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Example sentences for "venom"

Lexicographically close words:
venisse; venit; veniunt; venne; venoit; venome; venomed; venomous; venomously; venoms
  1. He almost hissed the last words, all the venom he felt toward Joe showing in his eyes.

  2. I hope they knock him out of the box," Fleming hissed, with the venom of a snake.

  3. That erratic individual, whose venom against Joe had once led him to drug his coffee so that our hero might be unable to pitch, had rapidly gone from bad to worse.

  4. Raging with indignation and a natural venom which he felt toward the storekeeper, Felipe flung up the window.

  5. But I can only repeat what His Majesty disbelieved the day before yesterday--that the heart of the ill is Dantzig, and the venom of it Sebastian.

  6. But I can only repeat what his Majesty disbelieved the day before yesterday--that the heart of the ill is Dantzig, and the venom of it Sebastian.

  7. The word "situation" is on her lips; but the venom in her is suppressed a second time by her nephew.

  8. There is a good deal of venom in his handsome face, but Lady Baltimore braves it.

  9. There was venom in McHenry's tone, and he looked at me, the newcomer, to see what impression he had made.

  10. Toad, that under cold stone Days and nights has thirty-one Swelter'd venom sleeping got, Boil thou first i' the charmed pot.

  11. There the grown serpent lies; the worm that's fled Hath nature that in time will venom breed, No teeth for the present.

  12. He probed the hand; His Lancet came out pure and unsullied; No traces of the venom were perceptible; and had not the orifice still been visible, Pablos might have doubted that there had ever been a wound.

  13. From the sudden effects, I suspected that the Abbot was stung by a Cientipedoro: The venom which you see upon my Lancet confirms my idea: He cannot live three days.

  14. All that I can do is to apply such herbs to the wound as will relieve the anguish: The Patient will be restored to his senses; But the venom will corrupt the whole mass of his blood, and in three days He will exist no longer.

  15. Still from the fount of joy's delicious springs Some bitter o'er the flowers its bubbling venom flings.

  16. The Senator has gone on to infuse into his speech the venom which has been sweltering for months--ay, for years; and he has alleged facts that are entirely without foundation, in order to heap upon me some personal obloquy.

  17. But a sharp criticism with a drop of witty venom in it stings a young author almost to death, and makes an old one uncomfortable to no purpose.

  18. It may be milk or venom to other minds; but, in either case, it is something which the producer has had the use of and can part with.

  19. From these first symptoms the child rallied, but his entire organism had been profoundly affected by the venom circulating through it.

  20. Their awful, deep-cut mouths were sternly closed over the long hollow fangs which rested their roots against the swollen poison-gland, where the venom had been hoarding up ever since the last stroke had emptied it.

  21. It was something which he prepared from the venom of a kind of swamp adder," she answered.

  22. A barb steeped in the venom of a hamadryad went in there!

  23. He compares this disease to the bite of a mad dog, which communicates its venom to the person who is bitten; thus, those who are infected by vampirism communicate this dangerous poison to those with whom they associate.

  24. Indeed, as the most revolutionary and uncompromising innovator, Anarchism must needs meet with the combined ignorance and venom of the world it aims to reconstruct.

  25. It could not understand, and therefore it poured the vials of abuse and venom upon its greatest benefactor.

  26. There was no anger in it and no venom in it.

  27. He opened up the wound and rubbed in permanganate of potash to oxidize the venom and destroy its toxic properties.

  28. The local treatments are most effective while the venom is still around the site of the bite, and will reduce the injurious effects considerably.

  29. The venom is related to snake poison, but is neither crotaline nor elapine.

  30. It finds the venom wherever it is present and neutralizes it there, without producing any ill effects on the system.

  31. Taking the cobra as the basis of estimate, it requires only twice as much moccasin venom as it does cobra poison to kill a guinea pig, whereas it requires six times as much copperhead and ten times as much rattlesnake virus.

  32. But after half an hour or so the absorption of the venom becomes more general and the local treatments ineffective.

  33. Experimenters wishing to secure the venom of the Elaps often find it difficult to rouse the snake to striking wrath.

  34. There is nothing in these data to indicate that a full-grown man in normal health, and with proper treatment, will succumb to crotaline poisoning unless the venom enters a vein, direct.

  35. Probably for two reasons--the greater amount of venom secreted, and the superior power with which the rattler drives its fangs home.

  36. This would make the venom about as dangerous as the toxin of typhoid fever, which is not generally regarded as a necessarily "deadly" disease.

  37. It is through this intimate contact that the venom works into the wounds.

  38. When the venom once enters into general circulation no chemicals or medication can neutralize its effects, except a specific antivenin, such as has been prepared by Dr.

  39. But the saurian itself has been studied and dissected, and its venom has been analyzed.

  40. Neither the southern Reduvius nor the northern Melanolestes possesses any venom apparatus.

  41. He adds, that some said that Chiron, others that Polenor, when wounded by the arrow of Hercules, washed the wound in the water of this river, which became impure from its contact with the venom of the Hydra.

  42. She scatters noxious venom and poisonous extracts; and she summons together Night, and the Gods of Night, from Erebus and from Chaos, and she invokes Hecate in magic howlings.

  43. The barbed steel stands out from his breast; soon as it is wrenched out, the blood gushes forth from both wounds, mingled with the venom of the Lernæan poison.

  44. In his ignorance, the hero receives it, and places upon his shoulders the venom of the Lernæan Echidna.

  45. The venom was commonly extracted from the vegetable reign: but that employed by the Scythians appears to have been drawn from the viper, and a mixture of human blood.

  46. The provinces of Egypt and Asia, which cultivated the language and manners of the Greeks, had deeply imbibed the venom of the Arian controversy.

  47. To set down in writing the circumlocutions, oratorical precautions, protracted conversations, and honeyed words glossed over the venom of intentions, would make as long a book as that magnificent poem called "Clarissa Harlowe.

  48. Didst thou dare to cast thy venom upon such a saint as Mrs Millisent, to traduce her virtue, and say it was adulterate?

  49. He blasts my early honour in the bud, Like some tall tree, the monster of the wood; O'ershading all which under him would grow, He sheds his venom on the plants below.

  50. The shadows of the trees are poisonous too: A secret venom slides from every branch.

  51. Marcellinus spits the venom of a Greek subject--perjuriis illectus, interfectusque est, (in Chron.

  52. I love to look upon a good fight, where there is no venom of hatred in the blows!

  53. The more the superior merit of his wife was known, the more seemed to increase the envy and venom of some of his relatives.

  54. The fame and glory acquired at this juncture by his rival in consequence of the publication of the Novum Organum gave venom to his hate.


  55. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "venom" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    abomination; acrimony; animality; animosity; animus; antibiotic; antiseptic; atrocity; bad; bane; barbarity; bitterness; blight; brutality; corruption; damage; destruction; detriment; disinfectant; evil; extremity; feud; force; fungicide; gall; germicide; grievance; grudge; harm; harshness; havoc; hurt; ill; inclemency; infection; inhumanity; injury; insecticide; intensity; malice; malignancy; mischief; outrage; pesticide; poison; pollution; rancor; rigor; roughness; sarcasm; savagery; severity; sharpness; soreness; sourness; spite; systemic; terrorism; toxicity; toxicology; toxin; vandalism; vehemence; vendetta; venom; vexation; virulence; virus; vitriol; woe; wrong