Cherry mellows and grows richer in colour with age.
In some cases it is desirable to stain your furniture, but as a rule you cannot improve on the natural colouring, which deepens and mellows with age.
Having achieved this constitutional feat, I asked Mr. Mellows if he could grace my dinner with a pint of good wine?
Mrs. Berrington had come back from Paris the day before but had not proceeded to Mellows the same night, though there was more than one train she might have taken.
The old woman had ideas and Laura liked them, though they often struck her as very sharp and hard, because at Mellows she had no diet of that sort.
The schoolroom at Mellows was not a charmless place and the girl often wished that she might have spent her own early years in so dear a scene.
Lady Ringrose was at all times and in all places a fitful apparition; she had described herself to Laura during her visit at Mellows as 'a bird on the branch.
It was to this that the girl's lesson in philosophy reduced itself, she reflected, as she walked back to Mellows in the rain, which had now come on, through the darkening park.
Mellows was now half the time full of visitors and when it was not its master and mistress were staying with their friends either together or singly.
It is best to use the center cream in making these, as it mellows up more after being coated than bon-bon cream, as it is much softer.
There's a barrel-organ carolling across a golden street In the City as the sun sinks low; Though the music's only Verdi there's a world to make it sweet Just as yonder yellow sunset where the earth and heaven meet Mellows all the sooty City!
It mellows exceedingly, and keeps the leather fibre open; it may be said that it only goes in the leather to prepare and make easy the way for other tannins.
The oil mellows by keeping three years, after which it deteriorates unless mixed with alcohol; it is also improved by redistillation.
Mrs. Mellows pouted fat pink lips, and looked more than ever an elderly infant about to burst into tears.
Mrs. Mellows rose hastily, gathered her flowing negligee about her and beat a retreat.
The atmosphere is smoky, and so mellows the sunlight that every object wears the livery of repose, like the landscapes of Southern Italy.
Joel had no proof that Luke Mellows would have amounted to much.
Yet Mellows had never written a play or an act of a play.
Joel Wixon read for excitement; Luke Mellows for information as to the machinery of authorship.
Joel's ideas of education were exactly those of Mr. Mellows, but he did not like Mr. Mellows because of the anguish inflicted on Luke.
It was as if Luke Mellows had suddenly found expression in something better than words, something that any ear could understand, an ache that rang.
Luke Mellows had not the courage or the recklessness to marry Kitty, though he had as good a job as Shakespeare's.
There were the childish poems by Luke Mellows that Joel's father had published in the Carthage "Clarion.
He had fits of remorse for this, and once he dared to make a personal appeal to old Mr. Mellows to send Luke away to school.
But Joel could not surrender his childhood faith that Luke Mellowshad been meant for another Shakespeare.
Luke Mellows was a boy, a boy that still felt his life in every limb, a boy devoured with fantastic ambitions.
I dearly love the grace of antiquity that mellows the venerable homesteads of England and blends the intermingling lustre of tradition with the roll of their lengthening years.
If our daily occupation is congenial to our taste and disposition, our mind dwells at ease and our nature mellows in the sunshine of agreeable surroundings.
There is something in the restful radiance of moonlight which mellows hearts.
It mellows the rank taste you seek to remove by boiling.
This tends to preserve them, and mellowsthe sharpness of the vinegar.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "mellows" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.