I am also still less disposed to believe in the existence of these animals, because Hémard declares that he has never been able to find any worms in carious cavities.
Hémard has omitted translating this passage, probably because he did not well understand it.
Hémard indicates by the term deschapellement (decrowning) the removal of the crown of a tooth for curative purposes.
He apparently ignores the researches of the Italian anatomists, from whom, and especially from Eustachius, Urbain Hémard had literally reproduced all that concerns odontogeny.
In regard to the development of the teeth, Fauchard repeats what Urbain Hémard had previously written.
At the time when Urbain Hémard was publishing his pamphlet in France, several other monographs were already appearing in various parts of Europe on teeth and their affections.
So well to me the maid is known, The mard and sable rich she weareth; From all the maids at court that wone The belle, the belle sweet Valborg beareth.
Forward eleven warriors trode, The mard and sable they were wearing, They all were clad in princely mode, In tresses each his hair was bearing.
Then in their sable and mard array Stepped forward stately knights eleven: “We’ll with Sir Axel swear to-day, Betide whatever pleases heaven.
Then answer made the ancient King, Rending his hair so long and grey: “With sable and mard I’ll them reward Who dare this cursed Jutt to slay.
No sable and mard was their reward, When they returned from the battle fray; They must doff, I ween, their armour sheen, And clothe them in the wadmal grey.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "mard" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.