The 6,537 occurrences of bastard

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~   ~   ~   Sentence 458   ~   ~   ~

And, waiving for a while my theory as to the _great race_, I would put it to the most untheorising reader, who may at times have disposable coin in his pocket, whether it is not more repugnant to the kindliness of his nature to refuse such a one as I am describing, than to say _no_ to a poor petitionary rogue (your bastard borrower), who, by his mumping visnomy, tells you, that he expects nothing better; and, therefore, whose preconceived notions and expectations you do in reality so much less shock in the refusal.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,068   ~   ~   ~

Should stand before thee with a tyrant's rod, O'er creatures like himself, with soul from thee, Yet dare to boast of perfect liberty: Away, away, I'd rather hold my neck By doubtful tenure from a Sultan's beck, In climes where liberty has scarce been named, Nor any right, but that of ruling, claimed, Than thus to live, where bastard freedom waves Her fustian flag in mockery o'er slaves; Where (motley laws admitting no degree Betwixt the vilely slaved, and madly free) Alike the bondage and the licence suit, The brute made ruler, and the man made brute!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 414   ~   ~   ~

Morny and Walewsky held in the quasi-reigning family the positions, one of Royal bastard, the other of Imperial bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,810   ~   ~   ~

Not too freely neither: I fare hard and drinke water; so doe the _Indians_, yet who fuller of Bastards?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,467   ~   ~   ~

A Bastard have I by her; and that Cocke Will have (I feare) sharpe spurres, if he crow after Him that trod for him.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,603   ~   ~   ~

Before the morrow Sunne hath rode Halfe his dayes journey; will send home his Queene As one that staines his bed and can produce Nothing but bastard Issue to his Crowne.-- Why, how now?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,021   ~   ~   ~

it's a lye: the Burre that stickes in your throat is a throane: let him out of his messe of Kingdomes cut out but one, and lay Sicilia, Arragon, Naples or any else upon your trencher, and you'll prayse Bastard[196] for the sweetest wine in the world and call for another quart of it.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,070   ~   ~   ~

And that _Medina's_ Neece, _Onaelia_, Is his true wife: her bastard sonne, they said, (The King being dead) should claim and weare the Crowne; And whatsoever children you shall beare To be but bastards in the highest degree, As being begotten in Adultery.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,087   ~   ~   ~

'Tis a plummet to sound Spanish hearts How deeply they are yours: besides a ghesse Is hereby made of any faction That shall combine against you; which the King seeing, If then he will not rouze him like a Dragon To guard his golden fleece and rid his Harlot And her base bastard hence, either by death Or in some traps of state insnare them both,-- Let his owne ruines crush him.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,822   ~   ~   ~

This Linstocke[211] gives you fire: shall then that strumpet And bastard breathe quicke vengeance in my face, Making my kingdome reele, my subjects stagger In their obedience, and yet live?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 7,848   ~   ~   ~

[196] It is hardly necessary to remind the reader that 'bastard' was the name of a sweet Spanish wine.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,019   ~   ~   ~

Susanna Pepper, convicted at the Lammas Assizes, 1817, of secreting the birth of her bastard child.--Ordered to be imprisoned for one year.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,138   ~   ~   ~

"Be killed, and there will be one useless bastard less to clutter up the curia!"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 763   ~   ~   ~

"So I have heard, and I am sorry I did not, before I came up, take out my own eyes and put in the eagle's; thus imperfect, to be sure, I am not royally furnished, but a kind of bastard bird."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,640   ~   ~   ~

There was no danger that the public would accept Doc's version of the nature or value of his securities, but there was always the chance that some of his worthless bonds--those bastard offsprings of his cracked old brain--would find their way into less honest but saner hands.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,228   ~   ~   ~

Scattered representatives of other species are found--the maple, cherry, dogwood, two varieties of sumac, the yerba del pasmo (or bastard cedar), madroƱos, walnut, mesquite, mountain mahogany, cottonwood, willow, ash, many varieties of bushes, also the yucca, mescal, cactus, etc.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,123   ~   ~   ~

