The 6,537 occurrences of bastard

View the definition of "bastard" on The Online Slang Dictionary

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~   ~   ~   Sentence 14,025   ~   ~   ~

Bastard Mahogany of Gippsland and New South Wales; called also Swamp Mahogany in Victoria and New South Wales.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 14,026   ~   ~   ~

It also bears the names of Bastard Jarrah, and occasionally Woolly Butt.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 14,030   ~   ~   ~

Mahogany, or Bastard Mahogany, Eucalyptus marginata , Smith, N.O.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 14,033   ~   ~   ~

In Western Australia it also bears the name of Mahogany, or Bastard Mahogany.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 15,067   ~   ~   ~

the Maori name for the Bastard Trumpeter (q.v.)

~   ~   ~   Sentence 15,292   ~   ~   ~

The Melbourne fishermen, according to Count Castelnau, call this fish the Bastard Trumpeter (q.v.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 15,641   ~   ~   ~

Various species have special epithets: Bastard, Dalby, True , Weeping , etc.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 15,662   ~   ~   ~

i. p. 46: " Lignum-vitae and bastard-myall bushes were very common."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 17,219   ~   ~   ~

See Bastard Trumpeter and Morwong .

~   ~   ~   Sentence 17,221   ~   ~   ~

'Royal Commission on Fisheries of Tasmania,' p. xxxvi: "The young [of the bastard trumpeter] are always coloured, more or less, like the red, and are known by some as 'paper-fish.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 17,222   ~   ~   ~

The mature form of the silver bastard is alone caught.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 17,577   ~   ~   ~

Other vernacular names of different species are Bastard-Peppermint , Peppermint-Box , Peppermint-Gum .

~   ~   ~   Sentence 20,421   ~   ~   ~

; called also Rosewood and Bastard-Sandalwood .

~   ~   ~   Sentence 24,463   ~   ~   ~

See also Bastard-Trumpeter , Morwong , and Paper-fish .

~   ~   ~   Sentence 24,700   ~   ~   ~

Myrtaceae , called also Leather- Jacket , Hickory , Red -, and Yellow-Gun , and Bastard-Box ; and to E. stuartiana , F. v. M., N.O.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,527   ~   ~   ~

On issuing from the station at Narbonne I found that the only vehicle in waiting was a kind of bastard tramcar, a thing shaped as if it had been meant to go upon rails; that is, equipped with small wheels, placed beneath it, and with a platform at either end, but destined to rattle over the stones like the most vulgar of omnibuses.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 15,571   ~   ~   ~

Serf mothers have thus borne serf children to free-born fathers, and slave mothers have borne slave children to their masters; while unmarried mothers still bear bastard children to unknown fathers, the Church thus throwing the taint of illegitimacy upon the innocent.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,071   ~   ~   ~

This adulterous beast--this ferocious monster--they accepted as their pope; and their children, following in their steps, accepted his bastard brood--of either sex--as their popes; while the only and true Pope, the successor of St. Peter, the Vicar of Jesus Christ, was rejected by them.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,379   ~   ~   ~

We, too, except we be "bastards, and not sons," must make our great sacrifices.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 457   ~   ~   ~

Evidently, church and state management require art and skill infinitely superior to what 'supernaturalism' and its legitimate child monarchism, or its bastard issue, caucus-and-ballot-boxism, are capable of.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,232   ~   ~   ~

When the youngest brother was letten blood, and done unto in all things as the two brethren were before, then the king's servants began to wash the bone, but neither for washing nor rubbing might they do away the blood of the bone, but it ever appeared bloody: when the king saw this, he said, "It appeareth openly now that this blood is of the nature of the bone, thou art his true son, and the other two are bastards.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 256   ~   ~   ~

The best parts of her were, that her breath was as sweet as sugar-candian,[28] being very well shouldered beneath the waste; and as my hostess told me the next morning, that she had changed her maiden-head for the price of a bastard not long before.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 9,975   ~   ~   ~

Conceive that, even in your virtuous and polished country, if every bastard, through all the circles of your social system, was thus branded by nature and known to all, what shocking developments might there not be!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,838   ~   ~   ~

