Swete husbande (quoth she), commaunde what ye wyll, and you shall fynde me obedyense in al thynges.
Whan a couetous man on a time was come vnto a certain cite, whither he was sent as ambassadour for his contrey, anon the mynstrels of the cite came to him to fil his eares with swete din, to th' intente he shuld fyl their purses with money.
And furthermore the aungell sayde: thou shall conceyue and bere a sonne, and thou shalt call his name Jesum; and Elyzabeth thy swete cosyn, she shall conceyue the swete Saynt John.
Why, swete herte, by your false fayth, can ye syng?
But yf that I maye have, trwly, Goode ale my belly full, I shall looke lyke one (by swete sainte Johnn) Were shoron agaynste the woole.
For pacience is payn For poverte hymselve, And sobretee swete drynke And good leche in siknesse.
The nynthe is swete to the soule, No sugre is swetter.
Here is pepyr, pyan, and swete lycorys, Take hem alle at thi lykying pyries (A.
Swete properly points out, as its use in this connection is limited, so far as we know, to the Gospel of Peter, Justin, and Cyril.
Swete proceeds "to compare the 'Diatessaron' with our fragment, with the view of ascertaining whether Tatian would have provided the Petrine writer with the words which he seems to have adopted from the Four Gospels.
Swete may have tried to be--and without doubt he did endeavour to be so--such a test is vitiated and rendered useless by the antecedent manipulation of the texts.
Swete means when he says that Peter "uses it freely," but it would indeed be singular if he seemed to be conscious that he was guilty of an anachronism in making use of this or any word.
Swete calls it "the most decisive indication of the relatively late composition of our fragment.
Nym water and welle [1] yt and brek eyryn and kast theryn and grynd peper and safroun and temper up wyth swete mylk and boyle it and hakke chese smal and cast theryn and messe yt forthe.
Nym Porke and seth it wel and hak yt smal nym eyryn wyth al the wytys and swyng hem wel al togedere and kast god swete mylke thereto and boyle yt and messe it forthe.
If þou wilt in stede of Almaunde mylke, take swete cremes of kyne.
When it was opened a very swete smell came owt of it.
O my swete mother, before all other For you I have most drede: But nowe, adue!
O my swete mother, before all other For you I have most drede," followed by the reflection: "But nowe adue!
Goe into my chamber, my husband,’ she sayd, ‘Swete Wyllyam of Cloudesle.
Lucrecius faith, the brimmes of their cuppes with honye, that the chylde entised by pleasure of the swetenes shuld not feare the wholesome bytternes, or else put suger into y^e medicine it selfe, or some other swete sauoryng thynge.
For he had for that other a good rewarde: and he was of this sorte of gospellers, to whom nothing is more swete then monei.
Here the course of our talkyng putteth vs in remẽbraunce briefely to shewe by what meanes it maye be brought to passe that lernyng shuld waxeswete vnto the chylde, [Sidenote: How learnyng may be made swete vnto y^e chyld.
Herkneth to me bothe eld and ying For Maries love thatswete thing.
Swete Philomele, the birde That hath the heavenly throte, Doth nowe, alas!
The duk of Burbon sware be seynt Denys, And other lordes many on, We will goo pleye them at dys, The lordys of Ingelond everych on, Ther gentilmen seide, be swete seynt John.
Extensio, is that wherby a swete and pleasaunt modulacion or tunablenes of wordes is kepte, because some are spoken wyth a sharpe tenure or accent, some wyth a flatte, some strayned out.
The leaders, Mrs. Blathwaite and Angela Blathwaite and Mrs. Palmerston-Swete came first.
The names of Mrs. Palmerston-Swete and Mrs. Blathwaite and Angela Blathwaite had got into the papers, where Frances hoped and prayed that the name of Dorothea Harrison might not follow them.
Cause theim to lie on their right side, and bowe theim selues forward, call theim by their names, and beate theim with a rosemary braunche, or some other swete like thynge.
The drinke of swete malte and good water kyndly brued, without other drosse nowe a daies vsed.
With the same you maye also make you a swete house in castynge it abrode therin, if firste by auoidynge the russhes and duste, you make the house clene.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "swete" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.