How To Use Denizen In A Sentence

  • Fussell’s topmost denizens were “out of sight” in hilltop manses at the end of long, curving driveways. Class Dismissed
  • For this play to work, as it did so well in Cunningham, you need a strong, activist local community whose denizens talk across partisan political lines.
  • Since we are far from a global citizenship, we are aware of the fact that a status grounded on denizenship will also exclude some residents in Europe.
  • With the progress of civilization all over the world, forest dwellers that were hunters and fruit gatherers have turned into denizens of the concrete jungle.
  • _So few_ has long been denizened; no wonder, since it is nothing more than _si peu_ Anglicized. Among My Books First Series
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  • If he is that different from the present denizens, perhaps his influence may extend to more tolerance toward detector users?
  • Evidently the good denizens of the street were too busy fretting about the economy to concern themselves with such small geographical matters.
  • The beautiful natural forests in which several species of animals and birds are denizens rank high among the natural resources.
  • There were a few islets in the sand, a kind of oases of mud and clay, in laminae no thicker than paper, and these were at once denizened by various weeds. Himalayan Journals — Complete
  • He insists that the denizens at the Guinness Book of World Records have given him the permission for the talkathon and were even watching his event closely.
  • Denizens of coastal waters in the Pacific, sea otters were pursued for centuries for their thick, soft pelts.
  • The solitary denizen of the plains -- the little minivet A Bird Calendar for Northern India
  • Donald stooped and lifted the tike to his shoulder, marveling the while that such a cherub could be the product of any of the denizens of the Sawdust Pile. Kindred of the Dust
  • And I have a garden, a luxury for all but the richest denizens of the capital. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now another denizen, the Chinese paddlefish, Psephurus gladius — which measures up to 20 feet long and decades ago was commonly seen leaping above the waters — appears to be on the verge of extinction, if not already gone forever. A Paddlefish Warning, from China
  • Mainstream journalists used to leave such muckraking to the denizens of the swamp where tabloid reporters reside. Not any more.
  • Denizen Hotels website remains fairly vague - lots of flash and plenty of sleek, chic introductions to the Denizen concept - here's what we know so far: the brand will be aimed at the "globally conscious modern traveler," with the word denizen meant to be interpreted as "citizen of the world. HotelChatter -
  • No author, excepting Pope, has done so much to endenizen the eminent poets of antiquity.
  • Anyway, the finny denizens for which Orkney is renowned are these odd trout; brown trout on the face of it but happy enough in the brine.
  • Babystars, fleabane, and the aptly name fireweed, post-fire denizens of the vegetation world, had already sprouted and were laying claim to the barren slopes. News Review - Top Stories
  • Denizen will initially be targeted at consumers in China, Singapore, South Korea, and eventually India.
  • Now, brethren, that is true in regard to our present imperfect denizenship within the city; and it is true in regard to men's passing into it in its perfect and final form. Expositions of Holy Scripture Isaiah and Jeremiah
  • The loom-rooms seem tenanted by huge, misshapen denizens of some preadamic world. Floyd Grandon's Honor
  • As a Roman military outpost, and with the aid of its uncouth denizens, the island was used as a staging point for the invasion of Great Britain.
  • In fact he doubted very much if this fast-flowing freshwater stream harboured denizens capable of inflicting such damage. CASCADES - THE DAY OF THE DEAD
  • It's enough to just think in a certain way, slap yourself on the back, and pity the uneducated, unliberated denizens of mainstream culture.
  • In Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels, Lemuel Gulliver voyages to a country called Laputa all of whose denizens are lost inside themselves. Erica Jong: Lost in Laputa
  • If the Venice boardwalk is a human circus, as many observers have described it, then the long, keyhole-shaped pier that abuts it is an angling circus, a narrow strip of concrete where the exotic and unpredictable denizens of the Pacific Ocean-needlefish have been reeled up onto the pier; occasionally someone hooks a sea lion-meet the exotic and unpredictable anglers of Los Angeles. Fishing the Venice Beach Pier
  • The multigeneration denizens of public housing can readily be compared to Karl Marx's lumpenproletariat.
  • And to fight that evolution with language conservatism, or to react in a way that the denizens of Language Log would say requires "langer management," that seems a bit petty. My mechanic Steve
  • It has the added advantage of not disturbing the denizens of the forest who assume that the people crossing it are orang-utans!
  • Some denizen of East Nowhere above asserts that “a taco is a hard shell corn tortilla folded in half w/refritos, beef, cheese, lettuce and tomatoes.” Matthew Yglesias » The View From Your Breakfast
  • We talk for quite a while, their cigarettes aglow, while I watch a local denizen pass by on the sidewalk three times.
