Poul le cuuelier +Poule the couper 16 Faict et refaict les cuues, Maketh and formaketh the keupis, tonniaulx, vaissiaux Barellis, vessellis Courans et gouttans.
I immediately sent a Poule to Yaour to get me the belt by any means and at any price, and any thing else he could discover belonging to Mr. Park.
I went back to Sansanding and staid there, waiting for the arrival of the Poule I had sent to Yaour.
The King ordered them to go to Massina, a small country belonging to the Poule nation, to take away all the Poules' cattle, and return.
Seynt Poule the Appostyll seithe he that is ignoraunt .
Wretyn at Bromholm, on the Saturday next after the Feste of the Conversion of Seynt Poule laste paste.
Plumer la poulesans la faire crier = To fleece a person adroitly, without his perceiving it.
Poule C’est une poule mouillée = He is a milk-sop.
The holy appostle and doctour of the peple saynt Poule sayth in his epystle.
The 'poule bleue' was doubtless the Swamp Hen or Purple Gallinule which, because of its rich purple plumage and red feet, is a conspicuous object in New Zealand landscapes.
Philippe pointed out that, notwithstanding this, Lusignan had won the Prix des Cars and the Grande Poule des Produits.
Now listen, Nana, I saw her after the Grande Poule des Produits, and she was dripping and draggled, and her sides were trembling like one o'clock.
The following are some of the dishes Van der Pyl's makes a speciality of:--Poule au pot Henri IV.
She's a level-going filly with which Serge hopes to win the next Poule des Produits.
A child who had been brought up so simply, in spite of her large fortune, a little commoner, speaking of level-going fillies and the Poule des Produits!
I[~t]m the same daye paied to poule the ytalian for his bourde wages for xij wok[s] at xx d.
The French call it 'Poule d'Aurigny,' from which one might suppose it was more common in this neighbourhood than elsewhere.
He lost no time in taking himself off, while the Belle-Poule cast anchor near the left bank of the river, before a town belonging to another native king known as Denis.
The Belle-Poule put in at Teneriffe to take in provisions and water, and I took advantage of this stoppage to finish the ascent of the famous Peak which I had had to break off in 1837.
The Belle-Poule was ordered on a cruise along the Guinea Coast and to South America, touching first of all at Lisbon, and it was settled that Aumale should take passage on board her as far as that port.
From the eastern coast of the island the Bette-Poule took her way to the western side, passing through the Straits of Belleisle, a narrow channel which parts Newfoundland from Labrador.
When the Belle-Poule had finished her cruise along the Guinea Coast she had orders to go to Brazil; so we set sail for Rio de Janeiro.
And then we entered Toulon harbour, where we saluted the flag of Admiral Hugon, commanding the squadron to which the Belle-Poule was about to be attached.
The Belle-Poule weighed anchor at last, but before we got past Sandy Hook a snowstorm came on.
At New York I found the Belle-Poule done up as good as new, thanks to the excellent care of my second in command, M.
But my winter in Paris slipped swiftly by, and towards the end of May Admiral Hugon's squadron prepared to go to sea, the repairs to the Belle-Poule were finished, and I started to join my ship.
Ours sailed for Smyrna, whence the Admiral sent the Belle-Poule under my command, and the Triton, Captain Hamelin, back to France.
During one of these the Belle-Poule had to scud along under bare poles at the rate of twelve knots an hour.
When the Belle Poule cast anchor at Cherbourg on November 3Oth, the storm had passed by.
As king, Henry said that his ambition was that every one of his subjects, every peasant in Béarn, should be able every Sunday in the year to put la poule au pot!
Footnote 27: The pouleau Pot is a general dish with the Béarnais.
Je veux que, le dimanche, chaque paysan ait sa poule au pot=--It is my wish that every peasant may have a fowl in his pot on Sundays.
Honteux comme un renard qu'une poule aurait pris=--Sheepish as a fox that has been taken in by a fowl.
Paul is regularly spelt Poule by Chaucer, and St. Paul's Cathedral is often called Powles in Tudor documents.
It is a Picard cache-poule (chasse-poule), collector of poultry in default of money.
But there thou sayest that Poule shulde have spoke thilke forsaid sentence +by tyme present, and that most shulde have ben acordaunt to the everlasting presence, 170 why gabbest thou +in thy wordes?
Wherthorow it may wel be knowe that Poule used tho wordes of passed significacion, for nede and lacke of a worde in mannes bodily speche betokeninge the everlasting presence.
Some which feare to be to farre gone, runne backewarde as it were to poule his shafte backe.
And besyde those whiche must nedes have theyr tongue thus walkynge, other men vse other fautes: as some will take theyr bowe and writhe and wrinche it, to poule in his shafte when it flyeth wyde, as yf he draue a carte.
An other writhes or runneth a syde to poule in his shafte strayght.
Poule was sentenced for this for twenty years to the galleys, and died on them.
At this time it was that the half-crazy fanatical Cordelier Poule attempted to shoot him.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "poule" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: bawd; cruiser; harlot; hustler; prostitute; stew; tomato; whore