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Updated: June 6, 2025
Having glanced at the cordon he stopped. 'Hy, Lyam! he called to the dog in such a ringing bass that it awoke an echo far away in the wood; and throwing over his shoulder his big gun, of the kind the Cossacks call a 'flint', he raised his cap.
After delivering this, like the word of command upon parade, the Colonel was crossing the turf, a yard or two higher up than Hope's workshop, when the spirit of revenge moved Bartley to retort upon his insulter. "Hy, Colonel Clifford!" The Colonel instantly halted, and marched down with Julia on his arm, like a game-cock when another rooster crows defiance.
It is furthest from my desire to place a thorn in any one's side, though he be my worst enemy." Hy. This historical document promised at one time to be a problem like the Sibilline Leaves or Czar Peter's will. But Secretary H. C. Whitney declares that it existed as he had it laid before him by the strategist. "'We must keep up a good and thorough blockade of their ports.
Mason, giving the victim a shake that threatened to dislocate his neck, "get up, my boy rouse up!" "Hallo! hy! murder! Come on you vill eh! Mr. Mason I beg pardon, sir," stammered Corrie, as he at length became aware of his condition, and blushed deeply; "I I really, Mr. Mason, I merely came to watch while you were all asleep, as there are savages about, you know, and ha! ha! ha! oh! dear me!"
We have given the Waha, the slip! ha, ha! The Wavinza will trouble us no more! ho! ho! Mionvu can get no more cloth from us! hy,by! And Kiala will see us no more -never more! he, he! they shouted with wild bursts of laughter, seconded by tremendous and rapid strokes with their oars, which caused the stiff old canoes to quiver from stem to stern.
The pronoun u is used for the plural as well as the singular, instead of the Standard plural ki. The diminutive i is used with inanimate nouns. This is also sometimes the case in the Standard form. Nouns. The prefix of the Dative is hanam, hnam, or tnam. The Standard Dative-locative prefix ha is also used, and may be spelt he or hy. Ta or te are also found.
I must come to play at Blind Harry and Hy Spy with them. But what is all this? added Pleydell, taking up the plans. 'Tower in the centre to be an imitation of the Eagle Tower at Caernarvon corps de logis the devil! Wings wings! Why, the house will take the estate of Ellangowan on its back and fly away with it! 'Why, then, we must ballast it with a few bags of sicca rupees, replied the Colonel.
After a cold night, during which I dreamt of our lost cook, we were awoke by a shout of "Jeeta hy!" "He is living!" then, "Rusta bhool gya!" "He lost his way!" and gradually it dawned upon us that the man we had fancied floating down the torrent a mangled corpse was still actually in the land of the living.
But I don't think he'll come again." "Did you hit him?" "Hit him, sir? What with that there stone? Not I. Nobody couldn't hit him with stick or stone neither. Keepers can't even hit him with their guns, or he'd been a dead 'un long ago. He's the slipperest dog as ever was." "Hy yow ow oo ooo!" came from a distance a pitiful cry that was mournful in the extreme. "Hear that, sir?"
A hyphenated name seemed the worst of luck for this camp, for there was no strong pole or cast iron bar to hold the two tents together, and the "hy" was merely a strip of ground that gave extra play to the wind. The smaller tent was now being dragged from the bed of wet sand into which it had partly buried itself, and the campers were struggling heroically to get it back to its pegs.
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