The apprehension of exciting powerful enmities, if he elevated the "Bastard" and his wrongs to so conspicuous a place, had, no doubt, an influence with the shrewd statesman.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 398   ~   ~   ~

All sorts of intrepid men gathered under his leadership, fugitive slaves, peasant rebels, and penniless bastards; he then organized an army which increased so much that he became famous and was in great demand.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 689   ~   ~   ~

These and many other Epigrammatists, the Latin tongue hath; Q. CATULLUS, PORCIUS LICINIUS, QUINTUS CORNIFICIUS, MARTIAL, CNOEUS GETULICUS, and witty Sir THOMAS MORE: so in English we have these, HEYWOOD, DRANT, KENDAL, BASTARD, DAVIES.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 167   ~   ~   ~

But at last came one who knew her word, And she perished in pain and shame,-- This bastard Sphinx leads the same base life And his end will be the same.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 817   ~   ~   ~

Oh, she was barren ever; she beguiled Thy folly with some bastard of a thrall.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 95   ~   ~   ~

How many delightful hamlets, pleasant villages, and even tranquil county towns, are losing their primitive characters for simplicity and contentment, by the passage of these fiery trains, that drag after them a sort of bastard elegance, a pretension that is destructive of peace of mind, and an uneasy desire in all who dwell by the way-side, to pry into the mysteries of the whole length and breadth of the region it traverses!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,696   ~   ~   ~

Who blurs fair paper with foul bastard rhymes, Shall live full many an age in latter times: Who makes a ballad for an alehouse door, Shall live in future times for evermore: Then ( )[41] thy muse shall live so long, As drafty ballads to thy praise are sung.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,281   ~   ~   ~

He hath your greyhound, your mongrel, your mastiff, your levrier, your spaniel, your kennets, terriers, butchers' dogs, bloodhounds, dunghill-dogs, trundle-tails, prick-eared curs, small ladies' puppies, raches,[88] and bastards.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,283   ~   ~   ~

What a bawdy knave hath he to his father, that keeps his Rachel, hath his bastards, and lets his sons be plain ladies' puppies to bewray a lady's chamber.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,805   ~   ~   ~

I am the bastard of great Mercury, Got on Thalia when she was asleep: My gaudy grandsire, great Apollo hight,[113] Born was, I hear, but that my luck was ill, To all the land upon the forked hill.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 9,710   ~   ~   ~

I have done so much that, if I wed not her, My marriage makes me an adulterer: In which black sheets I wallow all my life, My babes being bastards, and a whore my wife.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 10,168   ~   ~   ~

But hark, what thou hast got by it: Thy wife is but a strumpet, thy children bastards, Thyself a murderer, thy wife accessory, Thy bed a stews, thy house a brothel.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 11,751   ~   ~   ~

strumpet, I say thou liest, For wife of mine thou art not, and these thy bastards Whom I begot of thee with this unrest, That bastards born are born not to be blest.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 11,759   ~   ~   ~

Bastards!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 11,766   ~   ~   ~

And they that made the match, bawds to thy lust: Ay, now you hang the head; shouldst have done so before, Then these had not been bastards, thou a whore.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 11,837   ~   ~   ~

I'll mark thee for a strumpet, and thy bastards-- BUT.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 11,857   ~   ~   ~

Yes, goodman slave, you shall be master, Lie with my wife, and get more bastards; do, do, do.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 8,891   ~   ~   ~

If ye be not under correction (where of all are part takers) then are ye bastards and not sons.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,605   ~   ~   ~

Amidst their complaints, the indignity of submitting to a bastard [t] was not forgotten; the certain prospect of success in a revolt, by the assistance of the Danes and the discontented English, was insisted on; and the whole company, inflamed with the same sentiments, and warmed by the jollity of the entertainment, entered, by a solemn engagement, into the design of shaking off the royal authority.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,607   ~   ~   ~

[FN [t] William was so little ashamed of his birth, that be assumed the appellation of bastard in some of his letters and charters.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 9,031   ~   ~   ~

The great Earl Warrenne, in a subsequent reign, when he was questioned concerning his right to the lands which he possessed, drew his sword, which he produced as his title; adding, that William the Bastard did not conquer the kingdom himself; but that the barons, and his ancestor among the rest, were joint adventurers in the enterprise [q].