  • The Kingdom not only assimilated persons of all races, but actively promoted bringing them to Hawaii, giving them citizenship or denizenship and integrating them into the racial fabric of this land. Hawaii Reporter
  • And that's before we even get to the more bizarre denizens of the deep.
  • Excited denizens have waited with bated breath as the clock ticked by - months, days, hours and finally the big moment itself.
  • Left to his own devices, the denizen of hamburger restaurants would eat fresh carrots and brown rice, his natural choices.
  • Once again, I leave my gentle readers to draw their own conclusions about this hateful, evil nation and its unpleasant denizens, with their incessant foul language and their flip-top heads.
  • Lindsay-Abaire, who won a Pulitzer Prize for "Rabbit Hole," his absorbing study of a grieving family that became a movie with Nicole Kidman, is working in a more acerbically comic vein in "Good People," the story of McDormand's Margaret Walsh, a hard-luck single mom and lifelong denizen of heavily Irish working-class South Boston. In New York, 'Good People' a sign of hope for this theater season
  • Real-world visitors are occasionally summoned by otherworld denizens of striking aspect: of miniature size, or unusual colour. The Times Literary Supplement
  • As with most movies of this genre, the cautionary example about man himself being more deadly that the undead denizens of destruction around him gets a tired repeat here.
  • Its as if the last eight years of the Chimp and friends had never happened ... and the minds of these denizens of one of the 'bestest' and 'bwighttest' little 'pwo-gwessive' states in our fair Union had been wiped clean of all 'remembrances of things past'. AlterNet.org Main RSS Feed
  • With his exit from the men's singles yesterday another denizen of the baseline bit Wimbledon dust.
  • Which brings us to the Denizen desking system - actually a series of casework based desk/wall units, and clever freestanding components and tables. Denizen desking from coalesse
  • So enjoy being up, you world-weary denizens of the night; there is some stuff on the tube worth watching.
  • The denizens, be they peers or peasants, are weighed down by tradition and inertia, living out their lives according to exactly the same patterns as their ancestors.
  • It was well worth the detour, as they have a very nice museum with impressive mounted skeletons of an entelodont, a towering chalicothere, and some smaller denizens of the Miocene savannah.
  • We'd like to think about our tools, ideas and practices as if we were native denizens of some wiser and more advanced civilization!
  • Ground pine is a rare denizen on the North Downs.
  • Catering to the denizens ' demand for water is a tough proposition for local governing bodies.
  • Although they are amphibians, caecilians are denizens of the terrestrial underworld.
  • Leafy veggies which are not sold are stacked into vegetating piles which emanate a stink and consequently create health hazards for denizens.
  • It was as if he walked in a new and monstrously populous jungle and was unacquainted with its ways and denizens. CHAPTER XXV
  • We finished our drinks quickly and left double quick before the face eaters got any closer and just as one denizen of the night started to give Chaz the evil eye: Cyclops style.
  • It was as if they had landed on an alien planet, his fear that of awakening the denizens, giant and menacing.
  • Its denizens slip hyperactively in and out of view like character actors with coffee addictions and inspired agents.
  • A twisted and wizened complex of apish features, perforated by upturned, sky-open, Mongolian nostrils, by a mouth that sagged from a huge upper-lip and faded precipitately into a retreating chin, by peering querulous eyes that blinked as blink the eyes of denizens of monkey-cages. THE RED ONE
  • The philosophical beliefs of a mid-19th-century denizen of the British Museum are all too quickly elided with the most terrible atrocities of the 20th century as an all-purpose intellectual get-out card. Why Marx Was Right by Terry Eagleton – review
  • To close the tale, about three months after the battle of Nancy, the banished Earl of Oxford resumed his name of Philip son, bringing with his lady some remnants of their former wealth, which enabled them to procure a commodious residence near to Geierstein; and the Landamman’s interest in the state procured for them the right of denizenship. Anne of Geierstein
  • The ratel, sable, and genet belong only to the north; the beaver is found nowhere but in the Khabour and middle Euphrates; the alligator, if a denizen of the region at all exists only in the The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon The History, Geography, And Antiquities Of Chaldaea, Assyria, Babylon, Media, Persia, Parthia, And Sassanian or New Persian Empire; With Maps and Illustrations.
  • The dirty-minded denizens of "Avenue Q" have plopped their smutty little selves down in the Lansburgh Theatre for the next few weeks, bringing into that Shakespeare Theatre Company space their eternally delectable grab bag of postmodern wisecracks. 'Avenue Q' at the Lansburgh Theatre: Smutty puppets in a Shakespeare temple?
