Fortħ thai sailed on the flode, Having disembarked in Tille thai come to the haven of Rome: the haven of Rome, The wynde hem served, it was ful goode.
Wynde him blewe ful fayre and goode Into the Ryver of Gaȝe, 772 Propitious winds Even over the salte flode drove them into the And ouer the profounde rase.
Ne no man ne wondreþ whan þe blastes of þe wynde chorus betyn þe strondes of þe see by quakynge floodes.
The little turrets with ymages of golde About was set, whiche with the wynde aye moved.
O Birtha fayre, warde everyche commynge wynde, On everych wynde I wylle a token sende; Onn mie longe shielde ycorne thie name thoul't fynde.
And whan the wyndedoth blow the uttermost 685 Our wyndmylles walke a-mayne in every cost.
Then came a water-myller and he cryed out For water and sayde the wynde was so stout The rayne could not fale, wherfore he made request 1090 For plenty of rayne, to set the wynde at rest.
Nothynge more rejoyceth the maryner, Then meane cooles[169] of wynde and plente of water.
For as longe as the wynde rewleth, yt is playne, Twenty to one ye get no drop of rayne; And when the element is to farre opprest, Downe commeth the rayne and setteth the wynde at reste.
For, as we se the wynde in hys estate, We moder[178] our-saylys after the same rate.
If rayne came reasonable, as I requyre yt, We sholde of your wynde mylles have nede no whyt.
And then, syr, there came a wynde myller in, Who sayde for the rayne he could no wynde wyn, The water he wysht to be banysht all, Besechynge your grace of wynde contynuall.
Nay, in the hye wayes he shall take effecte, Where as the rayne doth never good but hurt, For wynde maketh but dust and water maketh durt.
Deputie and the wynde hath blowen hym soo in the erys that he can nott here them.
When the wynde bloweth from the northeast, then the sand riseth and is driuen against a certayne mountayne, which is an arme of the mount Sinai.
Therefore after three days, gyuyng wyndeto our sayles, we entered into the Redde Sea, otherwise named Mare Erythræum.
Then did the Chylde Wynde withdraw from before the anger of the great king, in the presence of whom, in his wrath, the life even of his kindred was as a spider's thread.
Great was the Chylde Wynde among the heroes of Bernicia.
She bent her ear only to listen to the song of affection from the lips of the Chylde Wynde--even to Chylde Wynde of the sharp sword and the unerring bow, who was her own kinsman, the son of her father's brother.
But, after his son Childe Wynde went to seek his fortune, the King, hunting in the forest, came across a lady of such great beauty that he fell in love with her at once and determined to marry her.
Three times three did Childe Wynde attempt to land, and three times three the Laidly Worm kept the good ship from the shore.
Until the world comes to an end Unspelled ye'll never be, Unless Childe Wynde of his own free will Sail give you kisses three!
But Childe Wynde and Princess May Margret loved each other as much as ever, and lived happily ever after.
And this was her spell: "I weird ye to a Laidly Worm, And such sail ye ever be Until Childe Wynde the King's dear son Comes home across the sea.
At last Childe Wyndegave the word to put the ship about, and the Witch Queen, who was watching from the Keep, thought he had given up: but he was not to be bested: for he only rounded the next point to Budley sands.
But Childe Wynde was not to be bested; so he called out the oarsmen.
The Princess does it all herself, with the help of some Bees (cousins of yours by the way), a few of the Byrdes, and the nymphs Wynde and Worta.
Sometimes in the long days that followed, the Princess sent out her two nymphs, Wynde and Worta to help him--but all the really hard work he had to do quite alone.
But touchynge wymen of them I wyll nought say, They can not speke, but ar as coy and styll As the horle wynde or clapper of a mylle.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "wynde" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.