An ice machine is a metal pail placed in another pail much larger than itself. |
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The calf should be allowed to suckle or be fed from the pail for six or eight months. |
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Prudence had nearly completed her operations and was salting the cream in the pail. |
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After his survey he went behind the bar and got the revolver from under an overturned pail. |
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Why, a big tin pail half full of lollypop juice, standing under a little spout that was driven into a yellow lollypop tree. |
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I'd as soon think of telling the Pope of Rome to empty a pail of swill as I would him. |
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Another method where fresh water is not available, as on a long drive, is to aerate it by pouring from one pail to another. |
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There was only one bailer in the boat, and there was nothing else in the shape of a can or pail. |
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And I'll be welched if Danvers didn't dig a wooden pail out of that hat-case and hand it over. |
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Then the outer pail of the new minnow-bucket was missing and the scaler could not be found. |
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By now, the goop had outgrown the pail and was two-thirds up in the laundry tub. |
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The pretty cowherd would fill the pail with water to plenish the tubs from which her charges drank. |
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Ven I go to sleep, puy one pail of pranty for ze Soldaten, ant zey will sleep. |
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As I remember the story, they first fed the horse with self-raising flour, and then gave him a pail of water to drink. |
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She lighted the candle and dropped the burnt match in the tin pail that served as slop jar. |
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He disappeared only to return with a pail of cold water to temper the first. |
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Rina, divining his thought, coolly lifted the pail to her lips, and drank of it. |
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A little stream ran down through the airway, from which the pail had been repeatedly filled. |
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Hoyle had the peas in a tin pail, and mother rode Aunt Sally's speckle and carried the biscuit in a pan on front. |
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Place the freezer into the pail, put in the paddle and cover the freezer tightly. |
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When he dined out he always took his champagne with him in a pail and in a four-wheeler. |
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Accept a ribbon red, I beg, For Madam Purrer's tail, And ice cream made by lovely Peg, A Mont Blanc in a pail. |
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At left, the spiderlike leaves of black mondo grass appear to crawl over the edge of a pail. |
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Jacob set down his milk pail, and followed her into the Veaseys' kitchen. |
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He emptied the pail with the wide thirst of the sweating ploughman, returned it to me, and started up the plough. |
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Then he went forward, and drew the pail from Amelia's unwilling grasp. |
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The rinsing now takes place by either a shower or pail pour. |
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Put the bottle in a pail or box, and pack ice and salt around it. |
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This man asked me where I was bound with my pail, and I told him. |
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Take it out with a wooden ladle, and put it into a small tub or pail. |
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In hot weather I place a piece of ice in flannel on the top of the pail. |
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Ichabod had been holding a pail of water so that a horse might drink. |
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When coonskin returned, he bore a pail of water in each hand. |
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Jim came skipping out at the gate with a tin pail, and singing Buffalo Gals. |
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A little girl came out with a tin pail, the gripman's dinner. |
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They'd mix about as well as a cruet of vinegar and a313 pail of lard. |
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You will find water in that pail, and the groats in that cupboard. |
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Hanging awkwardly from a nail in the wall, a slop pail of enamelled iron. |
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He does it with a sort of hoe thing and puts them in a pail. |
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There was the pail, safe hidden behind the soft-soap barrel. |
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There was a pail of water with a dipper in it on 351 a bench. |
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Near by were a pail of water, a pan of ashes, a rug, and a seltzer siphon. |
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Pretty soon Mary Jane came down the path with the water pail. |
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After a while, the maid appeared, with her pail in her hand, leaving the room by way of the dressing-room and the back stairs. |
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She heard our wagon, looked back over her shoulder, and, catching up her pail of water, started at a run for the hole in the bank. |
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If Samuel had not loved wickedness he would not have followed me to the water pail. |
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Pass the string through the handle of the pail and up over the spool. |
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Huldah Meserve asked permission to cover the largest holes in the plastered walls with boughs and fill the water pail with wild flowers. |
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One day I cooked a squash, putting the parings in a swill pail. |
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She silently assented, and with her stool at arm's length, and the pail against her knee, went round to where they stood. |
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But the others could find no fault with it, and Sereno drained the pail. |
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After some delay she was answered by a caretaker, whose pail and brush of themselves told her that the working day was over and the workers gone. |
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A few minutes after, a Bricklayer passed by, carrying a pail full of plaster on his shoulder. |
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He put down his pail, took the white alley, and bent over the toe with absorbing interest while the bandage was being unwound. |
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The pail was upset and some of the water splashed over the black dog. |
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They set aside a pail of blood for blood pudding and blood gravy. |
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As he could not lift the whole pailful of water at once, he fetched a milk jug, and ladled quarts of water into the pail by degrees. |
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And with the clangorous metal pail he smote the ugly, brutish skull. |
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Another time, one of the servants, whose office it was to fill my trough every third day with fresh water, was so careless as to let a huge frog slip out of his pail. |
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The water which the youth handed to them in a tin pail was not cold to taste, but it was cool to her heated face, and it greatly revived and refreshed her. |
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Or when one washes one's milk pail before milking one's cow? |
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When, having obtained permission, she walked to the water pail in the corner and drank from the dipper, unseen forces dragged Seesaw from his seat to go and drink after her. |
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I will dress as a dairymaid, and have a little pail to carry milk in. |
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Not satisfied with a dry cleaning, she took to a pail and scrubbing-brush, and cleaned us out of house and home, so that we stood shivering in the back-yard. |
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They popped up like corks released from the bottom of a pail of water. |
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Patty, the milkmaid, was going to market, carrying her milk in a Pail on her head. |
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Patty the Milkmaid was going to market carrying her milk in a Pail on her head. |
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