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Bohemia

[ US /boʊˈhimiə/ ]
NOUN
  1. a historical area and former kingdom in the Czech Republic

How To Use Bohemia In A Sentence

  • It was in stark contrast to her usual bohemian style. The Sun
  • Settling in Carmel, Calif., in 1930, she and Mr. Newell joined a bohemian community that included the photographer Edward Weston and the journalist Lincoln Steffens.
  • She loved the earthy, Bohemian feel of the place. Times, Sunday Times
  • Let's be honest, the tan-demic is really fashion's fault: In the last five years we've seen a very bohemian/hippie/California-girl style reign supreme, and naturally (no pun intended), what goes better with boho than a faux glow (or Uggs, for that matter)? Verena von Pfetten: Tan Is The New Tacky
  • Violins and clarinets were used in instrumental combinations in all areas, with the bagpipe (ubiquitous since the Middle Ages) prevalent in Bohemia, and the double bass and dulcimer in Moravia.
  • The magazine's tony mix of intellect and bohemian chic was the perfect home for Gladwell's innate quirkiness. His obsessive theorizing was no longer weird.
  • Detached translations also exist in Italian, Flemish, and Bohemian. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
  • The West, from Rome to Britain, was called into action; the kings of Poland and Bohemia obeyed the summons of Conrad; and it is affirmed by the Greeks and Latins, that, in the passage of a strait or river, the Byzantine agents, after a tale of nine hundred thousand, desisted from the endless and formidable computation. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • Snapperton do last year at her dejeune dansant after the Bohemian The History of Pendennis
  • He vagabonded his way to Paris and immediately settled into a bohemian life.
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