The 6,537 occurrences of bastard
View the definition of "bastard" on The Online Slang Dictionary
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,131 ~ ~ ~
SLIP, counterfeit coin, bastard.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,196 ~ ~ ~
The country continued open forest land for about three miles, the cypress and the bastard box being the prevailing timber; of the former many were useful trees.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,124 ~ ~ ~
In less than a mile, the timber had entirely changed from the bastard box to another kind of eucalyptus, called common blue gum, which grew in great luxuriance in the country before us.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,328 ~ ~ ~
For the first few miles we crossed a low flat country, which afterwards became undulating and covered with dwarf scrub, after this we passed over barren ridges for about three miles, with quartz lying exposed on the surface and timbered by the bastard gum or forest casuarinae.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 491 ~ ~ ~
Having sent Wylie to try and get crabs, I went out with the rifle, but could see nothing to shoot; and upon returning to the camp, I found Wylie had been equally unsuccessful among the rocks, the sea being too rough; there was no alternative, therefore, but to move on, and having got up the horses, we proceeded behind Cape Arid for ten miles, at a course of W. 15 degrees N., and encamped at night amid a clump of tea-trees, and bastard gums, where we got good grass for our horses, but no water.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 706 ~ ~ ~
Around the margins of the lakes we again found timber--the tea-tree and the bastard gum.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 731 ~ ~ ~
The trees growing upon the margin, were the paper-barked tea-tree, and the bastard gum.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 734 ~ ~ ~
Upon crossing this region deep gorges or valleys are met with, through which flow brackish or salt-water streams, and shading these are found the tea-tree and the bastard gum.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 831 ~ ~ ~
Upon the banks of the river were a few casuarinae and more of the tea-tree, and bastard gum, than we had seen before upon any other watercourse.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 832 ~ ~ ~
Upon crossing the river, we found the country getting more wooded, with a stunted-looking tree, apparently of the same species as the stringy bark, with bastard gums, and large banksias, the intervals being filled up with grass-trees and brush, or shrubs, common at King George's Sound.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,393 ~ ~ ~
For the first few miles we crossed a low flat country, which afterwards became undulating and covered with dwarf scrub, after this we passed over barren ridges for about three miles, with quartz lying exposed on the surface and timbered by the bastard gum or forest casuarinae.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,360 ~ ~ ~
Having sent Wylie to try and get crabs, I went out with the rifle, but could see nothing to shoot; and upon returning to the camp, I found Wylie had been equally unsuccessful among the rocks, the sea being too rough; there was no alternative, therefore, but to move on, and having got up the horses, we proceeded behind Cape Arid for ten miles, at a course of W. 15 degrees N., and encamped at night amid a clump of tea-trees, and bastard gums, where we got good grass for our horses, but no water.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,575 ~ ~ ~
Around the margins of the lakes we again found timber--the tea-tree and the bastard gum.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,600 ~ ~ ~
The trees growing upon the margin, were the paper-barked tea-tree, and the bastard gum.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,603 ~ ~ ~
Upon crossing this region deep gorges or valleys are met with, through which flow brackish or salt-water streams, and shading these are found the tea-tree and the bastard gum.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,700 ~ ~ ~
Upon the banks of the river were a few casuarinae and more of the tea-tree, and bastard gum, than we had seen before upon any other watercourse.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,701 ~ ~ ~
Upon crossing the river, we found the country getting more wooded, with a stunted-looking tree, apparently of the same species as the stringy bark, with bastard gums, and large banksias, the intervals being filled up with grass-trees and brush, or shrubs, common at King George's Sound.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 386 ~ ~ ~
the bastard kinchin should have walked the plank ere I troubled myself about him.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 392 ~ ~ ~
When he was but ten years old he persuaded another Satan's limb of an English bastard like himself to steal my lugger's khan--boat--what do you call it?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,796 ~ ~ ~
'He says that it is whispered about among tinkers, gipsies, and other idle persons that there is such a plan as I mentioned to you, and that this young man, who is a bastard or natural son of the late Ellangowan, is pitched upon as the impostor from his strong family likeness.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,487 ~ ~ ~
