Any habitation at a high altitude.
Sinònims
Examples for "eyrie"
Examples for "eyrie"
1And now there rests but the eagle, in his last lonely eyrie.
2From that lofty eyrie I had a comprehensive view of the vessel.
3From his eyrie he could see half the West End of London.
4Kynaston saw the proceeding from his eyrie, and uttered a shrill whistle.
5He examined every inch of the eyrie, sniffing like a pointer dog.
1I wonder how they got into the restricted area near the aerie?
2But young Brightwing, she kept circling the aerie, crying out, all mournful.
3Leaving me at Obi's camp while he goes on to the aerie.
4If you find her at the aerie, bring her back to me.
5It's as if I'm reliving the scorpion attack in the aerie basement.
1From his aery Kenkenes watched this particular phase of her tasks with interest.
2The room shared its aery with a broad, square veranda, trellised and vine-covered.
3Only to look down on her again, unseen, from his aery in the rocks over the valley!
4Kenkenes from his aery watched her, noting with a softening countenance the almost maternal love that beautified her face.
5The lovers, now that in an aery body they must sorrow for unconsummated love, are 'tangled up as the grass patterns are tangled.'
1They call us eaglets in sooth; and do eaglets rest for ever in their mountain eyry?
2But the sky remained pitiless, and from my mountain eyry I could see the valley bottoms growing sere and yellow.
3She went with them, and they left her alone on the ledge, where once the eagle's eyry used to be.
4He mounted to this eyry every Friday night, so as to be reminded of the good old days at Schwartz's.
5They were the eyry of freedom, and the pleasant region where unheeded I could commune with the creatures of my fancy.
6Such was the programme; and the eager curiosity of the select few who were invited brought them punctually to the philosopher's eyry.
7The birds went back to their eyries, and the troubled water was still.
8E'en those who gorge themselves with innocent blood live tranquil in their home eyries.
9Neither of them choose inaccessible places for their eyries; neither of them rear large broods.
10Silent, narrow-eyed men watched them from eyries on the hillsides, and let them pass on by without speaking.
11Their tops, now inaccessible, are to be the future eyries of self-crowned railroad nobs and rude bonanza barons.
12The pupils of the school from the Eyry soon arrived, with the young Spanish boys and the well-dressed maidens.
13Perhaps there was to be music at the Eyry,-therewas no formality, we went without ceremony to hear it.
14"By gad," said John, "I caught him asleep in the Eyry parlor.
15From that it turned on itself on the high ground toward the "Cottage" and "Eyry," the remaining houses.