1.
There was a wooden pail, and a small wooden pallet, maybe six feet long and two feet wide, filled with straw
2.
The pail was the facilities in this room, as she feared
3.
She knew what Alan’s toilet facilities were like in the vale and compared them to that pail
4.
After drinking deeply from the leather pail, I returned what was left to Polyphemus
5.
A little water spilled from her pail, wetting my foot
6.
There was a pail of water outside the door in case a visitor needed to wash his feet
7.
” He picked up the cup, dipped it into a pail of water and drank deeply
8.
He asked for a pail of water, washed his hands and said,
9.
girl in a warm hood and cloak, with a pail of bird-seed on her arm, and
10.
in the other, closed the door behind him with a bang, set the pail on
11.
Kay nodded, and in a moment Leland was bringing over the four bows, setting up banks of arrows against each window, except for Kay’s pitch-soaked arrows, which he left in their pail by the fireplace
12.
He took a rag, dipped it in the nearby pail of water, and began wiping away at the medicine layer
13.
There!” Having removed the stubborn spot, the young lady stopped and threw the towel in her hand into a pail at her feet
14.
Grandpa kisses the top of my head, grabs his lunch pail from the kitchen counter, “Have a good day, my bambina,” and heads out the door
15.
I did it in the pail
16.
“Mr Jingles,” replied the nurse as she saw him slowly move back down the ward, dragging the pail with his big lumps of meat
17.
To do this put the casserole into a large, clean saucepan, or pail, full of clean cold water
18.
one of the cold frames and turned to re-fill the pail
19.
had a small pail of water in his other hand as well, and walked
20.
Onni picked up the small pail of water and took a few steps
21.
to fetch a pail of water, Jack fell down and broke his crown and Jill rolled and rolled
22.
" Her hands fluttered over the abundance before she took one pail and poured its contents onto the counter
23.
He put the balance of the old bricks in the pail, and hauled everything down in two trips
24.
Feeling put upon, he lowered the ladder and carried it to Carl's truck, then washed off the tools and cleaned the pail
25.
We learned quickly to use a pail to pee in and dispose of its contents in the morning
26.
She tossed the dirty diaper into the pail and nested the baby’s head beneath her chin
27.
Water the plants with the use of pail and dipper
28.
"He's unconscious again," snapped the interrogator, and waved for the guard to bring another pail of water
29.
Into a pail of red paint so that if
30.
Ed put some ice in the bottom of a pail to keep it all cold and placed it in the trunk of the car
31.
She came back out with a pail of water and a few clean rags
32.
She scooped the pail under the water and brought it back up
33.
The shimmering water contrasted with the darkness of the rusty pail
34.
The water sloshed slightly and dripped out of a few holes that were in the side of the pail by the handle
35.
She took Bernice’s hand and placed it in the pail
36.
They all shared a laugh as Bernice splashed the water about as she dug her hands into the pail
37.
Everything was so recent that several weeks later, when Úrsula went into the room with a pail of water and a brush to wash the floor, there was nothing for her to do
38.
He did not think about her again or about any of the others after he went into the workshop with the steaming cup, and he lighted the lamp in order to count the little gold fishes, which he kept in a tin pail
39.
Only when he finished it and put it with the others in the pail did he begin to drink the soup
40.
They went into the bathroom and found a mop in a pail in the shower stall
41.
I mean, I’m tempted to think the author just put him in a hat because it happens to rhyme with cat!! What’s next? The Goat in a Boat? The Ape in a Cape? The Crab in a Cab? The Whale in a Pail? The
42.
‘Jack n’ Jill went up the hill to fetch a pail of water
43.
bowl cut was the hair style for him which made his long, pail, be-speckled face
44.
His skin was oily too, pail and clammy and its
45.
He was pail and drawn from his ordeal and
46.
He carries a pail and one of those trash grabbers, which
47.
Diane D does not move or blink as the yellow pail flies right by her face, almost hitting her face! She continues to stand there in a state of trance, not moving at all, giving an eerie blank stare towards Marcus as the pail falls and drops on the floor behind her! Her cell phone continues to ring
48.
Diane D does not move or blink as the yellow pail hits her right smack in her neck and chest! She remains in a state of trance, giving a cold blank stare towards Marcus as the pail falls and drops on the floor near her feet
49.
Marcus painfully turns around and reaches for a tin garbage pail that is close by! He turns back towards Diane D and shouts, “Can you respond to this?!” Marcus angrily throws and tosses the tin garbage pail right at Diane D!
50.
“She didn’t move or blink when the pail almost hit her in the face?!“
51.
“What! The pail hit Diane D smack in her neck and chest and she never once moved or blink?!”
52.