~   ~   ~   Sentence 10,819   ~   ~   ~

The common law had deemed all those to be bastards who were born before wedlock; by the canon law they were legitimate: and when any dispute of inheritance arose, it had formerly been usual for the civil courts to issue writs to the spiritual, directing them to inquire into the legitimacy of the person.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 351   ~   ~   ~

In the year 1066 this state of Flanders, even then flourishing and powerful, furnished assistance, both in men and ships, to William the Bastard of Normandy, for the conquest of England.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 777   ~   ~   ~

Charles procured the nomination of bishop of Utrecht for Philip, bastard of Burgundy, which made that province completely dependent on him.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 935   ~   ~   ~

You'll see, when night has covered all things o'er, _150 Jove's starry bastard and triumphant whore Usurp the heavens; you 'll see them proudly roll In their new orbs, and brighten all the pole.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,102   ~   ~   ~

The late king of Georgia left two sons, Melich and David, of whom the former was lawful, and the other born in adultery; but he left part of his dominions to his bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,861   ~   ~   ~

That drop of blood, that calmes[7] [Sidenote: thats calme] Proclaimes me Bastard: Cries Cuckold to my Father, brands the Harlot Euen heere betweene the chaste vnsmirched brow Of my true Mother.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,187   ~   ~   ~

_Five P.M._--M. de Bastard, Gros' secretary, has just returned from Tung-chow.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,201   ~   ~   ~

Several of our people, Colonel Walker, with his escort, my private Secretary, Mr. Loch, Baron Gros' Secretary of Embassy, Comte de Bastard, and others, passed through the Tartar army during the course of the morning on their way from Tung-chow without encountering any rudeness or ill-treatment whatsoever.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,094   ~   ~   ~

At that dear name I feel my heart rebound, Like the old steed, at the fierce trumpet's sound; I grow impatient of the least delay, No bastard swain shall bear the prize away.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 24,313   ~   ~   ~

pl._ escheats, goods of strangers dead without English-born issue, and of bastards dead intestate, PP; +streyues+, P.--Cp.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,544   ~   ~   ~

Mr. Bastard was anxious that the House should proceed to the discussion of the subject in the present session.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,246   ~   ~   ~

Mr. Pitt, Lord Bayham, Mr. Duncombe, Mr. Fox, Lord Arden, Mr. Martin, Mr. Burke, Lord Carysfort, Mr. Milnes, Mr. Grey, Lord Muncaster, Mr. Steele, Mr. Windham, Lord Barnard, Mr. Coke, Mr. Sheridan, Lord North, Mr. Eliott, Mr. Whitbread, Lord Euston, Mr. Montagu, Mr. Courtenay, General Burgoyne, Mr. Bastard, Mr. Francis, Hon.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,229   ~   ~   ~

I'de not have Her belly a drum, such as they weave points on, Unles they be taggd with vertue; nor would I have Her white round breasts 2 sucking bottles to nurse Any Bastards at them.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,343   ~   ~   ~

