The Collaborative International Dictionary
Quet \Quet\, n. (Zo["o]l.) The common guillemot. [Prov. Eng.]
Usage examples of "quet".
THEY WALKED up to the chinaberry tree on Sunday morning, Ellen and her father, carrying a bou quet of red salvia, which grew in a clump by the steps.
Hell, Ducos, the British have a cavalry screen and there are partisans and our own picquets and Cod knows how many other British sentries.
London but for the of be onstage, bowing, accepting the applause, quets, doing what he was born for.
Even if Babette had been present, she would only have smiled her gay little smile and coquetted with him.
Quet zol had dropped astern of station, was now a mere half-mile from Wanderer.
Four THEY WALKED up to the chinaberry tree on Sunday morning, Ellen and her father, carrying a bou quet of red salvia, which grew in a clump by the steps.