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barks

n. (plural of bark English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: bark)

Wikipedia
Barks

Barks may refer to:

  • Carl Barks
  • Coleman Barks
  • Samantha Barks

Usage examples of "barks".

In hundreds of comicbook adventures over the nextthree decades, Barks added intriguing new characters and dense backstory to theformerly one-note Disney property, creating a rich Benday-dot cosmos.

Aided bysuperior artwork, abetted by humor and a sense of adventure, Barks succeeded inplacing his own unique stamp on Uncle Walt's creation.

Harry and Norma Barks, with their young daughter Ginger, were distantrelatives down on their luck and happy to move to a town where they would becomeinstant celebrities with a new home and guaranteed income.

For at that moment Ginger Barks, eternal romantic icon lodgedin Gyro's perpetually adolescent heart, re-entered his life.

Then, preceded by the dog, who seemed to invite them by short barks to come with him, and followed by the reporter and the boy, he dashed out, after having put up in his handkerchief the remains of the supper.

Why did he utter such strange barks when a sort of uneasiness seemed to draw him towards this well?

But, although they remained silent, Top, not being troubled with feelings of this sort, uttered barks which were repeated by the thousand echoes of the basaltic cliff.

The engineer even observed that these barks had something strange in them, like those which the dog had uttered at the mouth of the well in Granite House.

Soon Top's barks ceased, and the vessel continued her course at a few cables-length from the coast.

Men called to each other with song and jest from heavily laden barks, while they waited the hour of sailing.

They were slight flat-bottomed barks framed of timber only, without the least mixture of iron, and occasionally covered with a shelving roof, on the appearance of a tempest.

Six hundred large barks, framed in the forest of the Ardennes, made several voyages to the coast of Britain.

Twelve ships from Constantinople, and about sixty barks, laden with the fruits of industry, annually cast anchor on the coast.

While the Northwesters continued to push their enterprises into the hyperborean regions from their stronghold at Fort William, and to hold almost sovereign sway over the tribes of the upper lakes and rivers, the Mackinaw Company sent forth their light perogues and barks, by Green Bay, Fox River, and the Wisconsin, to that areas artery of the West, the Mississippi.

Some of them may still occasionally be seen coasting the lower lakes with their frail barks, and pitching their camps and lighting their fires upon the shores.