  • Deer, foxes and squirrels are among the denizens of the forest.
  • This, in turn, set the stage for the origin of eukaryotes (from the very tightly packed denizens of the stromatolite mats), which eventually set the stage for multicellularity. Ancient Predator Revealed!
  • For drink, the denizen of the high table-land find his favourite beverage -- the rival of champagne -- in the core of the gigantic aloe; while he of the tropic coast-land refreshes himself from the juice of another native endogen, the acrocomia palm. The War Trail The Hunt of the Wild Horse
  • The large sculptural frieze is an attempt to portray a stringent penance witnessed both by heavenly hosts and the denizens of the netherworld.
  • The Daily News ran a poll the other day on the things that most annoy the local denizens.
  • Real-world visitors are occasionally summoned by otherworld denizens of striking aspect: of miniature size, or unusual colour. The Times Literary Supplement
  • I believe the web we should all strive to create is one where people have respect to each other, not a dark dungeon denizened by some freak trollers. Web 2.0 Asia
  • The task of seeing an important trial at the Old Bailey is by no means a pleasant business, unless you be what the denizens of the Court would call "one of the swells '-- so as to enjoy the privilege of being a benchfellow with the judge on the seat of judgment. Phineas Redux
  • Humorous description of the appearance and the denizens of this slum area of London.
  • Steeped in history, this vast expanse of beautiful tree-lined avenues has turned into a major stress buster for its denizens: a transformation over the last five years.
  • As Burns scampered up the narrow stairs to the quarterdeck, the gunfire abruptly ended: Either Smith had run out of ammunition or she had heaved herself through the hole, and Smith, like Wilson, was a denizen of the living world no more. The Monstrumologist
  • In fact he doubted very much if this fast-flowing freshwater stream harboured denizens capable of inflicting such damage. CASCADES - THE DAY OF THE DEAD
  • Still I do not think I would enjoy denizenship within its gorgeous borders now, as then, when composed in the main of modest two-story structures and Mexican adobes. Recollections and reflections : an auto of half a century and more,
  • So my buzzcasts go out and they try to break in and libelous pictures of Sill get passed around campuses and electronic office parks and meanwhile, my storewell gets nondescriptly dumped into Gabrielle Denizen†™ s system in Managua. 365 tomorrows » 2007 » November : A New Free Flash Fiction SciFi Story Every Day
  • I shall get them either naturalized or endenizened by the Queen.
  • Fontevrault, but the bonds uniting the English nunneries to the mother-house were gradually loosened until from alien they became denizen, that is to say, practically independent. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 6: Fathers of the Church-Gregory XI
  • With cell-phones, PCs, meishi name cards and glasses of beer in hand, the "tweeting" denizens of cyberspace gather to exchange knowledge and share new concepts and projects and, if they're lucky, leave the venue with a pleasant buzz and a pile of useful contacts. Paul robinson
  • No matter the setting denizens of adventure games all seem to suffer from short - term memory loss.
  • Mauritania's famous Nouadhibou beach-camp is not the same as it once was, but French anglers in particular still go there to chase after the denizens of its surf - with large rays and guitarfish still the main attraction.
  • Increasingly, it's not just the wizened erasing life's battle scars, but the under 30 on a quest for subtle enhancement -- and unlike the Upper East Side denizens whispering in hushed voices about a recent "procedure," they're not afraid to Twitter about it. Adrien Field: Beauty Is in the Wallet of the Beholder
  • How vaguely odd was this beauty, he reflected, too; how alien in its effect to that of any other woman in sturdy England, and how associable it was, somehow, with every wild and gracious denizen of the woods which blossomed yonder. Chivalry
  • To close the tale, about three months after the battle Nancy, the banished Earl of Oxford resumed his name of Philipson, bringing with his lady some remnants of their former wealth, which enabled them to procure a commodious residence near to Geierstein; and the Landamman's interest in the state procured for them the right of denizenship. The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 13, No. 373, Supplementary Number
  • Villages of mud huts dot the hillsides and oases of green amid the barren wilderness provide sanctuary for its denizens.
  • At heart, though, the ferret is a denizen of the countryside, a weasel closely related to the European polecat and the mink.
  • Beat’s outer trappings — black turtlenecks, cigarette pants, neckerchiefs, berets — is indebted less to Jack Kerouac and his wayward cohort, who slouched about in frayed flannel shirts, than to stylized interpretations in movies like “Funny Face” or the less well-known “Subterraneans,’’ a 1960 film based on a Kerouac novel about the kinky denizens of North Beach in San Francisco. August 2006
  • He thanked Allen for the “chance to show that I’m a whole human being, something more than a long-term denizen of the dugout.” Sound and Fury
  • If large consignments of brown trousers and bicycle clips are not being delivered to the back door of Number 10, then its denizens are too stupid to survive.
