SENTENCE:And by other [warranted] testimony.|The Complete Works of William Shakespeare|William Shakespeare|old
SENTENCE:Be like our [warranted] quarrel Why are you silen.|The Complete Works of William Shakespeare|William Shakespeare|old
SENTENCE:The peddler said it was [warranted] to dye any hair a beautiful raven black and wouldn't wash off.|Anne Of Green Gables|Lucy Maud Montgomery|modern
SENTENCE:Jane had assured her that it was [warranted] to produce any number of thrills, or words to that effect, and Anne's fingers tingled to reach out for it.|Anne Of Green Gables|Lucy Maud Montgomery|modern
SENTENCE:He tried the weather, the flood, the accident, golf, books and three good, substantial, [warranted] jokes, but the conversation lagged in spite of him.|The Best American Humorous Short Stories|Various|modern
SENTENCE:The latter is a prevalent opinion, but it seems hardly [warranted] by the facts.|English Literature|William J. Long|old
SENTENCE:Shipmen and pilgrimes sailors and pilgrims, who seem to have in Chaucer's time amply [warranted] the proverbial imputation against "travellers' tales..|The Canterbury Tales|Geoffrey Chaucer|old
SENTENCE:"Oh, well, he will add, 'We are [warranted] in believing that this Fernand is not the illustrious Count of Morcerf, who also bears the same Christian name.'.|The Count of Monte Cristo|Alexandre Dumas, Pere|old
SENTENCE:the exact force of the phrase in the text is uncertain but Mr Wright seems to be [warranted] in supposing that Wade's adventures were cited as examples of craft and cunning -- that the hero, in fact, was a kind of Northern Ulysses.|The Canterbury Tales|Geoffrey Chaucer|old
COUNT:17
ENDWORD:*********************************************
WORD:warranty
warranted can be used as a noun
1. guarantee, warrant, warrantee, warranty -- (a written assurance that some product or service will be provided or will meet certain specifications)
1.
But with such general warranty of heave. - from The Complete Works of William Shakespeare by William Shakespeare