A similar pavement is alluded to by Statius:-- "Varias ubi picta per artes Gaudet humus superare novis asarota figuris.
Magis gaudet quam qui senectam exuit=--He rejoices more than an old man who has put off old age, i.
De male quæsitis vix gaudet tertius hæres=--A third heir seldom enjoys what it dishonestly acquired.
Gaudet tentamine virtus=--Virtue rejoices in being put to the test.
Ardeat ipsa licet, tormentis gaudet amantis=--Though she is aflame herself, she delights in the torments of her lover.
Mr. Gaudet shows us a pumpkin which weighs twenty-five pounds, a squash of the same weight, and citron melons, which weigh over ten pounds each.
Thirty years ago when Miss Gaudet was a little girl she got her first Scripture lesson from an R.
Mr. John Gaudet says, "I was driving last winter on Lesser Slave Lake when it was sixty-four below.
Mr. Gaudet has continuously served The Company for fifty-seven years, and his ambition is to put in three years more.
We follow, and half-way up the two figures stop, ostensibly for Mr. Gaudet to point out to Mr. Brabant the view up river.
Gaudet for some interesting notes regarding the family of Gabriel Bellefontaine.
Gaudet for a copy of the original letter of which a translation is given on next page.
Gaudet about twenty years ago from an old Acadian of remarkable memory and intelligence, whose grandfather was a brother of Charles Belliveau.
All suit and service is too little for them, presents too base: Tormentis gaudet amantis--et spoliis.
The condition of the college and the country gave them abundant opportunities for appreciating the inscription on the armor of the Dartmouth family: "Gaudet tentamine virtus.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "gaudet" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.