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Mord

Mord may refer to:

  • Mord, a murder law in Germany
  • Mord, a murder law in Norway
  • Mord, a murder law in Sweden
  • Mord, a murder law in Switzerland

Usage examples of "mord".

Tu cours en amour comme un chien fou, tu te cognes partout, tu exiges, tu pleures, tu mords, mais tu es si bon que me viennent des larmes de tendresse et de fierté, quand je te vois cherchant ainsi le bien.

But King Arthur was so courageous, that there might no manner of knight let him to land, and his knights fiercely followed him, and so they landed maugre Sir Mordred and all his power, and put Sir Mordred back, that he fled and all his people.

Then it was told to King Arthur that Sir Mordred had pight a new field upon Barendown.

Mordred kept the King constantly upset, though he was outwardly polite to everyone else, especially smarmy to my lady and Lancelot.

He who had lain with his halfsister, Morgana, and had wound up siring his own nemesis, Mordred.

Then came word to Sir Mordred that King Arthur had araised the siege for Sir Launcelot, and he was coming homeward with a great host, to be avenged upon Sir Mordred.

Then Sir Mordred araised much people about London, for they of Kent, Southsex, and Surrey, Estsex, and of Southfolk, and of Northfolk, held the most part with Sir Mordred.

Now befalleth it to me to joust, said Mordred, for Sir Mador hath a sore fall.

Vois, la brise Tourne au nord, Et la bise Souffle et mord Sur ta pure Chevelure Qui murmure Et se tord.

Only it was not Cim who came to take him away from the murderous, horrible heap of twisting, fighting mords.

The ledge was littered with broken rock, and an entire section of the Croagh where it joined to the ledge-where the Mord Wraith had been standing when Cogline had challenged it-was gone.

Thunder rocked the mountainside, and whole sections of the Croagh flew apart, carrying the dark forms of the Mord Wraiths with them.

When an aerial bomb exploded, old Mord Cour sprawled down, injured in the arms and torso by flying stone splinters.

And then came in Sir Brandiles, Sir Sagramore le Desirous, Sir Dodinas le Savage, Sir Kay le Seneschal, Sir Griflet le Fise de Dieu, Sir Mordred, Sir Meliot de Logris, Sir Ozanna le Cure Hardy, Sir Safere, Sir Epinogris, Sir Galleron of Galway.

In it Mordred could see the two young birds, fully fledged but still obviously juveniles.