She threw the pail of water in our faces and attacked us with the broom
53.
Chepe followed the old man in silence to the far end of the courtyard, where some Indian women were making tortillas and stirring something in a large garbage pail over a fire
54.
When it was Chepe’s turn he was handed two tortillas, and then some amorphous substance was ladled onto the tortillas from the garbage pail
55.
I scooped water from a pail and threw it over the loose ground
56.
The boys whooped and ran past Nefer, and he shoveled hot coal into the pail
57.
by a pail of cold water on his head
58.
Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire
59.
Nangong Ping took a pail to empty the water into the seas
60.
She hung her under the burning sun and put a pail of water in front of her
61.
pail and dipper were provided for us at this outdoor manual
62.
A dozen strode straight towards the first present-ment and began digging with their pail, chipped nailed hands as if they were senseless shovels strip-mining
63.
A metal pail with
64.
Another pail of fish
65.
Sue happily set a pail near me as another appeared in the maketake
66.
As Sue sat the pail near me, I said to Sue, “This is going to be
67.
” Sue said gleefully, “I know!” Bev started carrying another pail over
68.
Another pail appeared in the
69.
” Bev sat her pail on the counter as Sue went for
70.
” As Sue retrieved the other pail, Sue said to Bev, “Are we
71.
sat her pail on the counter, Sue said in a happy manner, “Goodie, goodie,
72.
A few moment later a pail looking woman in a crisp white nursing uniform entered the room
73.
In the center stood a large pail turned upside down
74.
He stepped up on the pail and slid the noose around his neck
75.
There he stripped off the rags and washed himself clean from a pail of cold water
76.
Find me a pail of water and some soap
77.
Every Sunday, when the train barn was empty of workers he would heat water in a pail upon the hot forge coals and then pour it into the barrel
78.
Even in the colder weather a pail of water and a bar of soap were on the railroad platform so that all of the boys could wash their hands prior to beginning their sales of food
79.
"No," responded Olin, "the pail will never touch the ice and I am simply going to pour the water gently out of the pail
80.
Scalodi stuck an investigative finger into the pail of water
81.
" Wolfi pointed at the long handled swab with one end in a pail of water
82.
She is bringing it in her pail
83.
enterprising desert ragamuffins, each with a rag and a pail of water were fishing for customers offering a quick wash of their cars and even when faced with a refusal ignored it, did a quick, slapdash job and badgered the owners for their recompense
84.
The soldier dipped a plastic cup into a pail of water that was on the cart
85.
misadventures that we shall not know which is our right foot; and that the best and wisest thing, according to my small wits, would be for us to return home, now that it is harvest-time, and attend to our business, and give over wandering from Zeca to Mecca and from pail to bucket, as the saying is
86.
What is removed drops horribly in a pail;
87.
The hostler at a roadside public house was holding a pail of water to refresh my horses, when a cart of very green oats, newly reaped, passed by, and he remarked:
88.
All his furniture consisted of a bed, a chair, a table, a pail, and a jug
89.
The table and chair had nothing, the pail had once possessed a handle, but that had been removed
90.
Bert got the pail and the brush, drew some water from the tap, got a pair of steps and a short plank, one end of which he rested on the bottom shelf of the pantry and the other on the steps, and proceeded to carry out Crass's instructions
91.
When he had scrubbed it sufficiently he rinsed it off as well as he could with the brush, and then, to finish with, he thrust his hand into the pail of water and, taking out the swab, wrung the water out of it and wiped the part of the ceiling that he had washed
92.
Then he dropped it back into the pail, and shook his numbed fingers to restore the circulation
93.
He shifted the pail of water a little further along the shelf and went on with the work
94.
He lowered the handle very carefully so as not to spill the whitewash out of the pail which was hanging from a hook under the cart, then, sitting down on the kerbstone, he leaned wearily against the wheel
95.
There was one man sitting on an up-ended pail in the far corner of the room and it was evident from the movements of his lips that he also was relating a story, although nobody knew what it was about or heard a single word of it, for no one took the slightest notice of him
96.
These vessels had been standing on the floor, and the floor was very dirty and covered with dust, so before dipping them into the pail, Bundy - who had been working at the drains all morning - wiped the bottoms of the jars upon his trousers, on the same place where he was in the habit of wiping his hands when he happened to get some dirt on them
97.
`I'm a Bush Baptist meself,' remarked the man on the upturned pail
98.
`Bloody rot, I call it,' chimed in the man on the pail
99.
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
100.
That very morning at breakfast-time, the man on the pail had announced that he had heard on the very best authority that Mr Sweater had sold all his interest in the great business that bore his name and was about to retire into private life, and that he intended to buy up all the house property in the neighbourhood of `The Cave'