room and you'd a dide to see Pa.

  18. Illustration: Maple syrup for one 042] "Well, you'd a dide to see how quick his thoughts turned from his financial troubles to his physical misfortunes.

  19. We tied the teeth in the dog's mouth with a string that went around his upper jaw, and another around his under jaw, and you'd a dide to see how funny he looked when he laffed.

  20. O, you'd a dide to see us out in the garden.

  21. Well, you'd a dide to see the cow jump up and blat.

  22. Dide (20) thinks that such aggressive warfare as is practiced by the Germans always goes with a pessimistic disposition.

  23. Dide (20) says that the spirit of hatred does not fit into the soldier's life.

  24. Dide (20) also discusses the question of differences of race as causes of war, and the use that has been made of this dogma.

  25. Dide speaks of a deep but obscure need that drives all human beings to put themselves in harmony with the universal, and says that this is the end and purpose of the aesthetic tendencies.

  26. Dide (20) says that in Germany preoccupation with the idea of injustice is a cause of war, and Chapman (39) also remarks that Germany had gone mad thinking of her wrongs.

  27. Gret honour dide hem Deiphebus, certeyn, And fedde hem wel with al that mighte lyke.

  28. Al be I not the first that dide amis, What helpeth that to do my blame awey?

  29. And that thou me bisoughtest doon of yore, Havinge un-to myn honour ne my reste 1735 Right no reward, I dide al that thee leste.

  30. We should probably insert a mark of interrogation, thus-- "Hwat dide he?

  31. And so dide Jhesu in hise dayes, Who so hadde tyme to telle it.

  32. Though for her love his herte dide blede, She leet him go, and took of him no hede.

  33. Peter erred, so dide nat John; Why is he cleped the principall?

  34. Mr. Dide undertook the feat and the fly caught in the willows behind him.

  35. One evening when Mr. Dide and myself were alone at the camp-fire, the Major and Joshua having gone to the neighboring ranch, I made bold to inquire of the gentleman touching the ladies in whose company we had left our friend.

  36. I directed Mr. Dide to give no more line, but simply to hold the remains of his rod firmly and to stand still, if he could.

  37. I supported Mr. Dide by seizing the back of his collar with one hand and relieved him of the umbrella, directing him to reel in the line.

  38. At noon Mr. Dide expressed a preference for our late camp over the present one.

  39. But the umbwella was not my device, you know," Mr. Dide modestly protested.

  40. In the evening Mr. Dide announced that he should go to Meeker on the following day, and thence he knew not where, definitely.

  41. Mr. Dide was so much delighted at his success that the damage to his rod was a matter of little importance.

  42. Mr. Dide turned toward the lady, stared, and addressed her: "Begpahdon!

  43. Either the condition of Mr. Dide reflected in the old lady's mind with his eyeglass gone, or his general demoralization under the hands of Joshua, mitigated her indignation; she laughed as she bridled.

  44. I was looking only for one of the elements that go to make up a gentleman, and found that Mr. Dide was better endowed with unselfishness.

  45. And so on the morrow Mr. Dide drifted out of sight.

  46. We were overtaken here by Mr. Dide on horseback, for whom we had left, at the hotel, an invitation to join us.

  47. Mr. Dide declined my offer to take his rod, for which I commended him, but he was doubtful of his ability to stem the current and manage his tackle without my assistance, so I led him ashore and he dragged the trout.

  48. Silvere eagerly accepted, already foreseeing the time when he would be able to make his poor aunt Dide some return for all she had spent upon him.

  49. Ever since the murder of her lover, the elder Macquart, on the frontier, aunt Dide had cherished a bitter hatred against all gendarmes and custom-house officers, whom she mingled together in one common longing for vengeance.

  50. In the fast fading light he saw aunt Dide stretched, rigid and seemingly lifeless, upon her bed.

  51. Weary of the delights afforded by the well, and unwilling to vex aunt Dide by seeing Miette again on the other side of the wall, Silvere begged the girl to meet him somewhere else.

  52. The well in the yard of the house occupied by aunt Dide and Silvere was a party-well.

  53. When he at times entertained a vague idea that aunt Dide might be expiating some former transgressions, he would say to himself: "I was born to pardon her.

  54. In vain did Silvere try to explain that aunt Dide had detained him.

  55. At the end of the path, at the entrance of the Impasse Saint-Mittre, he fancied he could see aunt Dide standing erect, white and rigid like the statue of a saint, while she witnessed his agony from a distance.

  56. But aunt Dide was no longer listening to him.

  57. Of all his talk, however, aunt Dide only heard Silvere's name.

  58. Aunt Dide must every day have touched it with her hand, without ever making up her mind to throw it away, although it could now only carry her back sorrowfully into the past.

