Go forward through the gates under the mango trees, and set foot at once in sheds which have as little to do with mangoes as a locomotive with Lakshmi.
Hard by this place the road or rut turned by great gardens, very cool and pleasant, full of tombs and black-faced monkeys who quarrelled among the tombs, and shut in from the sun by gigantic banians and mango trees.
The colonel then apologised to Newton, while he repaired to the bath, and in a few minutes returned, having undergone the necessary ablution after a mango feast.
The contents of the mango were soon exhausted; the stone and pulp were dropped into the tub of water, and the colonel's hand was extended to the basket for a repetition of his luxurious feast, when Newton was announced.
So many sons you shall have, if you give each of your seven Queens a mango apiece.
And after twelve years, the mango tree began to flower, and Raja Rasalu married the Princess Kokilan, whom he won from Sarkap when he played chaupur with the King.
Then the King, greatly delighted, took the faqir's stick and went off to the mango tree.
Now, as luck would have it, the youngest Queen was not in the house, so the King put her mango away in a tiny cupboard in the wall, against her return, and while it lay there a greedy little mouse came and nibbled away one half of it.
For a week or more their hunting-grounds had been swarming with game, in amazing and daily increasing numbers, till there was little more of chance or of excitement in the hunt than in plucking a ripe mango from its branch.
The balls, forty in number, are packed in a mango wood case, which consists of two stories with twenty pigeon holes in each, lined with lath and surrounded by the dried leaves of the poppy.
The kernel of the mango can be reduced to an excellent flour for making bread.
And they used to pass many a delicious and fast fleeting hour under the mango trees behind the friendly curtain of bushes till Mrs. Almayer's shrill voice gave the signal of unwilling separation.
After the mango season is over he becomes a vendor of Poona figs or Nagpur oranges.
Here too comes the itinerant fruit-seller, very often a woman, who hawks fruit of all kinds from the superior mango to the acid "karaunda" of the Ghats.
Abandoned by Debendra, as a boy throws away an unripe mango not to his taste, Hira at first suffered frightfully.
About a mile from the house she was lying in a mango garden at the edge of a tank.
In the garden adjoining our house were citrus trees laden with golden fruit, bananas of many varieties and a large mango tree, whose branches were bending under the weight of its richly tinted, luscious drupes.
Only a short distance ahead of us, reclining against a mango tree, was an amorous young mestizo, who was fondly gazing on his dusky querida, while thrumming his instrument.
The fruits of India in general estimation with the Natives are the mango and the melon.
They dislike the acid of the lemon in their stews, which is never resorted to when the green mango or tamarind can be procured.
A gardener gave him by way of present a large mango fruit.
Phralaong, having thus begun the life of a recluse, spent seven days alone in a forest of mango trees, enjoying in that retirement the peace and happiness of soul which solitude alone can confer.
The sun sent golden gleams over the short turf worn to dustiness by crowding feet, and the long curves of the river, losing themselves on either side among green fields and mango trees, shone like a burnished shield.
The trees keep their foliage, and here and there is a broad-spreading banyan, or a mango grove, with its deep shade.
The site selected is usually a small hole in the trunk of a mango tree that has weathered many monsoons.
In the mango sprays The sun-birds flashed; alone at his green forge Toiled the loud coppersmith;.
The mango blossom becomes transfigured into fruit, which, by the end of the month, is as large as an egg, and will be ready for gathering in the latter half of May.
The soft emerald hue of the young wheat and barley is rendered more vivid by contrast with the deep rich green of the mango trees.
Most conspicuous of these are the yellowish verdure of the newly-transplanted rice, the vivid emerald of the young plants that have taken root, the deeper hue of the growing sugar-cane, and the dark green of the mango topes.
Currie has found the nest on two occasions in a mango tree in a tope at Lahore.
The spring crops have all been cut and the whole earth is dusty brown save for a few patches of young sugar-cane and the dust-covered verdure of the mango topes.
In April the green pigeons pair and build slender cradles, high up in mango trees, in which two white eggs are laid.
From everymango tope emanates the cheerful lay of the fantail flycatcher and the lively "Think of me .
APRIL The breeze moves slow with thick perfume From every mango grove; From coral tree to parrot bloom The black bees questing rove, The koil wakes the early dawn.
In the country of the Anarttas, O Bharata, there flows in a westward course the sacred river Narmada, graced by Priyangu and mango trees, and engarlanded with thickest of canes.
Take half the beaten spices, and mix with the latter ingredients, also three cups of brown sugar; besides, put one teaspoonful brown sugar in each mango before you put in the stuffing.
Mix all these well together, throwing in little bits of mango or cucumbers.
To the north one finds great mango trees with their solid hemispheres of beautiful foliage, and endless rice-fields in the cultivation of which the people still employ the methods of bygone centuries.
A tenant would be unwilling to part with a given clump of bamboo or a magnificent mango tree planted by his great-great-grandfather.
Needless to say, I agreed with Dingan, and in future gave the mango a wide berth.
Dingan exclaimed, when I approached him on the subject, 'the mango tree on the Yuka Road, just before you get to the bridge over the river?
The fruit of the Mango Tree, a native of India and the south-western parts of Asia; it also grows abundantly in the West Indies and Brazil.
The varieties of the mango are very numerous,--upwards of eighty are cultivated; and the quality of these varies according to the countries and situations in which they grow.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "mango" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: berry; ebony; fruit; oak; orange; tree