Whan Achilles with Telaphus His Sone toward Troie were, It fell hem, er thei comen there, Ayein Theucer the king ofMese To make werre and forto sese His lond, as thei that wolden regne And Theucer pute out of his regne.
I soon loosened the tongue of the scrupulous Vendômese notary, who communicated to me, not without long digressions, observations due to the profound politicians of both sexes whose decrees are law in Vendôme.
Not even to learn the story which would doubtless account for that extraordinary spectacle would I have asked a single question of any Vendômese gossip.
If then we speak of Hypate or Mese (just as when we speak of a moveable Do), we mean as many different notes as there are keys: but the Dorian Hypate or the Lydian Mese has an ascertained pitch.
The interval between Lichanos and Mese is more than one tone, but less than two: and the two other intervals, as in the enharmonic, are equal.
Paramese was left out, and consequently the Mese became the lowest note of the upper [Greek: pyknon], i.
The Mese linked together the great fora of the city,--the Augustaion on the south of St Sophia, the forum of Constantine on the summit of the 2nd hill, the forum of Theodosius I.
Sir, it is so that John Bakton graunted to John Trovy hes sone in lawe, hes mese with all the londes and tenements, &c.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "mese" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.