the bastard kinchin should have walked the plank ere I troubled myself about him.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,493 ~ ~ ~
When he was but ten years old he persuaded another Satan's limb of an English bastard like himself to steal my lugger's khan--boat--what do you call it?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,897 ~ ~ ~
'He says that it is whispered about among tinkers, gipsies, and other idle persons that there is such a plan as I mentioned to you, and that this young man, who is a bastard or natural son of the late Ellangowan, is pitched upon as the impostor from his strong family likeness.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 427 ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~ Sentence 430 ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~ Sentence 450 ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,444 ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,832 ~ ~ ~
To eat a child; to partake of a treat given to the parish officers, in part of commutation for a bastard child the common price was formerly ten pounds and a greasy chiu.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,366 ~ ~ ~
Greasy chin; a treat given to parish officers in part of commutation for a bastard: called also, Eating a child.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,741 ~ ~ ~
To break a leg; a woman who has had a bastard, is said to have broken a leg.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,961 ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,192 ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,336 ~ ~ ~
To stand Moses: a man is said to stand Moses when he has another man's bastard child fathered upon him, and he is obliged by the parish to maintain it.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,510 ~ ~ ~
A natural son or daughter; a love or merry-begotten child, a bastard.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 9,406 ~ ~ ~
A bar-boy; also a bastard or any other child.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 9,407 ~ ~ ~
To stifle the squeaker; to murder a bastard, or throw It into the necessary house.--Organ pipes are likewise called squeakers.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 9,440 ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~ Sentence 10,330 ~ ~ ~
A short voyage or journey, a false step or stumble, an error in the tongue, a bastard.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 10,331 ~ ~ ~
She has made a trip; she has had a bastard.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 10,844 ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~ Sentence 11,021 ~ ~ ~
A wrinkle-bellied whore; one who has had a number of bastards: child-bearing leaves wrinkles in a woman's belly.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,409 ~ ~ ~
He heard them talking to each other, and recognized with joy the bastard Pushto that he had picked up from one of his father's grooms lately dismissed.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,653 ~ ~ ~
Another extends his indifference to good morals even to his future wife, or he sinks to such depths of infamy as to be indifferent to his wife's conduct; but go a step further; speak to him of his mother; is he willing to be treated as the child of an adulteress and the son of a woman of bad character, is he ready to assume the name of a family, to steal the patrimony of the true heir, in a word will he bear being treated as a bastard?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 231 ~ ~ ~
He, who had often felt flattered at being praised for the purity of his Greek--pure not merely for his time: an age of bastard tongues--and for the engaging Hellenism of his person, here and now had an impulse of pride of his Egyptian origin.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,068 ~ ~ ~
He, who had often felt flattered at being praised for the purity of his Greek--pure not merely for his time: an age of bastard tongues--and for the engaging Hellenism of his person, here and now had an impulse of pride of his Egyptian origin.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 54,845 ~ ~ ~
He, who had often felt flattered at being praised for the purity of his Greek--pure not merely for his time: an age of bastard tongues--and for the engaging Hellenism of his person, here and now had an impulse of pride of his Egyptian origin.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,703 ~ ~ ~
That foreign she-bastard has betrayed us!" shouted Gungadhura, slamming the priest's private door behind him and ramming home the bolt as if it fitted into the breach of a rifle.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 362 ~ ~ ~
His brother was a brave fellow, a friend to his friends, of an open hand, and kept a full table: He did not order his affairs so well at first as he might have done; but the first vintage made him up again; for he sold what wine he would; and what kept up his chin was the expectation of a reversion; the credit of which brought him more than was left him; for his brother taking a pelt at him, devised the estate to I know not whose bastard: He flies far that flies his relations.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,485 ~ ~ ~