1051.=--In Godwine's absence Eadward received a visit from the Duke of the Normans, William, the bastard son of Duke Robert and the daughter of a tanner of Falaise.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,666   ~   ~   ~

"It is not a right thing or reasonable," he said, when they urged him to keep aloof from the unjust undertaking to which he invited them, "that a bastard should hold a kingdom, and thrust out of it, and of his heritage, a brother and heir of the land by legal marriage.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,672   ~   ~   ~

She had at her side brave and skilful warriors, such as La Hire and the Bastard of Orleans, the illegitimate son of the murdered Louis of Orleans, and with their help she pressed the English hard, driving them northwards and defeating them at Patay.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,725   ~   ~   ~

At the same time Captain de Lisle, pushing out from the extreme left towards Bastard's Nek, reconnoitred the country to the northward, and found the enemy in strength along the line Bastard's Nek--Wolve Kop--Spitz Kop--Plessis Poort.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,802   ~   ~   ~

French seizes Bastard's Nek.]

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,806   ~   ~   ~

French, therefore, determined to lose no time in reconnoitring and, if possible, seizing on so valuable a point, and on the evening of January 24th, despatched de Lisle to occupy Bastard's Nek, a defile cutting the same range as Plessis Poort, and five miles to the westward of it.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 8,874   ~   ~   ~

Bastard's Nek, 400, 405.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,287   ~   ~   ~

In moments of depression he saw himself through all the coming years being gradually broken, crushed under a weight of Barthops--father-in-law, wife and children--moulded into a thin semblance of a Marquis of Ipswich, a bastard Marquis.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 814   ~   ~   ~

But there were taken to the number of thrée or foure score, and amongst other the lord de Dampier seneshall of Ponthien, monsieur de Weriners, monsieur de Vineles, monsieur de Noielles, monsieur Iohn de Hangests capteine of Bullongne, the lord de Rambures, monsieur Lionell Darreis capteine of Graueling, monsieur Peter Rasser capteine of Arde, also Combernard capteine of Tirouan, Boid Chanon capteine of Montoire, Iohn Chanon capteine of Lisle, Stenebecke capteine of Ralingham, the bastard of Burneuill capteine of Burburgh.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 920   ~   ~   ~

and diuerse proper feats of armes wrought in that meane while, in the which the French lost manie of their nobles and gentlemen, as the lord Patroullars de Tries, brother to the marshall of France, the lord Matelonne or Martelonne, the lord de la Valle, and the bastard of Bourbon, with other, to the number (as some haue written) of fiue hundred.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 927   ~   ~   ~

This yeare at London, the earle of Arundell maried the bastard daughter of the king of Portingale, the king of England and the quéene with their presence honoring the solemnitie of that feast, which was kept with all sumptuous roialtie, the morrow after saint Katharins daie.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,078   ~   ~   ~

¶ The countesse of Kent that was daughter (as yée haue heard) to Bernabo viscont lord of Millaine, hauing no issue by hir husband, was now mooued by the king after hir husbands death, to marrie with his bastard brother the earle of Dorset, a man verie aged and euill visaged; [Sidenote: The countes of Kent maketh hir owne choise of hir second husband.]

~   ~   ~   Sentence 956   ~   ~   ~

But later on I heard that he had not told me the truth in saying this for the trap had been put there, on purpose for me, by the villanous bastard in whose hut I had halted, and whose photograph I was afterwards able to take and here present to my readers.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,231   ~   ~   ~

It was disposed to regard as a hostile act the circumstance that she kept a special holiday, of which nothing was known except from her statement that it referred to the fall of somebody or other whom she called the Bastille, in suspicious proximity to the detested battle of the Boyne; but when it was observed that she did nothing worse than dance upon the flags "_avec ze leetle bébé_" of the tenant in the basement, and torture her "Dootch" husband with extra monkeys and gibes in honor of the day, unfavorable judgment was suspended, and it was agreed that without a doubt the "bastard" fell for cause; wherein the alley showed its sound historical judgment.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 940   ~   ~   ~

