If the sloes have been pricked, the liquor will be ready for use in two or three months; but do not hurry it.
So Borlase went to her aid and he found a basket half full of amazing sloes and a maiden the like of which he never had found afore.
The signs amazed her, for she had never loved before, and when she found as she couldn't trespass for no more sloes after all, it broke in upon her that she must already be terrible addicted to Samuel.
Take of Sloes hardly ripe, press out the juice, and make it thick in a bath.
Furthermore, the dark ruby juice of Sloes enters largely into the manufacture of British port wine, to which it communicates a beautiful deep red colour, and a pleasant sub-acid roughness.
Country people bury the Sloes in jars to preserve them for winter use; and the bush which bears this fruit is sometimes called, provincially, Scroggs.
Many in the West are our Kings and Princes noble, Orchards bend double beneath their fruitage vast; Sloes upon the thorn-bush shine in blue abundance, Oaks in redundance drop the royal mast.
And for special use "for the stomach's sake" old-wife followers of St. Paul pin their faith to gin in which Sloes have soaked for months.
Country people make them into wine, and it used to be said that much that is sold as port had its origin in the skins of British sloes instead of Portuguese grapes.
A preternaturally tall young lady, with eyes like sloes and a very superior figure, attracts him most.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "sloes" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.