How To Use Debonair In A Sentence

  • Agnes is said of agna a lamb, for she was humble and debonair as a lamb, or of agnos in Greek, which is to say debonair and piteous, for she was debonair and merciful. The Golden Legend, vol. 2
  • A tailored jacket hung elegantly from his broad shoulders, giving him a debonair look.
  • He drew himself up, a smile of debonair gallantry lit up his face and as soon as the last figure of the ecossaise was ended, he clapped his hands to the musicians and shouted up to their gallery, addressing the first violin: War and Peace
  • Then Foxy Davis had seemed a debonair remotely superior, and glamorous personage.
  • He is supposed to be a charming and debonair ladies man.
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  • The debonair, sophisticated singer has tackled so many different styles that he transcends easy classification.
  • But his would-be debonair, self-satisfied yet insecure dotard could not be more appropriately laughable or pitiful.
  • The English norm was to simplify to a single consonant, which is what we find with commissionaire and concessionaire, presumably following the pattern of the much earlier borrowing debonair, and also doctrinaire, which are recorded for the most part with a single n. On one n or two
  • Andrew enjoyed golf and will be remembered for his debonair appearance, particularly the rakish angle of his trilby hat and his cream calfskin gloves.
  • But what is lightsome and blithe in her, was debonaire in him. CHAPTER XVIII
  • But when we meet he has a more debonair look. Times, Sunday Times
  • In this volatile period, tough-guy anti-heroes, populist salt-of-the-earth protagonists, and debonair dandy heroes shared the spotlight.
  • These are poets as moral actors voicing concerns and dilemmas; they are conscience-stricken purchasers, harassed homemakers, debonair lovers, anxious motorists and old grumps.
  • Ricardo Montalbán, a Mexican-born actor who starred in Hollywood dramas and candy-colored musicals in the 1940s and '50s and was perhaps best known as the debonair host of the TV drama Fantasy Island and as pitchman for the "soft Corinthian leather" of the Chrysler Cordoba, died Wednesday at his home in Los Angeles of congestive heart failure. HispanicTrending
  • In that portrait, now in the Louvre, Chardin looks more conventionally prepossessing: debonair, benign and smiling all over his face.
  • Andrew enjoyed golf and will be remembered for his debonair appearance, particularly the rakish angle of his trilby hat and his cream calfskin gloves.
  • He sang poetic songs of love and regret in a warm, expressive voice laced with debonair Gallic charm. Times, Sunday Times
  • The debonair stylist was an aficionado of organic produce long before it became fashionable.
  • Handsome doesn't even begin to describe how dashing and debonair he looks.
  • His caramel-colored hair was not styled today, making him appear slightly disarrayed and lending him a debonair, slightly rugged quality.
  • Nancy Pelosi looks great, and Obama is "debonair" and has never been more bone-able. TV SoundOff: Sunday Talking Heads
  • A small, dark man, dapper and debonair, swallow-tailed and top-hatted, was waltzing about the stage with dainty, mincing steps, and in a thin little voice singing something or other about somebody or something evidently pathetic. Amateur Night
  • In this volatile period, tough-guy anti-heroes, populist salt-of-the-earth protagonists, and debonair dandy heroes shared the spotlight.
  • But in the end, the debonair president with a touch for the common citizen came through with a landslide re-election victory.
  • The debonair drollery of that title sets the bar high, and keeps it high.
  • Would the ladies of a Unionist persuasion prefer the younger impetuous rascal type as their representative or the more mature, debonair sophisticate?
  • Another acquaintance of my morning saunter was the debonair Arkansas goldfinch, which has received its bunglesome name, not from the State of Birds of the Rockies
  • When men go grey and accept it, they exude suave, debonair confidence. The Sun
  • More often than not, Michael Douglas is known for playing suave, debonair men.
  • He could not have looked more suave or debonair had he walked out of the window of a fashion house in Recoleta, the upmarket district of his hometown Buenos Aires.
  • Beneath the colonnade, although urged on by a small band of string-players, the debonair couples are too involved in their flirtations and gossip to join the leaders of the dance.