Still, the fact remains that while Louise d'Albany was secretly or openly making light of all social institutions, and living as the mistress, almost the wife, of Alfieri; this insignificant Charlotte, this bastard of a Miss Walkenshaw, this woman who had probably never had an enthusiasm, or an ideal, or a thought, had succeeded in reclaiming whatever there remained of human in the degraded Charles Edward; had succeeded in doing the world the service of laying out at least with decency and decorum this living corpse which had once contained the soul of a hero, so that posterity might look upon it without too much contempt and loathing, nay, almost, seeing it so quiet and seemingly peaceful, with compassion and reverence.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 7,249   ~   ~   ~

For his character, in all respects in nature, feature and manners, he resembled the tyrant Tiberius; and for all the numerous brood of bastards begot on other men's wives, he died a childless poltroon, having no legitimate heir to succeed him of his own body, according to the divine malediction, _Write this man childless: for no man of his seed shall prosper, sitting on the throne of David, and ruling any more in Judah._ THOMAS DALZIEL of Binns, a man natively fierce and rude, but more so from his being brought up in the Muscovy service, where he had seen little else than tyranny and slavery: Nay, it is said, that he had there so learned the arts of divilish sophistry, that he sometimes beguiled the devil, or rather his master suffered himself to be outwitted by him[279].

~   ~   ~   Sentence 665   ~   ~   ~

Elsewhere, 4. the _Rose_, the _Bastard-Corinths_, the _Elder_, the _Juniper_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 56   ~   ~   ~

The _bastard_ Democracy of the present age has united with the Prelates, Priests, Monks, and Nuns of Romanism, and is daily affiliating with hundreds of thousands of the very off-scourings of the European Catholic population--stimulating them to deeds of violence, and to the shedding of blood!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 749   ~   ~   ~

Here is the bull of Pope Sixtus: "We, Sixtus the Fifth, the universal shepherd of the flock of Christ, the supreme chief, to whom the government of the whole world appertains, considering that the people of England and Ireland, after having been so long celebrated for their virtues, their religion, and their submission to our see, have become putrid members, infected, and capable of corrupting the whole Christian body, and on account of their subjection to the impious, tyrannical, and sanguinary government of Elizabeth, the bastard queen, and by the influence of her adherents, who equal her in wickedness; and who refuse, like her, to recognize the power of the Roman Church: regarding that Henry VIII.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 982   ~   ~   ~

While, to cap the climax--"Well done, my _Johnsing_ and the _White Bastard_," (meaning _Basis_,) exclaimed a drunken negro!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,820   ~   ~   ~

What bastard doth not?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,161   ~   ~   ~

V.96 Enter Brutus ... | Enter Brutus, Messala, Cato, Lucillius and Flauius Ff V.97 What bastard doth not: who is so base-born as not to do so?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,280   ~   ~   ~

Ate : 98 272. attraction of verb to nearest subject : 124 5, 146 33. base degrees : 44 26. basest metal : 7 63. bastard : 160 2. battles : 144 4. bay'd : 94 205, 119 48. be let blood : 91 153. be not fond, to think : 83 39. bear hard : 29 310, 57 215. bear me a bang : 115 18. bears with glasses : 56 205. behaviours : 12 42. beholding : 103 65. bend : 17 123. bending their expedition : 134 170. betimes : 143 307. betray : 58 225. bills : 152 1. bird of night : 32 26. bloods : 140 262. bloody sign : 145 14. blunt : 28 292. bondman : 37 101. brav'd : 129 96. bravery : 144 10. break with him : 53 150. bright day : 43 14. brook'd : 19 159. brother : 48 70. brought : 30 1. brutish : 105 104.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,162   ~   ~   ~

Score a pint of bastard in the Half-moon."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 671   ~   ~   ~

Among the scattered references from Virginia records are found charges of 100 pounds of tobacco for the service of a midwife; the presence of two midwives assisted by two nurses and other women at a single birth; the payment of twelve hens for obstetrical services; and the delivery of a bastard child by a midwife.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,157   ~   ~   ~

Though the English language is doubtless Germanic, that is by no means a proof that the Keltic bastards have acquired the German nature (_Wesen_).

