He yielded and flared back, asked forgiveness and forgot why, became the harshly-held favorite, who ran away and rioted and roamed and loved and married my brown mother.
Upon one twig of the tree sate a huge black bird, looking on me with a fiery glance, and singing hoarsely and tunelessly, while the tempest and flame rioted around him.
But the Russian king, having tasted the pleasures of a more sunny clime, and having rioted in the excitements of sensual indulgence, soon became weary of tranquil life in Kief.
You know," whispered Tom, "what we feel now is the sense of all the gorgeous youth that has rioted through here in two hundred years.
With their usual reckless indifference to the future, the Galla had wasted the country, and rioted in its destruction.
Against the dazzling blue of the sky the branches of the palms stood out in gleaming gold, throwing their light shade over the masses of crimson and white and yellow roses that rioted together beneath.
He felt not the provocation of lust; No voluptuous desires rioted in his bosom; Nor did a burning imagination picture to him the charms which Modesty had veiled from his eyes.
Such were the scenes, on which his thoughts were employed while sleeping: His unsatisfied Desires placed before him the most lustful and provoking Images, and he rioted in joys till then unknown to him.
Winston looked out across the prairie, and for a moment the demons of pride and ambition rioted within him.
For all these years the imperial power had rioted at Yedo, in the hands of two generals, while the emperor, a prisoner in his palace-hermitage in Kyoto, had been but the high priest of his people.
Standing on a balcony and looking pleased as the people rioted against the Tartar ambassadors.
These were the same people who had rioted against the Tartars a month ago, the day this man was arrested.
The scenery was glorious, and mountains, trees, frolicsome water, and scarlet birds, all rioted as if in conscious happiness.
Here were thousands upon thousands of square miles in which nature rioted unrestrained, with semi-tropic fervor; the topography of which was unknown, and whose character in any respect was a matter of pure conjecture.
Tom Van Dorn and Henry Fenn rioted in their twenties.
When finally he rioted in mere word-play, banter, quizzing, it was a sign that he regarded the matter as worthy no higher species of notice.
He riotedin 'all their fine things said unconsciously.
It was not the Jews who riotedin the days of Claudius, Emperor, but the sect of Christians.
Death and infamy had rioted in that deplorable family.
Then, licking up everything which lay in its path, it rioted with voluptuous fury in the more densely crowded regions of the city, raging and crackling among the old, tortuous purlieus and crazy habitations of the Subura.
Trees, grass and underbrush rioted at will, until they suddenly ended on the brow of the bluff, where there was a sheer declivity of sand to the beach.
The stretches of forest that fringed the ravines rioted in color.
And certain reckless, grim thoughts that had rioted in his mind since the day before, now assumed a definiteness that made his blood leap with eagerness.
One thought leaped vividly above the others that rioted in her mind: Trevison had again sinned against the law, and this time his crime was murder!
Others, more skilful, preserved or improved their fortunes while they rioted in expense.
For him again, the army of Venus laughed and rioted as it had rioted once before in the crowded opera house.
Tiberius by a letter excused himself to the Senate, for not having paid his last offices to his mother; and, though he rioted in private luxury without abatement, pleaded "the multitude of public affairs.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "rioted" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.