  • When men go grey and accept it, they exude suave, debonair confidence. The Sun
  • Which caused Dominic Hamilton, one of the most suave and debonair boys I'd ever met, go absolutely nuts.
  • The royal equivalent of a Hollywood matinee idol, he was tall, suave, charming and debonair, with the unmistakeable look of his Hanoverian forebears.
  • Grant projects a steady threat of violence, as though he could go over the edge from debonair to deadly at any moment.
  • Gentle and debonair in manners, he knows how to be a submissive husband and cater to the needs of his sweetheart.
  • Equal parts rugged and debonair, but with a lurking tinge of insincerity somewhere in the curl of his lips and the sharp spark in his eyes. OFF THE CHART
  • He was charming, debonair, and a master of comedic timing.
  • One minute you could be all cool and debonair but the moment she enters, your legs turn to jelly.
  • He's debonair, smooth, handsome and slim like Moore.
  • The term debonair was indeed coined for Powell, and Lombard makes for an adorable ditz. John Farr: A Wistful Champagne Toast to William Powell
  • Hair, face and skin are pretty debonair, so is the sneakers and suit's comfort.
  • He was debonair, yet there seemed a sense of fun about him, as though he wasn't bound by the strict rules of his society.
  • Tall, trim and debonair, with rimless glasses and waves of silver hair, Hinton has a reputation for being level-headed and insightful, and has won praise for balancing out some of the stormier personalities within the Murdoch empire. Les Hinton: the rise and fall of Rupert Murdoch's most trusted lieutenant
  • He sang poetic songs of love and regret in a warm, expressive voice laced with debonair Gallic charm. Times, Sunday Times
  • Early Debonairs had 225 hp under the cowl, yet still offered cruise speeds near 160 knots on only about 13 gph.
  • He had not even climbed far into sensual decadence, a different mountain entirely, with play for the playboy tearing his crepe paper heart the inwardly lachrymose and outwardly debonair way that it did, with these bouts of sensing a woman's genitalia as vapid holes being banged as empty drums from inside by a man's stick; these conclusions that sex was just a bored erumpent man banging on any tin trash can in reach for a bit of sound and vibration, and brief moments of total, pellucid understanding called enlightenment as to the absolute absurdity of an instrument of urination being used for intimacy. An Apostate: Nawin of Thais
  • Arjun Khanna, a debonair Delhiite, nibbles on a cape gooseberry galette as he explains how remarkable it is that Pamela, a Scot, is reintroducing the locals to the delights of their own backyard. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • In this volatile period, tough-guy anti-heroes, populist salt-of-the-earth protagonists, and debonair dandy heroes shared the spotlight.
  • Before me is not the debonair, gentleman writer I had expected but an unshaven, dishevelled man with wild, curly grey hair and frayed clothing.
  • The royal equivalent of a Hollywood matinee idol, he was tall, suave, charming and debonair, with the unmistakeable look of his Hanoverian forebears.
  • Gentle and debonair in manners, he knows how to be a submissive husband and cater to the needs of his sweetheart.
  • But for now, the debonair local tunesmith is a high-class guy living in a lo-fi world.
  • Dan Brown and his debonair professor of "symbology" Robert Langdon have broken the stranglehold that celebrity autobiographies have held over December book sales in recent years to take the Christmas number one slot. Culture | guardian.co.uk
  • Generations ago Dysarts had been shot very conventionally at ten paces owing to this same debonair resistlessness; Dysarts had slipped into and out of all sorts of unsavoury messes on account of this fatal family failing; some had been neatly winged, some thrust through; some, in a more sordid age, permitted counsel of ability to explain to a jury how guiltless a careless gentleman could be under the most unfortunate and extenuating appearances. The Danger Mark
  • He grew into a dapper and debonair-seeming man who modelled himself on the film star Ronald Coleman.
  • He sang poetic songs of love and regret in a warm, expressive voice laced with debonair Gallic charm. Times, Sunday Times
  • He sang poetic songs of love and regret in a warm, expressive voice laced with debonair Gallic charm. Times, Sunday Times
  • The new story is set in a contemporary urban setting with Red as a sexy adult nightclub entertainer, the Wolf a debonair skirt chaser, and Grandma an oversexed man-chaser.