The port, ah, the port of Manila, a bastard that since its conception had brought tears of humiliation and shame to all!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 9,031   ~   ~   ~

untrue &c. 546 ; mock, sham, make-believe, counterfeit, snide [Slang] , pseudo, spurious, supposititious, so-called, pretended, feigned, trumped up, bogus, scamped, fraudulent, tricky, factitious bastard; surreptitious, illegitimate, contraband, adulterated, sophisticated; unsound, rotten at the core; colorable; disguised; meretricious, tinsel, pinchbeck, plated; catchpenny; Brummagem.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 16,792   ~   ~   ~

illegitimate, bastard, spurious, supposititious, false; usurped.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 8,084   ~   ~   ~

untrue &c 546; mock, sham, make-believe, counterfeit, snide [Slang] , pseudo, spurious, supposititious, so-called, pretended, feigned, trumped up, bogus, scamped, fraudulent, tricky, factitious bastard; surreptitious, illegitimate, contraband, adulterated, sophisticated; unsound, rotten at the core; colorable; disguised; meretricious, tinsel, pinchbeck, plated; catchpenny; Brummagem.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 14,985   ~   ~   ~

illegitimate, bastard, spurious, supposititious, false; usurped.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,098   ~   ~   ~

bastard: - undueness 925 Adj.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,978   ~   ~   ~

factitious bastard: - deception 545 Adj.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,163   ~   ~   ~

His actions are guilty of more crimes than any other men's, thoughts; and he conceives no sin which he dare not act save only lust, from which he abstains for fear he should be charged with keeping bastards.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,460   ~   ~   ~

He is drawn into naughtiness with company, but suffers alone, and the bastard commonly laid to his charge.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,729   ~   ~   ~

He is a great diver in the streams or issues of gentry, and hot a by-channel or bastard escapes him; yea he does with them like some shameless quean, fathers more children on them than ever they begot.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,782   ~   ~   ~

He tastes styles as some discreeter palates do wine; and tells you which is genuine, which sophisticate and bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,834   ~   ~   ~

An unclean jest shall shame him more than a bastard another man, and he that got it shall censure him among the rest.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,486   ~   ~   ~

He has no quarrel to it but because he was born in it, and, like a bastard, he is ashamed of his mother, because she is of him.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,851   ~   ~   ~

They are all bastards commonly and unlawfully begotten, but being his own, he had rather, out of natural affection, take any pains, or beg, than they should want a subsistence.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,218   ~   ~   ~

For these virtues he never fails of his summons to all balls, where he manages the country-dances with singular judgment, and is frequently an assistant at _l'ombre_; and these are all the uses they make of his parts, beside the sport they give themselves in laughing at him, which he takes for singular favours and interprets to his own advantage, though it never goes further; for, all his employments being public, he is never admitted to any private services, and they despise him as not woman's meat; for he applies to too many to be trusted by any one, as bastards by having many fathers have none at all.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,346   ~   ~   ~

Impudence is the bastard of ignorance, not only unlawfully but incestuously begotten by a man upon his own understanding, and laid by himself at his own door, a monster of unnatural production; for shame is as much the propriety of human nature, though overseen by the philosophers, and perhaps more than reason, laughing, or looking asquint, by which they distinguish man from beasts; and the less men have of it the nearer they approach to the nature of brutes.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,363   ~   ~   ~

His fancy is like the innocent lady's, who, by looking on the picture of a Moor that hung in her chamber, conceived a child of the same complexion; for all his conceptions are produced by the pictures of other men's imaginations, and by their features betray whose bastards they are.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,401   ~   ~   ~

He exposes his wit like a bastard, for the next comer to take up and put out to nurse, which it seldom fails of, so ready is every man to contribute to the infamy of another.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,414   ~   ~   ~

He fathers all his own passions and concerns, like bastards, on the people, because, being entrusted by them without articles or conditions, they are bound to acknowledge whatsoever he does as their own act and deed.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 9,937   ~   ~   ~

A slow fever still remained, which was pronounced a bastard tertian.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 430   ~   ~   ~

Yea for the very founder[1] of this country once on a time struck with his staff of tough wild-olive-wood Alkmene's bastard brother Likymnios in Tiryns as he came forth from Midea's chamber, and slew him in the kindling of his wrath.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 514   ~   ~   ~