But when he saw that Agib still grew more and more insolent, and occasioned him a great deal of trouble, Children, said he to his scholars, I find that Agib is a little insolent gentleman; I will show you a way how to mortify him, so that he will never torment you more; nay, I believe it will make him leave the school: When he comes again to-morrow, and if you have a mind to play together, set yourselves round him, and do one of you call out, Come let us play, but upon condition, that he who desires to play shall tell his own name, and the names of his father and mother; and they who refuse it shall be esteemed bastards, and not suffered to play in our company.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 860 ~ ~ ~
The securing the parish for bastard children is become so small a punishment and so easily compounded, that it very much hinders marriage.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,382 ~ ~ ~
We cannot too much or too often repeat our warning against this lax and even mean habit of thought which seeks for its principle amongst empirical motives and laws; for human reason in its weariness is glad to rest on this pillow, and in a dream of sweet illusions (in which, instead of Juno, it embraces a cloud) it substitutes for morality a bastard patched up from limbs of various derivation, which looks like anything one chooses to see in it; only not like virtue to one who has once beheld her in her true form.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,946 ~ ~ ~
Farewell to all types of power without an aim; to all personifications of the solitary individuality which seeks an aim to find it not, and knows not how to apply the life stirring within it; to all egotistic joys and griefs: "Bastards of the soul; O'erweening slips of idleness: weeds--no more- Self-springing here and there from the rank soil; O'erflowings of the lust of that same mind Whose proper issue and determinate end, When wedded to the love of things divine, Is peace, complacency, and happiness."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 376 ~ ~ ~
To lead a decent life, one must be a bastard.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,536 ~ ~ ~
When he comes again to-morrow, place yourselves round him, and let one of you call out, "Come, let us play, but upon condition, that every one who desires to play shall tell his own name, and the names of his father and mother; they who refuse shall be esteemed bastards, and not be suffered to play in our company."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,544 ~ ~ ~
The sultan now returned to the adventurer, and commanded him to pull off his clothes, which he did; when the sultan, disrobing himself, habited him in the royal vestments, after which he said, "Inform me whence thou judgest that I was a bastard?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,545 ~ ~ ~
The sultan now returned to the adventurer, and commanded him to pull off his clothes, which he did; when the sultan, disrobing himself, habited him in the royal vestments, after which he said, "Inform me whence thou judgest that I was a bastard?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,552 ~ ~ ~
When he comes again to-morrow, place yourselves round him, and let one of you call out, 'Come, let us play, but upon condition, that every one who desires to play shall tell his own name, and the names of his father and mother; they who refuse shall be esteemed bastards, and not be suffered to play in our company.'"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 15,383 ~ ~ ~
The sultan now returned to the adventurer, and commanded him to pull off his clothes, which he did; when the sultan, disrobing himself, habited him in the royal vestments, after which he said, "Inform me whence thou judgest that I was a bastard?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,234 ~ ~ ~
Thus thou art nought without Pride; and little would Pride profit without Wantonness, for bastards are the most numerous and the most fierce of all the subjects of my daughter Pride.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 374 ~ ~ ~
We cannot too much or too often repeat our warning against this lax and even mean habit of thought which seeks for its principle amongst empirical motives and laws; for human reason in its weariness is glad to rest on this pillow, and in a dream of sweet illusions (in which, instead of Juno, it embraces a cloud) it substitutes for morality a bastard patched up from limbs of various derivation, which looks like anything one chooses to see in it, only not like virtue to one who has once beheld her in her true form.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 451 ~ ~ ~
Surrounded by shouting thousands, by military pomp, by the splendors of his capital city, and companioned by kings and princes-this is the man who was sneered at and reviled and called Bastard-yet who was dreaming of a crown and an empire all the while; who was driven into exile-but carried his dreams with him; who associated with the common herd in America and ran foot races for a wager-but still sat upon a throne in fancy; who braved every danger to go to his dying mother-and grieved that she could not be spared to see him cast aside his plebeian vestments for the purple of royalty; who kept his faithful watch and walked his weary beat a common policeman of London-but dreamed the while of a coming night when he should tread the long-drawn corridors of the Tuileries; who made the miserable fiasco of Strasbourg; saw his poor, shabby eagle, forgetful of its lesson, refuse to perch upon his shoulder; delivered his carefully prepared, sententious burst of eloquence upon unsympathetic ears; found himself a prisoner, the butt of small wits, a mark for the pitiless ridicule of all the world-yet went on dreaming of coronations and splendid pageants as before; who lay a forgotten captive in the dungeons of Ham-and still schemed and planned and pondered over future glory and future power; President of France at last!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,228 ~ ~ ~
