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Example sentences for "cole"

  • I would like these negatives which Mr. Cole examined and which were found in one of the residences of Lee Harvey Oswald to be received as 800.

  • Mr. Chairman, may we state on the record that the Commission is requesting Mr. Cole to do this, if we can obtain a better standard, and that we will attempt to obtain such a standard?

  • I will make arrangements for Mr. Cole to see that writing, Mr. Chairman.

  • A facetious soul, Cole the clogger was, and apparently a well-beloved by his neighbours.

  • Cole would mark spectacles of soot about his eyes, making the resemblance startling.

  • Cope’s own house was guarded back and front, and soldiers smoked their pipes in the shop of Cole the clogger.

  • The swain was not required to put his hand into his pocket, and, journeying to Horwick next day, Pim o’ Cuddy passed his new crown piece round a company gathered in the shop of Cole the clogger.

  • Cole the clogger would have given stock and goodwill to have been there.

  • The lad delivered the message to Dooina (with whom Cole the clogger had taken up his quarters), and so it came to Cicely Monjoy, who read it and thrust it immediately into the kitchen fire.

  • Cole the clogger entered, and he stood for a moment wondering at the laughter that greeted him.

  • It was worth something, in those days, to hear Cole the clogger make sport of Dooina Benn.

  • Then Cole began habitually to double and repeat terminations, often achieving ludicrous accidental results.

  • Note that a certain emulation could not fail to arise between the pupils of the École normale and those of the Faculties in the competitions for agrégation.

  • Does it not seem strange," it has been said, "that so many generations of professors should have been turned out by the École normale incapable of utilising documents?

  • There was a curious case of lightning-stroke reported at Cole Harbor, Halifax.

  • Cole describes a woman of twenty-four who was delivered without the rupture of the hymen, and Meek remarks on a similar case.

  • Cole speaks of a child with two well-developed male organs, one to the left and the other to the right of the median line, and about 1/4 or 1/2 inch apart at birth.

  • GOODY COLE Goodwife Eunice Cole, of Hampton, Massachusetts, was so "vehemently suspected to be a witch" that in 1680 she was thrown into jail with a chain on her leg.

  • Goody Cole will fly fast enough when she hears it screaming, and will come down chimney in the shape of an owl or a bat, and take the thing away.

  • She urged her husband to ride with all speed to justice Sewall and demand that Goody Cole be freed.

  • Hope Bay, and containing the majority of the flats in the Cole and Lee rivers, it possesses a greater available territory free from the contaminating influences of the Taunton River than any other town in this region.

  • This photograph shows a portion of the grant leased to Mr. Frank Cole by the town of Kingston for the propagation of clams.

  • The best of this area is now included within the confines of the bay itself, though the Cole and Lee rivers furnish a small but valuable addition.

  • Shortly after, Swansea followed suit, and restricted the exploitation of her native oyster beds in the Lee and Cole rivers.

  • This was aggravating, for Melvina had been two years a nurse in the Cole family and was well qualified to clear up these vexed questions.

  • Poitiers was famous for its divinity schools and its École de Droit, wherein thousands of students were instructed in doctrinal matters and subjects of metaphysical science.

  • He studied at the École Polytechnique and at the École des Mines, and later received his doctorate in mathematics in 1879.

  • Arras also possesses an École Normale or large training school for female teachers.

  • There was a unanimous turning of heads and twisting of bodies toward the bidder, who proved to be Mr. Cole the lawyer from Northboro, who made a very impressive appearance, clad as he was in a handsome fur-lined overcoat and a shiny silk hat.

  • Cole escaped by throwing the blame on a careless partner, and at once removed the "stop.

  • Cole too was apprehended, and in due course tried at the Central Criminal Court.

  • The goods having no existence, Cole of course could not deliver them.

  • Cole found out where they were, and redeemed them at a heavy outlay, thus establishing business relations with the firm that held them, much to the firm's subsequent anger and regret.

  • These bankers, wishing for more specific information, asked Davidson & Gordon, a firm with which Cole was closely allied, whether the warrants meant goods or nothing.

  • Attached is the École de Pisciculture, with tanks and a small aquarium.

  • Opposite the Botanic Gardens is the once famous +École de médecine+, said to have been founded by Arab physicians under the patronage of the Counts of Montpellier.

  • The public library is in the Boulevard du Musée, in the École des Beaux Arts.

  • This building is the property of the town, and the corporation intend to restore it and convert it into a clock-tower for the École Normale and furnish it with a carillon.

  • The three were shackled together, Cole in the middle, with Bob on the right and Jim on the left.

  • It was at this juncture that Cole Younger rode to the door of the bank and shouted to the men inside to come out, which they made all haste to do.

  • The ball grazed the edge of a post, deflecting it slightly; but it found Cole Younger, wounding him in a vulnerable though not vital place.

  • About two weeks before the robbery, Cole Younger and one other of the band spent a Sunday at the Flanders House in that place.

  • The fourth charged Cole Younger as principal, and his brothers as accessories, with the murder of Nicholas Gustavson, the Swede whom the robbers shot for remaining on the street when ordered to leave.

  • Arrived in Madelia, the captured men were taken to the Flanders House, where Cole Younger and his now dead comrade Pitts, had played the role of gentlemen travelers a month before.

  • Overholt again caught sight of the robbers, and the Doctor fired at them, with so good an aim as to hit the stick with which Cole Younger was walking.

  • Fysshe and pike it clene, cole the broth thurgh a cloth into a erthen panne.

  • Rosis, and flour of rys, cole it, salt it & messe it forth.

  • In a graphic article published some years ago Sir Henry Cole described (what it is almost impossible for the Londoner of to-day to realize) the condition of this metropolis at the beginning of the century.

  • Buckland, requesting the pleasure of my company to dinner, at six, to meet two celebrated geologists, Lord Cole and Sir Philip Egerton.

  • Lord Cole and I were talking about some fossils newly arrived from India.

  • I allus feel sorry for pore folks as has tu move in cole weather.

  • He was director of the ['E]cole des Beaux Arts from 1878 until his death, and received the grand cross of the Legion of Honour.

  • I have not included either the Cole Tit or the Marsh Tit in this list, as I have never seen either bird in the Islands, and have not been able to find that they are at all known either in Guernsey or any of the other Islands.


  • The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "cole" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.

    Some related collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    cole des; cole polytechnique