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pupils

n. (plural of pupil English)

Usage examples of "pupils".

The days of your education, as pupils of trained instructors, are over.

Although he knew how to keep order, how to make himself respected, and could on occasion deal severely and speak sternly, so that very few dared to forget themselves before him, he knew also how to be merry with his pupils, chatting with them familiarly, putting himself in their place, entering into their ideas, and making himself their rival.

Some even went so far as to denounce him publicly, and he was mentioned one day from the height of the pulpit, to the indignation of the pupils of the upper Normal College, as a man at once dangerous and subversive.

The teachings of the two Professors in the great schools of Philadelphia are sure to be listened to, not only by their immediate pupils, but by the Profession at large.

In June, 1823, he assisted some of his pupils at the autopsy of a case of puerperal fever.

Also to several instances of individual pupils having had a succession of cases in various quarters of the town, while others, practising as extensively in the same localities, had none.

We need not wonder that our young men are beginning to announce themselves not only as graduates of this or that College, but also as pupils of some one distinguished master.

She stared hard at it, feeling her lowlight pupils widening to full enlargement.

Klnn-dawan-a straining to keep both her lowlight and darklight pupils as wide-open as possible and to keep watch in all directions.

The light blazed into her dilated lowlight and darklight pupils, stabbing agony into her eyes and head and plunging everything else around it into terrifying darkness.

Letting his lowlight pupils widen, he scanned the sky beyond the shrine.

His lowlight pupils were already fully open, and now that he was outside the darklight-blocking effect of the dome, he let his darklight pupils widen as well.

Your pupils make rapid progress, and you give your lessons with such a learned air.

Petersburg for two years, and I live here well enough, and have pupils who do me credit.

Skellum had always said that a master needs pupils, and in one stroke Chainer had more than any master who had ever lived.