~   ~   ~   Sentence 557   ~   ~   ~

The Bastard Balm (_Melittis melissophyllum_) is a handsome native plant, found sparingly in Devonshire, Hampshire, and a few other places, and is well worth growing wherever it can be induced to grow; but it is a very capricious plant, and is apparently not fond of garden cultivation.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 866   ~   ~   ~

(1) _Perdita._ The fairest flowers o' the season Are our Carnations and streak'd Gillyvors, Which some call Nature's bastards.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 869   ~   ~   ~

(2) _Polyxenes._ Then make your garden rich in Gillyvors, And do not call them bastards.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,735   ~   ~   ~

(31) _Bastard._ My face so thin, That in mine ear I durst not stick a Rose.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,076   ~   ~   ~

(6) _Bastard._ A Rush will be a beam To hang thee on.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,648   ~   ~   ~

(18) _Bastard._ I am amazed, methinks, and lose my way Among the Thorns and dangers of this world.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,725   ~   ~   ~

The word has an interest from its biblical associations, though modern scholars decide that the Zizania is wrongly translated Tares, and that it is rather a bastard Wheat or Darnel.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,579   ~   ~   ~

(4) _Perdita._ The fairest flowers o' the season Are our Carnations and streak'd Gillyvors, Which some call nature's bastards: of that kind Our rustic garden's barren; I care not To get slips of them.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,585   ~   ~   ~

_Polixenes._ Then make your garden rich in Gillyvors, And do not call them bastards.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 7,850   ~   ~   ~

_Cotgrave._ Glayeul bastard; _Sedge_, _wild flags_, _&c._ SENNA.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,481   ~   ~   ~

The middle-class women of Berlin have an extraordinary affection all through the summer season for collarless blouses, bastard tartans, and white cotton gloves with thumbs but no fingers.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 195   ~   ~   ~

The mask and buskins are put for the stage trappings, or _properties_, of the part of Hercules: of these, one of the items was the _lion's skin_; and hence the extreme aptitude of the allusion, as applied by the Bastard, in _King John_, to Austria, who was assuming the importance of Coeur de Lion!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,158   ~   ~   ~

By hiding here I've heard all he proposed, And God in His goodness has guided me To confound this noisome bastard's treachery, To discover a way to take my vengeance For his hypocrisy and insolence, To wake up my father, and to justly screw This scumbag who wants to make love to you.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,776   ~   ~   ~

Facing that bastard, I felt resentment that I never mastered.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 16,101   ~   ~   ~

_Die Rehobother Bastards und das Bastardierungsproblem beim Menschen._ Anthropologische und ethnographische Studien am Rehobother Bastardvolk in Deutsch-Südwest Afrika.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 21,065   ~   ~   ~

To this end it works, through the immense superfluity of germs, through the urgent vehemence of the sexual instinct, through its willingness to adapt itself to all circumstances and opportunities, even to the production of bastards, and through the instinctive maternal affection, the strength of which is so great that in many kinds of animals it even outweighs self-love, so that the mother sacrifices her life in order to preserve that of the young.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,230   ~   ~   ~

I am an impostor, a bastard, and I have no right to the title of Count de Gobignon."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,243   ~   ~   ~

The bastard son of a bastard son.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,248   ~   ~   ~

"Roland de Vency, my true father, is the bastard son of Count Stephen de Gobignon, sired by rape in Languedoc.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 9,857   ~   ~   ~

"You filthy bastard!" she screamed.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 10,481   ~   ~   ~

"You Greek bastard!" he groaned, and fell first to his knees, then on his face.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 13,266   ~   ~   ~

May God send that little bastard Marco and all the Filippeschi straight to hell!"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 13,268   ~   ~   ~

Inwardly Simon winced, too, as he always did at the word bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 13,269   ~   ~   ~

But, bastard or not, he was about to command a palace under siege.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,098   ~   ~   ~

Unless you set one there, knowing that I am--I am a bastard and an impostor.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,986   ~   ~   ~

