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Example sentences for "teed"

Lexicographically close words:
tedious; tediously; tediousness; tedium; tee; teef; teeing; teel; teem; teemed
  1. Teed had said he was going to make Peter do as much work as my sister did.

  2. Every time that Peter would fall behind my sister, Teed would take him out and buckle him down to a log with a leather strap and stand 'way back and then he would lay that long cowhide down, up and down his back.

  3. He drawed me when my old master, Teed Sharpe, Sr.

  4. Henry teed up and drove a "Pink Spot" out of sight.

  5. I once did a two at this hole," I said as I teed my ball.

  6. He teed up the ball, took a careless stance, and flicked moodily.

  7. The ball is always teed up for the drive," I assured him.

  8. As Celia teed up her ball, he directed her attention to the golden glory of the sand-pit to the left of the flag.

  9. Mrs. Teed replaced the bed-clothes, which flew off again, the pillow striking John Teed in the face.

  10. So Mr. Teed removed Esther to the house of a Mr. White.

  11. Mr. Teed claims to be engaged to the estimable young woman.

  12. Teed regarded Litton and his Latin as the sole obstacles to his success in college; and, though Litton was too much of a gentle heart to hate anybody, if he could have hated anybody it would have been Teed.

  13. Teed had no intention of enduring either of these inconveniences; he trusted to fate to inspire him somehow with some scheme for attaining his diploma without delay.

  14. For his own sake I vote that Mr. Teed be given six months of meditation at home; and I trust that the faculty of the Woman's College will have a similar regard for its ideals and the welfare of the misguided young woman.

  15. Teed had scientific ambitions and hated Greek and Latin, which Litton felt almost necessary to salvation.

  16. Teed turned and came back, with an intolerable smirk, straight to the desk.

  17. Well, as one lover to another, then," Teed laughed.

  18. Well," Teed drawled, "I'll bring you the cylinders.

  19. Litton could not speak; but he threw a look that was like a grappling-iron and Teed came back.

  20. Teed demanded the exact words overheard; and, as often happens to the too-ardent cross-examiner, he got what he asked for and wished he had not.

  21. II Teed had a splendid mind for everything material and modern, but he could not and would not master the languages he called dead.

  22. Teed replied, with the insolence of a conqueror.

  23. He did not remember that Teed had ever used such language.

  24. John Teed and William Cox also boarded at the house--brothers of Mr. and Mrs. Teed, respectively.

  25. In July the phenomena became so bad that the landlord came and told the Teed family that either Esther would have to go, or they would all have to leave the house.

  26. It was replaced, but again flew out, hitting Mr. Teed in the face.

  27. Then there is a local rule saying that if the ball reaches the top of the cliff, but does not pass the wire, it must be teed again, with loss of distance only, the man not being allowed to play it from the tee side of the wire.

  28. However, when the Scot and the American teed up that fateful morning there was a disposition to be sorry for Mr. Blackwell, and a kind of hope that the end might be painless.

  29. One muggy winter morning, when a friend and I teed up at the beginning of the round at La Boulie, we could with difficulty see the flag on the first green, short as was the hole.

  30. Thus the other man, presumably a good driver, had the ball left teed for him.

  31. These are the times when the golfer's pulse beats strong, and he feels the remorse of the man with the misspent youth because he was grown up and his limbs were setting before ever he teed a ball.

  32. If it be impossible to tee the ball behind the place where it lay, it shall be teed as near as possible thereto, but not nearer the hole.

  33. In the meantime I had been a little off my game, and when I teed my first ball at Muirfield it seemed to me that I was as likely to make a bad drive as a good one, and I was equally uncertain with all the other clubs in my bag.

  34. A ball so lifted shall be teed if possible behind the place where it lay.

  35. In two practice rounds that I played before the great encounter opened I did 76 each time, and I felt very fit when we teed up on the eventful morning.

  36. When at length we teed up again at Muirfield, I felt as though I were fit to play for anything, and started in a way that justified my confidence, for I picked up a useful lead of five strokes in the first half-dozen holes.

  37. The ball being teed unusually high, the golfer must be careful not to make any unconscious allowance for the fact in his downward swing, and must see that he wipes the tee from the face of the earth when he makes the stroke.

  38. General Bullwigg teed his ball and drove it far.

  39. Major Jennings teed up his ball, and addressed it, and waggled, and shifted his feet, and had just received that sudden inner knowledge that the time was come to strike, when General Bullwigg interrupted him.