But the wife bare within her the seed of the Mightiest, and the hero saw the bastard born and rejoiced, and called him by the name of his mother's father, and he became a man preeminent in beauty and great deeds: and his father gave unto him a city and a people to rule over.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 270   ~   ~   ~

As his father and mother were not married, Allan was of course a bastard or natural son, and had no inheritance to look for, save that which he might win for himself.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 919   ~   ~   ~

Rougon, however, suffered because of this bastard, and she had planned to get him away from the gossiping tongues of Plassans, by persuading Maxime to take him and keep him with him in Paris.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,136   ~   ~   ~

Before his eyes appeared the whole line, the legitimate branch and the bastard branch, which had sprung from this trunk already vitiated by neurosis.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,226   ~   ~   ~

Suche is myne, A Mule, that is the bastard breede betwyxte An asse & mare, & onlye fytt for labor.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,432   ~   ~   ~

Compared with this, all other purposes in literature, except the purely lyrical or the purely philosophic, are bastard in nature, facile of execution, and feeble in result.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,498   ~   ~   ~

CHAPTER XXIII The Pitti Luca Pitti's pride--Preliminary caution--A terrace view--A collection but not a gallery--The personally-conducted--Giorgione the superb--Sustermans--The "Madonna del Granduca"--The "Madonna della Sedia"--From Cimabue to Raphael--Andrea del Sarto--Two Popes and a bastard--The ill-fated Ippolito--The National Gallery--Royal apartments--"Pallas Subduing the Centaur"--The Boboli Gardens.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,631   ~   ~   ~

Himself a bastard, Giulio became the father of the base-born Alessandro of Urbino, first Duke of Florence, who, after procuring the death of Ippolito and living a life of horrible excess, was himself murdered by his cousin Lorenzino in order to rid Florence of her worst tyrant.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,776   ~   ~   ~

&c. [2059]Michael the emperor, and Isacius, were so much given to their studies, that no base fellow would take so much pains: Orion, Perseus, Alphonsus, Ptolomeus, famous astronomers; Sabor, Mithridates, Lysimachus, admired physicians: Plato's kings all: Evax, that Arabian prince, a most expert jeweller, and an exquisite philosopher; the kings of Egypt were priests of old, chosen and from thence,--_Idem rex hominum, Phoebique sacerdos_: but those heroical times are past; the Muses are now banished in this bastard age, _ad sordida tuguriola_, to meaner persons, and confined alone almost to universities.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 8,780   ~   ~   ~

Hercules, Romulus, Alexander (by Olympia's confession), Themistocles, Jugurtha, King Arthur, William the Conqueror, Homer, Demosthenes, P. Lumbard, P. Comestor, Bartholus, Adrian the fourth Pope, &c., bastards; and almost in every kingdom, the most ancient families have been at first princes' bastards: their worthiest captains, best wits, greatest scholars, bravest spirits in all our annals, have been base.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 10,482   ~   ~   ~

Some would have them still used a few days between, and those to be made with the boiled seeds of anise, fennel, and bastard saffron, hops, thyme, epithyme, mallows, fumitory, bugloss, polypody, senna, diasene, hamech, cassia, diacatholicon, hierologodium, oil of violets, sweet almonds, &c. For without question, a clyster opportunely used, cannot choose in this, as most other maladies, but to do very much good; _Clysteres nutriunt_, sometimes clysters nourish, as they may be prepared, as I was informed not long since by a learned lecture of our natural philosophy [4278]reader, which he handled by way of discourse, out of some other noted physicians.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 11,945   ~   ~   ~

Who would ever have thought that Adrian' the Fourth, an English monk's bastard (as [4827]Papirius Massovius writes in his life), _inops a suis relectus, squalidus et miser_, a poor forsaken child, should ever come to be pope of Rome?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 14,489   ~   ~   ~

For these causes I will dilate, and treat of it by itself, as a bastard-branch or kind of love-melancholy, which, as heroical love goeth commonly before marriage, doth usually follow, torture, and crucify in like sort, deserves therefore to be rectified alike, requires as much care and industry, in setting out the several causes of it, prognostics and cures.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 14,713   ~   ~   ~

