Willan at once declared it also as his opinion, that Berns’ case was a genuine instance of the tuberculous leprosy or Elephantiasis Græcorum; a disease of which, as he informed Dr.
Se Haelend haefde thone g['o]dan willan to dham fostre, and tha mihte to dhaere fremminge.
Agenes willan and agenre gymeleaste he bidh gebunden, ac thurh Godes mildheortnysse he bidh unbunden, gif he dha alysednysse eft aet Gode geearnadh.
He cwaedh eft, "Geweordhe heofen," and thaerrihte waes heofen geworht, swa swa he mid his wisdome and mid his willan hit gedihte.
Tha englas dheniadh Gode the bodiadh his willan middangearde, and dha dhing gefylladh the him liciadh.
The future is sometimes expressed by willan + inf.
Both Rosenstein and Willandeclared that they had never witnessed an instance of the true recurrence of measles.
This was an old observation--by Sydenham for the scarlatina simplex of that age, by Willan in the end of the 18th century (one or two spring epidemics being remarked upon as exceptional).
Pronounced by Sims to have been wholly scarlatina, and by Willan to have been in part that disease.
Huxham, he says, saw such cases, Willan never; and that was one of the reasons why Willan claimed the Foundling cases as scarlatina.
Writing in 1800, Willansaid that intermittents had not, to his knowledge, been epidemic in London at any time within twenty years.
The next general view that Willan gives us of the relative importance of measles among the infectious diseases is under Oct.
Soon afterwardsWillan was ploughing in his field when the implement suddenly bounded up, and the handle struck one of his eyes, causing blindness.
The owner decided to have the grimalkin respectably buried in her garden, and a man named Willan dug a grave for it.
Old Mary handed Willanan open book, and pointed to something he was to read.
Willan has quoted with approbation two cases from Amatus Lusitanus, which he seems to think correctly described as Phthiriasis.
Willan to himself, "she doth not know the speech of lovers.
But he is of no consequence in this account of the career of Mademoiselle, only this,--that if it had not been for him she had not probably been away from the Golden Pear on the occasion of Willan Blaycke's second visit.
She had made this excuse to go to the storeroom again, having observed that Willan had left the house.
Willan paced back and forth beneath it, where he had lain sleeping before supper.
So long as he knew that Jeanne was living in her fine house as Mistress Blaycke he had been content, in spite of Willan Blaycke's having sternly forbidden him ever to show his face there.
It would be no hard thing to love such a man as he, methinks," she said to herself as she went on leisurely weaving the thick braids of her hair, and humming a song just low enough for Willan to half hear and half lose the words.
I would have Willan Blaycke perceive that one may live as well outside of his house as in it.
Willan Blaycke made some indifferent reply, as if all that were nothing to him, and galloped off.
It turned Jeanne's thoughts at once away from Willan Blaycke, but it did not save Mademoiselle Victorine from a catechising quite as sharp as she was in danger of on the other subject.
But all that Willan thought was that Victor and his daughter were far quieter and modester people than he had supposed, and seemed disposed to keep themselves to themselves in a most proper fashion.
It was undoubtedly a consolation to him in his last days to think that his son Willan would succeed to everything, and the Dubois blood remain still in its own muddy channel.
Willan picked up a handful of them and tossed them idly in the air.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "willan" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.