Then quickly Kay the seneschal bare the first meat, and the service was made throughout the hall, in joyful wise, as befitted such high festivity.
And Kay answered, "The best knight in the world is in the king's company; without him would he go nowhither!
This vexed Kay mightily, and he sprang forward to smite him; with his foot he thrust him against the pillar of the hearth so that the stone thereof became bloody.
Then the king betook him to rest, and at dawn Sir Ywain prayed as gift the joust which Kay had given unto him.
The brachet which Kay was chasing stayed not till it came to the knight, and took shelter betwixt his legs, barking loudly at the pursuer.
Sir Ector came up to the jousts, with others, and with him rode Kay and Arthur.
Thereupon, Sir Ector and Sir Kay kneeled upon the ground before him.
Nor did Sir Kay mean harm thereby, for he was knight who held no villainy.
Sir Launcelot now came to Sir Kay and had him carried home upon his shield.
Sir Launcelot made them yield themselves to Sir Kay and promise to go next Whitsunday to the court as prisoners of Queen Guenever.
Sir Kay would have helped him, but Sir Launcelot suffered him not, and anon within six strokes he had struck all three to the earth.
Then they went to their beds, and Sir Launcelot and Sir Kaywere lodged together in one bed.
Little Kay was almost blue and black with cold, but he did not feel it, for she had kissed away his feelings and his heart was a lump of ice.
The old woman was afraid that if Gerda saw the roses she would begin to think about her own, and then would remember Kay and run away.
He carried Kay and Gerda first to the Finland woman, who warmed them in her hot room and gave them advice for their journey home.
When Kay hears that I am there he will come out at once and fetch me!
The Snow-queen kissed Kay again, and then he forgot all about little Gerda, his grandmother, and everybody at home.
In the evening, when little Kay was going to bed, he jumped on the chair by the window, and looked through the little hole.
Every time that Kay tried to unfasten his sledge the driver nodded again, and Kay sat still once more.
Little Kay is with the Snow-queen and he likes everything there very much and thinks it the best place in the world.
And poor Kay had also a splinter in his heart, and it began to change into a lump of ice.
But high up the moon shone large and bright, and thus Kay passed the long winter night.
But what happened to little Gerda when Kay did not come back?
One morningKay came out with his warm gloves on, and his little sledge hung over his shoulder.
After forty centuries of unchanged life, it occurred to John Kay of Bury, England, that the weaving process might be improved.
At the same time that Kay was struggling with his invention of the flying shuttle, another poor man, but with less success, had conceived another idea, as to spinning.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "kay" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.