He was sometimes a little touchy; but gave promise of proving himself a good scout, being willing to learn, faithful, and obliging.
Smithy was getting on very well, Thad thought, considering how much he had to "unlearn" in order to make a good scout.
In short, to be a good scout is to be a well-developed, well-informed boy.
This National Council is made up of leading men of the country and it is their desire that every American boy shall have the opportunity of becoming a good scout.
To be a good scout a boy must learn to obey the orders of his patrol leader, scout master, and scout commissioner.
Besides his adventures in Canada, and besides his power of sticking to his duty, Lord Strathcona was also a good scout, because he was kind and helpful to others.
Then George--again as a good scout would--invented a plan.
Like a good scout, he never came to a rise without checking his pace and peeping very carefully over it before going on.
A good Scout is generally a good "ornithologer," as Mark Twain calls him.
Mr. Ellsworth laughed and said, "But the principal thing is to make him a good scout.
If I had been a good scout I would have known that passage didn't lead anywhere.
My husband would be the sort of man that is called a Good Scout.
A Good Scout is the sort of man who if a woman trusts him with one one-hundredth of her heart will take the whole heart and twist and batter it: and read the paper and smoke his pipe and pay the bills: serenely unaware.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "good scout" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.