  40. He teed his ball for the two-hundred-yard flight to the easy tenth, and took his cleek.

  41. He had already teed his ball for the second hole, which was poised on a rolling hill one hundred and thirty-five yards away.

  42. He teed his ball, took exactly eight full practice swings, and drove one hundred and fifty yards as usual directly in the middle of the course.

  43. He teed up, and drove his best drive, and followed it with a brassy that laid him twenty yards off the green, where a good approach brought the desired four.

  44. The sometimes insisting opinions of Miss Major and the familiar "When I was abroad" of Mrs. Winslow Teed seldom obtruded on her dreams.

  45. Mrs. Winslow Teed and Miss Crilly were in the room.

  46. Dudley's; but Mrs. Winslow Teed has my seat--I was in front with the chauffeur.

  47. Tha needn't think 'at wedded life Noa disappointment brings; Tha munnot think to keep a chap Teed to thi appron strings.

  48. Jane went to the shop, Dan to his shoe factory, and William Cox and John Teed about their business as usual, leaving Olive and Esther to attend to their household duties.

  49. In less time than it takes to count three, the pillow flew from under Esther's head and struck John Teed in the face.

  50. Caritte, Dan, Olive, Esther and Jane, William Cox and John Teed having left the room after Esther had burried her face in the pillow.

  51. John Teed has gone up the Main Street to see his sister Maggie, and Jane has returned to Mr. Dunlap's.

  52. Illustration: "We rested on top of the hill"] Against her protest I teed another ball, but she went under it and it met the fate of its predecessors.

  53. Carter drove out a good one, and I teed a ball for Miss Harding.

  54. I carefully teed a new ball and took a practise swing or two.

  55. Just before they teed off, Marshall put a crisp one-hundred-dollar note belonging to Miss Lawrence in Harding's hands as stakeholder, and LaHume promptly covered it with five bills of the same denomination.

  56. Wallace corrected other errors, and after fifteen minutes of instruction Harding teed a ball and for the first time in his life cleared the lane.

  57. Wallace teed a ball and Miss Lawrence drove a very good one for her.

  58. He teed a dozen balls, and I doubt if one of them fell fifteen yards outside the line of the lone walnut tree which had been selected as the target.

  59. In this I put the heads of three matches, teed the ball on the beach, called to Powers what I had done and told him to keep his eye on the ball.

  60. I'm going to play my best game this afternoon," announced Miss Harding when I had teed her ball.

  61. I once did a two at this hole," I said, as I teed my ball.

  62. A ball may, under a penalty of two strokes, be lifted out of a difficulty of any description, and be teed behind same.

  63. Whereas in medal play, rule 8 reads: "A ball may under a penalty of two strokes be lifted out of a difficulty of any description, and be teed behind the same.

  64. Two more balls were teed on the bank, and the Professors smote them with their clubs, but those balls were claimed by the Zambesi, and perchance they have been digested by the crocodiles.

  65. So he teed up the ball and addressed it most elaborately and conscientiously with his umbrella, for, of course, he had no clubs with him.

  66. Guaran- teed stocks are of various kinds and rank -- some on the same level as, and others next in order to, debenture stocks.

  67. They had to strike as nearly as possible in the centre, a ten-inch disc of clay, the ball being teed about six feet in front of it.

  68. Then he stooped down and teed it carefully.

  69. He teed his ball, swung his club a couple of times, and shook his head.

  70. At first I thought he was going to say something, but evidently nothing occurred to him, so he teed his ball and took his stance.

  71. Cottle teed his ball and stood over it, gripping his driver until his knuckles showed white under the tan.

  72. He teed his ball, dropped his left arm at his side, grasped the driver firmly in his right hand and swung the club a couple of times in tentative fashion.

  73. Kitts saw that he wasn't going to get any goats with conversational leads, so he shut up and teed his ball.

  74. Teed of Chicago, understood it well, and his sect was, in fact, merely a religious sect based on the principle of communal possessions.

  75. Founded in Chicago, the sect moved recently to Florida, and there, from day to day, Teed had the satisfaction of seeing the number of believers steadily increase.

  76. Teed was a sufficiently clever psychologist to know that nothing fascinates the crowd so much as mysteries and things that cannot be understood, and he acted accordingly.


  77. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "teed" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.