_The Filippeschi should have missed Mass today._ "God damn your puzzolenti souls, you bastards!"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,395   ~   ~   ~

D'Ucello's clerk said, "The podesta believes he is a Ghibellino spy sent here by the bastard King Manfred.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,678   ~   ~   ~

"What the devil did those bastards do to you?"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,755   ~   ~   ~

"What I told you last time--that I am a bastard and that the last Count de Gobignon was not my real father--does that make you less willing to marry me?"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,299   ~   ~   ~

They were about to be attacked by five or more times their number, and these bastards were arguing about money.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 7,679   ~   ~   ~

May it please God that the bastard Manfred be the last of them.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 8,146   ~   ~   ~

If Simon de Gobignon, a bastard and an impostor, led this army to its destruction, what name was there for such a crime?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 9,997   ~   ~   ~

"You filthy, stinking, cowardly bastard!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 10,001   ~   ~   ~

I save your life and you call me a bastard?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 11,092   ~   ~   ~

This high-horse bastard has fifty men outside."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 11,094   ~   ~   ~

She screamed, "Do not call him a bastard!"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,085   ~   ~   ~

We arrived safe and stunned, in about an hour and a half, at the foot of a tower of no Roman or Sicilian growth, but a bastard construction upon the ancient foundations of Epipolæ.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,245   ~   ~   ~

Never, since the day when men first armed their heads for the fight, has there been seen such a paltry, ugly, useless, bastard kind of a thing as the last cap turned out for the British army.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 86   ~   ~   ~

), the headquarters of astronomy, became invaded by the spirit of astrology, the bastard science which has always tried--parasite-like--to suck its life from astronomy.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 446   ~   ~   ~

You may even call him a coward without finding more than a boot whiz past your ear, but you must not call a man a bastard unless you are prepared to prove it on his front teeth.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,199   ~   ~   ~

Thomas Lupset, who was a scholar of Dean Colet, and a sort of _elève_ of the cardinal, (being appointed tutor to a bastard son of the latter) could not suppress his sarcastical feelings in respect of Wolsey's pomp and severity of discipline.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 11,713   ~   ~   ~

The first and second part of the troublesome Raigne of John, King of England, with the discoverie of King Richard Cordelion's Base sonne (vulgarly named the Bastard Fauconbridge) also the Death of King John at Swinstead Abbey, as acted by her Majesties Players, 4to.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 12,096   ~   ~   ~

0 2 6 There were copies of the Catalogue of Steeven's books struck off on LARGE PAPER, on bastard _royal octavo_, and in _quarto_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 12,490   ~   ~   ~

Bastard's (Thomas) Chrestoleros, seven Bookes of Epigrammes, _G.M.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 15,121   ~   ~   ~

This title is preceded by what is called a bastard title: and is followed by 55 pages of the work, not very elegantly printed.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,986   ~   ~   ~

'For she had not come to England,' she said, 'on mercantile business at a venture, but according to the will of the two venerated kings now dead: she had married King Henry according to the decision of the Holy Father at Rome: she was the anointed and crowned Queen of England; were she to give up her title, she would have been a concubine these twenty-four years, and her daughter a bastard; she would be false to her conscience, to her own soul, her confessor would not be able to absolve her.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,557   ~   ~   ~

He persuaded the young King that it lay in his power to alter his father's settlement of the succession, as in itself not conformable to law, neither Mary nor the younger sister Elizabeth being entitled to the throne, as the two marriages from which they sprang had been declared illegal, and a bastard could not be made capable of wearing the English crown by any act of Parliament.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,222   ~   ~   ~

The French abuses came into vogue here also: ecclesiastical benefices fell to the dependents of the court, to the younger sons of leading houses, often to their bastards: they were given or sold _in commendam_, and then served only for pleasure and gain: the Scotch Church fell into an exceedingly scandalous and corrupt state.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,683   ~   ~   ~

In the country there were many who thought themselves to stand so high above the bastard Earl of Murray, that they held it a disgrace to obey him: all these gathered round her; and as she then, the very day after her escape, revoked her abdication, they bound themselves together to replace her on the throne.

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