Near by where we nooned to-day, there was 2 dead indians in the top of a cottonwood tree,[57] this being their manner of disposing of their dead.
A few miles farther along they noonedin the shade of a piƱion.
Northen branch of the creek where we had nooned it on the 12 th of Septr.
We nooned it as usial at Collins's Creek where we found Frazier, solus; the other four men haveing Born in pursute of the two indians who had Set out from Collin's Creek two hours before Fraziers arrival Wiser arrived there.
We noonedat some nameless change-house and were glad to make the thirty-six miles to Libarium by dusk.
We crossed the Selado river at 11, and nooned it in its neighbourhood.
Then one hot day, when they nooned beside a shining lake and she sat in the shade of a boulder, she heard the men talking.
When they nooned upon a gravel bank near the end of a wide lake it was fiercely hot.
At the spring where we nooned we were met by Brothers Pack and Matthews from the forward camps.
We nooned at a beautiful spring in a small birch grove.
We immediately returned to the Creek upon which we had nooned and camped for the night, and Mr. Bridger and his men camped with us.
On the 19th we nooned at the Grand Falls, the main fall we judged to be about one hundred feet.
Next morning we made seven miles andnooned near Ash Creek, on the south side of the river where the Oregon road first strikes the north fork of the Platte.
The pioneers had traveled nine miles and nooned in a valley.
We nooned next day, Tuesday, May 25th, in good grass two miles above Chimney Rock; and I rode with Brothers Kimball and Benson to look out a road.
We traveled fifteen miles from where we nooned before we could get grass, and this made the longest day's journey on the whole route, making twenty-three and three-fourths miles.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "nooned" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.