Ay,' says Sam; 'but I wants t' bludgeon anotherswile afore I dies.
If the ground were clear we might be findin' berries, though I'm doubtin' there's many on Swile Island.
So here you be out o' your fix, and we're all happy as a swile on a sunny rock.
Swile Island was a small, nearly round island, containing an area equal to about that of a city block.
With unexpected suddenness the wind rose to half a gale before they had spanned two-thirds of the distance to Swile Island.
Lard, Charley and I be wonderful thankful for the owl and the swile You sends us.
When I finds the oars this marnin' I says, 'The lads gets toSwile Island, whatever.
Were you findin' the oars we caches on Swile Island?
Sometimes they would themselves eat seal meat, and though the Twigs were fond of it, and Charley had pronounced the meat excellent when he and Toby were starving on Swile Island, he now thought it strong and not as palatable as he would like.
Make the most of un, and don't be takin' too much time to boil the kettle at Swile Island!
The wind comes to blow a gale before you has time to get to Swile Island, and I wonders and wonders about un, and I fears you gets in a wonderful bad fix.
We been bidin' here on this island, which we calls Swile Island, goin' on ten days.
He was now in a "fix," and a worse fix indeed than that in which he and Toby had found themselves on Swile Island.
Swile an' ice bears live on fish, lad, and 'tis but natural they should carry a bit of the flavor of fish.
We calls un swile in Newfoundland and down on the Labrador.
Tis not so high flavored of fish, either, as old swile, an' swile is good.
Ay," says Peter, "but I wants t' bludgeon anotherswile afore I dies.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "swile" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.