  • He strolled about, looking very debonair in his elegant new suit.
  • Dressed in a beige, linen Ermenegildo Zegna suit, he was every bit the suave, debonair businessman.
  • The first semi-final round will have the debonair Tony O'Neill, representing 3: AM Magazine, facing off against the fetching Maureen Tkacik (pronounced "Tay-sick," the announcer is told), representing The Crier or something. July 2007
  • Matthew Risch, lately of "Pal Joey," is smooth and debonair as Sky Masterson, the high-rolling sharpie who wins the heart of Miss Sarah Brown Morgan James, the dishy Salvation Army doll who longs to save the souls of all the heels on Broadway. Joy in Runyonland
  • And she, warm with what Dick had just told of him, pleasured at the goodly sight of him, dwelling with her eyes on the light, high poise of head, the careless, sun-sanded hair, and the lightness, almost debonaireness, of his carriage despite his weight of body and breadth of shoulders. CHAPTER XXIII
  • Less rugged and robust than debonair and sophisticated, he attracted modern, independent women who appreciated his flair.
  • Less rugged and robust than debonair and sophisticated, he attracted modern, independent women who appreciated his flair.
  • Ricardo Montalban (88) actor best known as the debonair and mysterious Mr. Roarke on the popular TV series MINISTER OF RANTS
  • He would be handsome, intelligent and debonair, but affable and always approachable, and on top of that he would always be wise, loving and kind.
  • But when we meet he has a more debonair look. Times, Sunday Times
  • Seiffert's free verse is not as good as her debonair balladry, nor are the poems of Elijah Hay equal to those of Emanuel Morgan or Anne Knish.
  • When I am 71, can I be as suave, good-looking and debonair as the late Sacha Distel?
  • Luciana appears near incoherent (based on Giovanni's side of the conversation) and her debonair, eloquent lover a frazzled and henpecked rube.
  • Rome which is called the market of Trajan, and then he remembered of the justice and other good deeds of Trajan, and how he had been piteous and debonair, and was much sorrowful that he had been a paynim, and he turned to the church of S. Peter wailing for the horror of the miscreance of Trajan. The Golden Legend, vol. 3
  • He was a handsome, debonair, death-defying racing-driver.
  • He was for five decades a debonair man about town, a swinger musically and socially, the house pianist on the Playboy TV show and not a guy who had to make do with Hef's leavings from the grotto. Broadway's Last Good Time
  • life that is gay, brisk, and debonair
  • Morris' reputational problem is undoubtedly connected to the fact that the debonair, funny, omnicompetent man does not fit our template of a Founder.
  • These are poets as moral actors voicing concerns and dilemmas; they are conscience-stricken purchasers, harassed homemakers, debonair lovers, anxious motorists and old grumps.
  • “Women like a man with a sensitive side,” Nutz said, chewing a piece of hyena gristle that dangled out of his mouth, giving him a debonair, devil-may-care air. My Brain is a Pre-Historic Babe Magnet
  • The waiters (to a man debonair and charming) overfill the glasses and it is a somewhat acquired taste - like sucking raw damsons - but once you get over the astringency, it is appealingly cheap.
  • I desperately wanted to seem worldly, cool, suave, and debonair—sarcastically pronounced “deboner” around the eighth-grade girl’s lunch table. Chocolate for a Lover’s Heart
  • A glittering tribute to Michael Jackson will have you swaying your neck to the beat of "Thriller," while the costume exhibit will lure you to long flowing gowns, sweat-stained debonair ensembles, crystal-encrusted bodices such as the one worn in Swan Lake and even M.C. Hammer's infamous harem pants. Maria Russo: Saratoga Springs: Mineral Baths, Museums And Homemade Potato Chips
  • Marc McSharry and Barry Duignan play the debonair students, Michael Roper the money-chasing, carpet-bagging uncle.
  • Ricardo Montalban was perhaps best known as the debonair Mr. Roarke on the popular TV-show "Fantasy Island. Undefined
  • a debonair gentleman

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