That yellow bastard killed his daughter last night!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 496 ~ ~ ~
"I can make princes and you can make nothing but bastards," is an answer sparkling with truth.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 161 ~ ~ ~
There come one of them counter-attacks, a regular bastard for Jerry.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,437 ~ ~ ~
Because he was a bastard sovereign--and dared not reappear before his electors once he was beaten.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,464 ~ ~ ~
"Ay, and so we ever shall, so long as Britain makes men generals because they are king's bastards."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,253 ~ ~ ~
Then, as Florent still kept silence, Claude continued: "Besides, that church is a piece of bastard architecture, made up of the dying gasp of the middle ages, and the first stammering of the Renaissance.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 963 ~ ~ ~
He spoke in bastard Portuguese, which I could understand, and I heard him talk of Umslopogaas to whom he pointed, as "that nigger," after the fashion of such cross-bred people who choose to consider themselves white men.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,962 ~ ~ ~
Behind this breastwork we gathered and waited, Robertson and I being careful to get a little to the rear of the Zulus, who it will be remembered had the rifles which the Strathmuir bastards had left behind them when they bolted, in addition to their axes and throwing assegais.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 29 ~ ~ ~
The thieves were the priests of a certain bastard Arab tribe who, on account of a birthmark shaped like the young moon which was visible above her breast, believed her to be the priestess or oracle of their worship.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,505 ~ ~ ~
Bastard, I know you not.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 498 ~ ~ ~
for I too have been hungered--not like you, bastard scum, but as any honest man may be, by the turn of Fate and the will of God.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 516 ~ ~ ~
But he, this bastard son of naught, must steal!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,376 ~ ~ ~
And she's a bastard."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,383 ~ ~ ~
"And that if his son was to be allowed to have it all--" "A bastard, you know, keeping it away from the proper heir."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 10,453 ~ ~ ~
But he would not now be enticed by pity into a bastard feeling, which would die away when the tenderness of the moment was no longer present to his eye and touch.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 99 ~ ~ ~
"Wounded no," said Don Quixote, "but bruised and battered no doubt, for that bastard Don Roland has cudgelled me with the trunk of an oak tree, and all for envy, because he sees that I alone rival him in his achievements.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 227 ~ ~ ~
"That is impossible," said Don Quixote: "I say it is impossible that there could be a knight-errant without a lady, because to such it is as natural and proper to be in love as to the heavens to have stars: most certainly no history has been seen in which there is to be found a knight-errant without an amour, and for the simple reason that without one he would be held no legitimate knight but a bastard, and one who had gained entrance into the stronghold of the said knighthood, not by the door, but over the wall like a thief and a robber."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 48 ~ ~ ~
Zoraida's father as the better linguist helped to interpret most of these words and phrases, for though she spoke the bastard language, that, as I have said, is employed there, she expressed her meaning more by signs than by words.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 49 ~ ~ ~
Zoraida's father as the better linguist helped to interpret most of these words and phrases, for though she spoke the bastard language, that, as I have said, is employed there, she expressed her meaning more by signs than by words.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 101 ~ ~ ~
"Wounded no," said Don Quixote, "but bruised and battered no doubt, for that bastard Don Roland has cudgelled me with the trunk of an oak tree, and all for envy, because he sees that I alone rival him in his achievements.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 228 ~ ~ ~
"That is impossible," said Don Quixote: "I say it is impossible that there could be a knight-errant without a lady, because to such it is as natural and proper to be in love as to the heavens to have stars: most certainly no history has been seen in which there is to be found a knight-errant without an amour, and for the simple reason that without one he would be held no legitimate knight but a bastard, and one who had gained entrance into the stronghold of the said knighthood, not by the door, but over the wall like a thief and a robber."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,048 ~ ~ ~
