Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: July 22, 2025
"Oh, you're rather certain to get all the sat. you want, I imagine when you're a cadet," retorted Cadet Pratt dryly. "But, Jud, our time is fairly running away from us, and we have yet other social calls to make. Our respectful farewells, misters." Turning, straight and stiff as ramrods, Cadets Pratt and Judson marched from the room.
You'll find Section D in the starboard wing." Astro and Tom immediately began to pile Manning's luggage to one side of the slidestairs. "Take your luggage with you, Misters!" snapped Herbert. "It isn't ours," replied Tom. "Isn't yours?" Herbert glanced over the pile of suitcases and turned back to Tom. "Whose is it then?" "Belongs to Cadet Candidate Roger Manning," replied Tom.
"Oh, I dinna ken aboot that!" he said hurriedly. "She's just a grand woman anyway." Then, bethinking himself of another subject, he asked, "Have you heard o' the Reverend Mr. Dyceworthy lately?" Errington and Lorimer replied in the negative. Macfarlane laughed his eyes twinkled. "It's evident ye never read police reports," he said "Talk o' misters, he's a pretty specimen!
The British Nobility, the great, world- renowned Middle Class, and the poor laboring population, constitute the three great divisions of the people and include them all in his mind. He is apt to leave out of count the Gentry, the great untitled MISTERS, who come in between the nobility and middle-men, and constitute the connecting link between them.
So when I took my razor that morning I was wild an' I wouldn't be here now but for that man catching my hand. There was no reason in it, I'm willing to confess. It was foolish; but wait till you get feeling like what I was, and see how it draws you. Misters the jury, don't send me back to prison; it is worse still there.
A shrewd observer of the world once said to me: "When an earl gets a marquisate, it is worth a hundred thousand pounds in hard money to his family." The explanation of this cryptic utterance is that, whereas an earl's younger sons are "misters," a marquis's younger sons are "lords."
Perhaps we are disposed to smile at seeing so much made of titles; but after what we have learned of Lord Timothy Dexter and the high-sounding names appropriated by many of our own compatriots, who have no more claim to them than we plain Misters and Misseses, we may feel to them something as our late friend Mr.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking