The top and the sayll both will I make, The helme and the castell also will I take, To drife ich a nayll will I not forsake, This gere may neuer fayll, that dar I vndertake Onone.
Belyue loke [th]at mygere be grathed, Miselffe schall to [th]at gedlyng goo.
Fine felt hatts, spectacles for to rede; Of this gay gere a great cawse why, For lake of money I might not spede.
Ye shall washe me no gere, for feare of fretynge[203] I love no launders that shrynke my gere in wettynge, I praye the go hens, and let me be in rest.
But let thatgere passe, for I feare our pryde Is cause of the care whyche god doth us provyde.
Here is a prety matter, to see this gere how it goes; 15 By Gogs soule, I thenk you wold loes your ars, and it were loose!
So oft have we peckt that our stones wax right thynne, And all our other gere not worth a pyn, 750 For with peckynge and peckyng I have so wrought, That I have peckt a good peckynge-yron to nought.
Now this gere must forward goe, for here my gammer commeth.
A later Haggadic version characteristically omits the last, recognizing only the full converts (Gere Emeth) as proselytes.
Go therefore and work: straw shall not be given you, and you shall deliver the accustomed number of bricks.
And when my glory shall pass, I will set thee in a hole of the rock, and protect thee with my righthand till I pass: 33:23.
Therefore when we were gone up to thy servant our father, we told him all that my lord had said.
And the Lord spoke to Moses and Aaron, and he gave them a charge unto the children of Israel, and unto Pharao the king of Egypt, that they should bring forth the children of Israel out of the land of Egypt.
And the fishes that are in the river, shall die, and the waters shall be corrupted, and the Egyptians shall be afflicted when they drink the water of the river.
And the Lord spoke to Moses, saying: I am the Lord 6:3.
So he sent away his brethren, and at their departing said to them: Be not angry in the way.
And the Lord spoke to Moses and Aaron, saying: 11:2.
And they met Moses and Aaron, who stood over against them as they came out from Pharao: 5:21.
Plurality of wives, though contrary to the primitive institution of marriage, Gen.
It is certainly very prettily situated on the Gere and the Rhone, and is surrounded by hills, which give it pleasantness and effect.
The Gere is animated by numerous flower-mills; there are likewise many paper-mills.
Wine is to him both food and drink, as is here said: Gere and Freke Sates the warfaring, Famous father of hosts; But on wine alone Odin in arms renowned Forever lives.
Har answered: The food that is placed on his table he gives to his two wolves, which hight Gere and Freke.
And for that no-thing of hir olde gere She sholde bringe in-to his hous, he bad That wommen sholde dispoilen hir right there; Of which thise ladyes were nat right glad 375 To handle hir clothes wher-in she was clad.
Also my master Sir Thomas Howys schol send a letter to the person ye wote of, for to deliver you the gere at London the next week.
Of his clothinge and of his gere He was unlich alle othre there, So that it hapneth ate laste, The queene on him hire yhe caste, And knew that he was strange anon: Bot he behield hire evere in on Withoute blenchinge of his chere.
For I do not see how to choose between such lines as these following:-- And on I put my gere and myn array; F.
The voice was that of the Editor and he was evidently talking to Miss Gere about her, because he said: "Why, today I found a poem on my desk, with a letter.
It was Miss Gere asking how soon she would be down with her items and to take up some other work.
Miss Gere was sighing over Mabel, but Mabel did not guess that.
Well, he and Miss Gere went out, and I went home and sat down and thought about everything.
When Mabel returned to the office, Miss Gere sent her up Fourth Street to study the delicatessens and bread shops.
It won't be necessary," said Miss Gere hastily, "although I am sure they are well worth reading.
When Mabel finally reached the room, she was told that Miss Gere was out but that she might wait at her desk.
Miss Gere was not at all what Mabel thought a Society Editor should be.
The real Mabel sat very still and red until Miss Gere came in.
She never reached home again until six and later, and on several occasions she had been obliged to accompany Miss Gere on long tiresome night trips by automobile or trolley into the surrounding country.
I saw it on some of the papers Miss Gere and the Chief threw in the waste basket.
It did not take long, and while she waited for Miss Gere who was almost always out, she reviewed the experiences that had beset her during the past few days.
In the elder or poetic Edda it is thus written in the chapter called Grimnismal: “The warlike highly honoured Father of heroes gives his food To Gereand to Freke; For by wine alone Is the glorious Odin nourish’d.
Then Gere and his men were lodged and men bade take their steeds in charge.
In the court she saw bold Gere standing, him and the fellowship that had been sent thither.
Then he bade Ortwin and the Margrave Gere go to court.
Then answered Gere from the Burgundian land: "Your mother Uta, Gernot, and Giselher have charged you, that ye refuse them not.
Rich gifts were also given them by his kinsmen Giselher and Gernot, Gere and Ortwin.
Duke Gere led Kriemhild's palfroy by the bridle till just outside the castle gate.
Ortwin and Gere would not desist, but sent to fetch their friends on every side, and made known to them the feasting that was to be.
He is perhaps the historical Margrave Gere (965) of East Saxony, whom Otto the Great appointed as a leader against the Slavs.
Giselher and Gere both were come; Dankwart and Folker, too, had heard about the strangers.
The host and his lady rose from their seats at once and greeted well Gere of the Burgundian land with his fellowship, Gunther's liegemen.
Gere was of their kin; the host bade him be seated and had wine poured out for the guests; no longer did they tarry.
For nine days, then, waited Gere at Siegfried's hall; but still the king put off his answer.
When the queen saw that they were ready to take their leave, and that Gere could wait no longer upon the king's pleasure, she urged her husband to say to Gunther that they would come to his harvest festival.
Then Gere spoke of the queen-mother Ute, now grown old and feeble, who wished once more, ere death called her hence, to see her daughter Kriemhild.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "gere" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.