[6087]Philippus Bonus left fourteen bastards.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 14,764   ~   ~   ~

_Symptoms of Jealousy, Fear, Sorrow, Suspicion, strange Actions, Gestures, Outrages, Locking up, Oaths, Trials, Laws, &c._ Of all passions, as I have already proved, love is most violent, and of those bitter potions which this love-melancholy affords, this bastard jealousy is the greatest, as appears by those prodigious symptoms which it hath, and that it produceth.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 14,994   ~   ~   ~

Yea but thou repliest, 'tis not the like reason betwixt man and woman, through her fault my children are bastards, I may not endure it; [6187]_Sit amarulenta, sit imperiosa prodiga_, &c. Let her scold, brawl, and spend, I care not, _modo sit casta_, so she be honest, I could easily bear it; but this I cannot, I may not, I will not; "my faith, my fame, mine eye must not be touched," as the diverb is, _Non patitur tactum fama, fides, oculus._ I say the same of my wife, touch all, use all, take all but this.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 15,366   ~   ~   ~

The part affected of superstition, is the brain, heart, will, understanding, soul itself, and all the faculties of it, _totum compositum_, all is mad and dotes: now for the extent, as I say, the world itself is the subject of it, (to omit that grand sin of atheism,) all times have been misaffected, past, present, "there is not one that doth good, no not one, from the prophet to the priest," &c. A lamentable thing it is to consider, how many myriads of men this idolatry and superstition (for that comprehends all) hath infatuated in all ages, besotted by this blind zeal, which is religion's ape, religion's bastard, religion's shadow, false glass.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 15,441   ~   ~   ~

[6383]St. George fought in person for John the Bastard of Portugal, against the Castilians; St. James for the Spaniards in America.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 418   ~   ~   ~

After the death of Alexander, Ptolemy became king of Egypt, who by some was reputed to have been the bastard son of Philip, the father of Alexander: He, imitating the before named kings, Sesostris and Darius, caused dig a canal from the branch of the Nile which passed by Pelusium, now by the city of Damieta[34].

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,300   ~   ~   ~

Cannon-royal 8-1/2 8000 66 30 1930 Cannon 8 6000 60 27 2000 Cannon-serpentine 7 5500 53-1/2 25 2000 Bastard cannon 7 4500 41 20 1800 Demi-cannon 6-3/4 4000 30-1/2 18 1700 Cannon-petro 6 3000 24-1/2 14 1600 Culverin 5-1/2 4500 17-1/2 12 2500 Basilisk 5 400* 15 10 3000 Demi-culverin 4 3400 9-1/2 8 2500 Bastard culverin 4 3000 5 5-3/4 1700 Sacar 3-1/2 1400 5-1/2 5-1/2 1700 Minion 3-1/2 1000 4 4 1500 Faulcon 2-1/2 660 2 3-1/2 1500 Falconet 2 500 1-1/2 3 1500 Serpentine 1-1/2 400 3/4 1-1/2 1400 Rabanet 1 300 1/2 1/3 1000 [6] Two weights of that name are described as used in India for the sale of pepper and other commodities, the small and the large bahar; the former consisting of three, and the latter of four and a half peculs.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 202   ~   ~   ~

It was to our fathers like the shadow of a great rock in a weary land--it has enabled them to transmit to us a fair and glorious inheritance--if we suffer revolutionists to rob us of this birth right "then we are bastards and not sons."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,693   ~   ~   ~

Another obstacle had been the fear of the danger to which the Presbyterian Church might be "exposed, when brought thus within the power of a Legislature so frequently influenced by one which held her, not as a sister, but rather a bastard usurper to a sister's inheritance."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,212   ~   ~   ~

There are two sorts, the lesser and the greater, the former also called the bastard florican.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 9,308   ~   ~   ~

The little bastard is gone.

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