Will Shakespeare, who lives after death, and who is presently to afford thee such pleasure as none but himself can confer, has described the gallant Falconbridge as calling that man ----' a bastard to the time, That doth not smack of observation; Which, though I will not practise to deceive, Yet, to avoid deceit, I mean to learn."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,528 ~ ~ ~
That is the signal when their privileges are invaded by tipstaff or bailiff; and at the blast of the horn they all swarm out to the rescue, as bees when their hive is disturbed.--Jump, Jim," he said, calling out to the attendant, "and see what they are doing in Alsatia.--That bastard of a boy," he continued, as the lad, accustomed to the precipitate haste of his master, tumbled rather than ran out of the apartment, and so down stairs, "is worth gold in this quarter--he serves six masters--four of them in distinct Numbers, and you would think him present like a fairy at the mere wish of him that for the time most needs his attendance.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,542 ~ ~ ~
Indeed, when old Duke Hildebrod saw that the quest was after some one of whom he knew nothing, he permitted, out of courtesy, the man-catcher to search through his dominions, quite certain that they would take little by their motions; for Duke Hildebrod is a most judicious potentate.--Go back, you bastard, and bring us word when all is quiet."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,487 ~ ~ ~
When the cups and cans were duly arranged upon the table, and when Deborah, whom the ducal generosity honoured with a penny farthing in the way of gratuity, had withdrawn with her satellites, the worthy potentate, having first slightly invited Lord Glenvarloch to partake of the liquor which he was to pay for, and after having observed, that, excepting three poached eggs, a pint of bastard, and a cup of clary, he was fasting from every thing but sin, set himself seriously to reinforce the radical moisture.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 652 ~ ~ ~
Thyrsis had come to hate Christianity for many things by that time, but most of all he hated it because it taught the bastard virtue of Obedience.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,747 ~ ~ ~
This amateur eugenist was accustomed to maintain that the great men in history had for the most part been bastards; and Thyrsis, knowing this fact about him, would read editorials in his papers, in which Henry Darrell was denounced as an enemy of the home!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,435 ~ ~ ~
It may be only a whim--I can prove nothing any more than you--but I have a--whim then--to be loved as an immortal woman, the child of a living God, and not as a helpless bastard of Nature!--I beg your pardon--I forget my manners."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,497 ~ ~ ~
It may be only a whim--I can prove nothing any more than you--but I have a--whim then--to be loved as an immortal woman, the child of a living God, and not as a helpless bastard of Nature!--I beg your pardon--I forget my manners."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 165 ~ ~ ~
Consequently children born of such a connexion are not in their father's power, but as regards the latter are in the position of children born of promiscuous intercourse, who, their paternity being uncertain, are deemed to have no father at all, and who are called bastards, either from the Greek word denoting illicit intercourse, or because they are fatherless.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,722 ~ ~ ~
The chorus always sang in the "soft bastard Latin," whether the principals sang in Italian or French; and the occasions were not a few when two languages were sung also by the principals--when lovers wooed in French, and received their replies in Italian, thus recalling things over which Addison made merry generations ago.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,705 ~ ~ ~
the bastard kinchin should have walked the plank ere I troubled myself about him.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,711 ~ ~ ~
When he was but ten years old he persuaded another Satan's limb of an English bastard like himself to steal my lugger's khan--boat--what do you call it?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,114 ~ ~ ~
'He says that it is whispered about among tinkers, gipsies, and other idle persons that there is such a plan as I mentioned to you, and that this young man, who is a bastard or natural son of the late Ellangowan, is pitched upon as the impostor from his strong family likeness.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,580 ~ ~ ~
There are those who will tell you it is not spruce, but a bastard fir; while others will tell you it is not fir, but a bastard spruce.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,888 ~ ~ ~
'But that which was reported with the boldest confidence, was, that I had my misses, my whores, my bastards, yea, two wives at once, and the like.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,001 ~ ~ ~
Here is also Rahab the harlot, and Bathsheba, that bare a bastard to David.
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