John Farden was the first to break the silence: 'I wouldn't bide,' said he.
Quite unexpectedly, John Farden came in for a share of the savings of an old aunt at service, and, like an honest fellow as he was, he got himself out of debt at once.
At the gate he had met, going home to dinner, John Farden with Mrs. Hayward, who had been charing at the farm.
Help me to be a good lad,' said Paul, who knew John Farden would not enter into any other explanation.
Not them; not a brass farden among the 'ole dam good an' lawful lot.
He was off with the letters and all, and never gave me a farden for what he had or what he l'arnt off o' me.
A lady buys two oranges, and forks {179} out a sixpence; well in coorse, I hands over fippence farden astead of fippence.
I always gives a farden more change, and takes according.
A separate call was made upon her time with reference to almost every letter brought to her office, and for all this, as she often told her friends in profound disgust, she received as salary no more than "tuppence farden a day.
What business have they with post-missusses, if they cannot pay 'em better nor tuppence farden a day?
Penury in a tidy cotton gown, to his keen discernment, is nothing better than “farden pride”—a weakness he feels it is his bounden duty to snub and correct whenever he meets with it.
I wouldn't take a fardenbeyant it, in the shape of debt.
I let 'im off the farden in consideration that he 'adn't got one, an' I had no change.
A farden is a farden in districts where a penny is a substantial coin of the realm.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "farden" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.