  59. He had just seen aunt Dide standing before him erect and motionless on the threshold of the doorway.

  60. He knew with what devotion his aunt Dide allowed the relics of the past to lie rotting wherever they might be.

  61. They were waiting till they should be old enough to marry: Aunt Dide would remain with them.

  62. In the evening, aunt Dide had another of those nervous attacks which came upon her at intervals.

  63. I noot my-self not wisly what it is; But now I fele a newe qualitee, Ye, al another than I dide er this.

  64. If I dide ought that mighte lyken thee, It is me leef; and of this treson now, God woot, that it a sorwe is un-to me!

  65. And dide also his othere observaunces 1345 That to a lovere longeth in this cas; And, after that these dees turnede on chaunces, So was he outher glad or seyde 'allas!

  66. And 'twer the cheaper way: Better it were a brother dide at once, Then that a sister, by redeeming him Should die for euer Ang.

  67. And dide that day when Viola from her birth Had numbred thirteene yeares Seb.

  68. So dide our sexteyn and our fermerer, That han been trewe freres fifty yeer; 1860 They may now, god be thanked of his lone, Maken hir Iubilee and walke allone.

  69. Two fyres on the auter gan she bete, And dide hir thinges, as men may biholde In Stace of Thebes, and thise bokes olde.

  70. And by my trouthe, me thoughte he dide thee so.

  71. The fifthe is, foryetelnesse by to muchel drinkinge; for which somtyme a man foryeteth er the morwe what he dide at even or on the night biforn.

  72. Soothly, the gode werkes, that he dide biforn that he fil in sinne, been al mortified and astoned and dulled by the ofte sinning.

  73. Now that Uncle Macquart and Aunt Dide were dead, she no longer feared what she called the abomination of the Tulettes; and even poor little Charles, in dying, had carried with him one of the most humiliating of the blots on the family.

  74. Pascal had placed Aunt Dide on the bed, he found that the old mother was still alive.

  75. She handed him the envelope bearing the name of Aunt Dide in large characters; and he took from it papers of all sorts, notes taken by him long ago, which he proceeded to read.

  76. And Aunt Dide looked at him with her vacant stare in which there was neither pleasure nor pain, the stare of eternity contemplating things earthly.

  77. He told of the days when Aunt Dide talked, and he affirmed that he had found her one morning singing a romance of her youth.

  78. Come, look for the names on the envelopes; Aunt Dide first.

  79. Without the set expression of her countenance changing Aunt Dide wept, a flood of tears rolled from her living eyes over her dead cheeks.

  80. At this voice Aunt Dide at last turned her head.

  81. And when he found himself alone with Aunt Dide he returned to his pictures quietly.

  82. The prophete his payn eet In penaunce and in sorwe, By that the Sauter seith, So dide othere manye; That loveth God lelly, His liflode is ful esy.

  83. Ac thow hast famed me foule Bifore the kyng here; 1730 For killed I nevere no kyng Ne counseiled therafter, Ne dide as thow demest I do it on the kynge.

  84. For David in hise dayes Dubbed knyghtes, And dide hem sweren on hir swerdes To serven truthe evere; And who so passed that point Was apostata in the ordre.

  85. For Crist cleped us alle, Come if we wolde, Sarzens and scismatikes, And so he dide the Jewes.

  86. For alle yede out at oon ere That in that other she dide lere; Fully on me she lost hir lore, Hir speche me greved wondir sore.

  87. My moder flemed him, Seynt Amour: This noble dide such labour To susteyne ever the loyaltee, That he to moche agilte me.

  88. And dye he moste, he seyde, as dide Ekko For Narcisus'; C.

  89. Thanne I anoon dide al my crafte For to drawen out the shafte, And ther-with-al I sighed eft.

  90. But wel I woot I was in rage, Whan I to Love dide homage.

  91. His moder swete he dide also; He callid no men mo him to.

  92. MArie his moder sore dide wepe; The teeres fellen at hure fete.

  93. And the[AZ] cite dide faste encrece Of brede and wyne, fisshe, and fflesshe.

  94. To the mynster dide he fare, And of his horse he lighte there.

  95. Messe he hirde and offrid thoo, And thanne to the Castelle dide he goo.

  96. Some dide sitting at their meate, others as they were asking counsell of the phisition for their friendes.

  97. Those who were condemned to be smothered to death by sinking downe into the softe bottome of an high built bedde of roses, neuer dide so sweete a death as I shoulde die, if her rose coloured disdaine were my deathsman.

  98. Then happie was he that was an asse, for nothing wyll kill an asse but colde, and none dide but with extreame heate.

  99. Well, by gosh, you'd a dide to have seen Pa try to stop.

  100. Well, you'd a dide if you had heard the explosion.

  101. Well, you'd a dide to see Pa look at us when he woke up.

  102. You'd a dide to see Pa flinch when I pulled up his shirt, and got ready to brand him.

  103. He got down on his knees right under the parrot's cage, and you'd a dide to see Polly hang on to the wires of the cage with one foot, and drop an apple core on the minister's head.

  104. Well, you'd a dide to see that woman look at me.

  105. You'd a dide to see me and my chum drink that lather.


  106. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "dide" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.