baby-faced

ADJECTIVE
  1. having a youthful-looking face
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How To Use baby-faced In A Sentence

  • Even Eliot Ness would have had his hands full with this baby-faced crew.
  • For over a decade, baby-faced Big Sandy has nailed the sound and swagger of Western swing, hillbilly boogie, or whatever else revivalists are dubbing it today.
  • The baby-faced A-level student, who viewers have seen struggling to overcome his stammer, promises ‘to work hard and give my fans everything they deserve for giving me this opportunity’.
  • As I stood in the middle of the ballroom, smoothing out a crease on a white linen napkin and inhaling the sweet scent of lilies, the worst news I could possibly imagine was being delivered by a baby-faced representative from the D.C. Opera Company. Skipping a Beat
  • Cora's evolution, from a cheeky, baby-faced first year student in Ballinrobe Community School, has been remarkable.
  • He is a short man in a gray suit who manages to look both baby-faced and wizened at the same time. Johann Hari: Promoting Anorexia: An Interview With Kenneth Tong. This Was No Hoax
  • In her first major film, in 1997 as Keanu Reeves' wife in Devil's Advocate, she negotiated the transformation from vibrant baby-faced blonde to wasted madwoman.
  • Strippers, dead poets and baby-faced gangsters helped make 2002 a memorable year for theatre in Toronto.
  • Hundreds of baby-faced teenagers from around the country serve as the guard of honour, donning black capes and sombre expressions as they take turns watching over the lily-decked crypt.
  • It is worth a peek, however for the many cast members who went on to bigger and better things (Laura Dern, Christine Lahti and a baby-faced Ray Winstone are all very good; Lane is merely okay). 2009 February : Scrubbles.net
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