All 35 Uses
exile
in
A Dance With Dragons
(Auto-generated)
- Bittersteel saw the strength of House Blackfyre scattering to the four winds, so he formed the Golden Company to bind the exiles together.†
p. 86.3 *
- They were exiles and sons of exiles, dispossessed and unforgiven ...yet formidable fighters still.†
p. 86.4
- They were exiles and sons of exiles, dispossessed and unforgiven ...yet formidable fighters still.†
p. 86.4
- And Daenerys will give the exiles what Bitter-steel and the Blackfyres never could.†
p. 86.7
- Braavos provided a Lyseni exile with a hundred warships, Aegon Targaryen flew forth from Dragon-stone on the Black Dread, and Myr and Lys rose up in rebellion.†
p. 205.9
- He must be, to remain so fiercely loyal to the grandson of the king who took his lands and titles and sent him into exile.†
p. 306.1
- And when the piss-water prince was safely dead, the eunuch smuggled you across the narrow sea to his fat friend the cheesemonger, who hid you on a poleboat and found an exile lord willing to call himself your father.†
p. 306.4
- I know that she spent her childhood in exile, impoverished, living on dreams and schemes, running from one city to the next, always fearful, never safe, friendless but for a brother who was by all accounts half-mad ...a brother who sold her maidenhood to the Dothraki for the promise of an army.†
p. 306.8
- By they, you mean the slavers, the exiles she drove from Astapor and Meereen.†
p. 315.6
- Whatever their sires or their grandsires might have been back in Westeros before their exile, the men of the Golden Company were sell-swords now, and no sellsword could be trusted.†
p. 336.6
- Even the men who'd ridden with him might not recognize the exile lord Jon Connington of the fiery red beard in the lined, clean-shaved face and dyed blue hair of the sell-sword Griff.†
p. 340.6
- "We want no songs about the gallant exile," the eunuch had tittered, in that mincing voice of his.†
p. 340.7
- Soldier to the bone, Toyne was fierce but always fair, a father to his men and always generous to the exile lord Jon Connington.†
p. 341.5
- Jon Connington might have been one of those successors if his exile had gone otherwise.†
p. 341.8
- "Gold for four generations," Harry would boast, as if four generations of exile and defeat were something to take pride in.†
p. 343.3
- He had exiled two of his Hands and burned a third.†
p. 352.2exiled = forced to leave one's homeland
- Wealthy knights from Houses old in honor did not cross the narrow sea to sell their swords, unless exiled for some infamy.†
p. 353.2
- Exiles or the sons of exiles.†
p. 360.7
- Exiles or the sons of exiles.†
p. 360.7
- She forgot Moat Cailin and Ramsay Bolton and his little piece of skin, forgot the kingsmoot, forgot her failure, forgot her exile and her enemies and her husband.†
p. 367.2
- When Stark drove me into exile, I fled to Lys with my second wife.†
p. 397.4
- Some exiled lord has hired the Golden Company to win back his lands for him.†
p. 400.1exiled = forced to leave one's homeland
- All the other exiles are sailing west, or so these old ears have heard.†
p. 402.8
- Twice exiled, and small wonder Tyrion thought.†
p. 480.7exiled = forced to leave one's homeland
- I'd exile him too if I could.†
p. 480.7
- Ser Jorah has exiled me from our cabin.†
p. 581.9exiled = forced to leave one's homeland
- The rest of Meereen might see him as an amusing curiosity, like the exiled Summer Islander King Robert used to keep at King's Landing, but the queen had always spoken to him gently.†
p. 874.1
- In his youth, Jon Connington had shared the disdain most knights had for bowmen, but he had grown wiser in exile.†
p. 876.1
- After the Battle of the Bells, when Aerys Targaryen had stripped him of his titles and sent him into exile in a mad fit of ingratitude and suspicion, the lands and lordship had remained within House Connington, passing to his cousin Ser Ronald, the man whom Jon had made his castellan when he went to King's Landing to attend Prince Rhaegar.†
p. 879.9
- "Tywin Lannister himself could have done no more," he had insisted one night to Blackheart, during his first year of exile.†
p. 881.2
- I am your rightful lord, returned from exile.†
p. 882.4
- Promises of land and promises of gold may suffice for some, but Strickland and his men will expect first claim on the choicest fields and castles, those that were taken from their forebears when they fled into exile.†
p. 885.1
- Let King's Landing think this is no more than an exile lord coming home with some hired swords to reclaim his birthright.†
p. 887.5
- In Dagon's day a weak king sat the Iron Throne, his rheumy eyes fixed across the narrow sea where bastards and exiles plotted rebellion.†
p. 910.9
- They spoke of how the woman had wept and begged, of the desperate way she clung to her garments when she was commanded to disrobe, of her futile efforts to cover her breasts and her sex with her hands as she hobbled barefoot and naked through the streets to exile.†
p. 934.4
Definitions:
-
(1)
(exile) to force someone to live outside of their homeland; or living in such a condition
or more rarely: voluntary absence from a place someone would rather be - (2) (meaning too rare to warrant focus)