  • Downey has called the denizen of 221B Baker Street an early superhero. Denver Post: News: Breaking: Local
  • You'll find all sorts of denizens like our friendly holothurian here. Ugly Overload
  • In fact he doubted very much if this fast-flowing freshwater stream harboured denizens capable of inflicting such damage. CASCADES - THE DAY OF THE DEAD
  • But, for the denizens of the Temple City, there are still avenues to get quality products at the most competitive price, if only they repose their faith in the products manufactured by Self-Help Groups.
  • Your epic fantasy novel, The Dragons of Duncan's Ass Tattoo, can portray My Ass Tattoo's blue-skinned denizens, their miniature zeppelins, and their sphincter-worshipping rituals either accurately or inaccurately, with or without prejudice, but you ain't going to be appropriating their culture until you start covering yourseves in woad, living in airships and pouring libations to The One True Hole. Cultural Appropriation
  • Bikini Bottom is periodically swept by fads and crazes, its denizens rushing around in a volatile teenybopper horde, cheering or booing or raving on the beach to shudders of Dick Dale-ish guitar. SpongeBob's Golden Dream
  • Its denizens now sense that the American people no longer wish to subsidize their defense only to earn ingratitude.
  • It was as if they had landed on an alien planet, his fear that of awakening the denizens, giant and menacing.
  • Taken from four decades of popular dance, "Neighborhood Ballroom" is a major production piece, ranging from Belle Époque serenity to a wild Latin American mambo show, all viewed through the lens of a night club denizen known as the Poet. Marconews.com Stories
  • The crocodile dragonfish is one of the stranger-looking denizens of Antarctic waters the spiny plunderfish is a bottom-dweller
  • Deep sea denizens such as the feather star inhabit caves in the wall.
  • At heart, though, the ferret is a denizen of the countryside, a weasel closely related to the European polecat and the mink.
  • I headed to the pub, and was stunned by the noise, the crowd, the smoke and the astonishing quantities of alcohol that were being necked by the denizens of Carlisle.
  • It is true also that there were many autocratic denizens of the quarterdeck whom a speck of dust would render apoplectic, but who were not in the least interested in accurate gunnery.
  • At heart, though, the ferret is a denizen of the countryside, a weasel closely related to the European polecat and the mink.
  • From the constitution of government we get the rights of denizenship, including the rights to remain on and return to the location of our birth, and citizenship, including the rights of voting and holding office.
  • Villages of mud huts dot the hillsides and oases of green amid the barren wilderness provide sanctuary for its denizens.
  • Gysin's reputation as a postwar decadent precedes him (he was a restaurateur in Tangier and a Beat Hotel denizen in Paris, and contributed to Alice B. Toklas 'much-touted cookbook), but his oeuvre, in its many forms, has been all too little appraised, much less appreciated, as art. Peter Frank: Blague d'Art: Brion Gysin, Together at Last
  • Penguins are restricted to the Southern Hemisphere where they are oceanic or coastal denizens.
  • A twisted and wizened complex of apish features, perforated by upturned, sky-open, Mongolian nostrils, by a mouth that sagged from a huge upper lip and faded precipitately into a retreating chin, and by peering, querulous eyes that blinked as blink the eyes of denizens of monkey-cages. The Red One
  • Their fleshy leaves readily absorb and retain moisture because most of these plants are denizens of the desert.
  • * A denizen is precisely determined by calculating the generalized autoregressive conditional heteroscedascticity of the standard deviation of "residents", passed through a Bayesian filter, and finally normalized through a time-delay, reentrant neural net optimized with genetic algorithm parameter narrowing. Countdown to SL backlash
  • He must manage not only the logistics of the project, but also the security, as the 'dig' is often under attack by the denizens of the wall. REVIEW: Escapement by Jay Lake
  • The sovereign cannot make a citizen by any act of his own; he can confer denizenship, but this does not make a man either a citizen or subject.
  • Second, a number of questions about the relationship between migrants and states are raised by the continually changing nature of membership seen in dramatic increases in dual citizenship and denizenship.
  • Gannets are denizens of the open ocean.
  • As used in this place (hamsaya) has exactly the force of our word denizen ... it is a point of honor for every man to protect his Humsauyehs ... one of the few quarrels I have heard of among the Dooraunees, originated in an injury offered to a Humsauyeh. Connecting Histories in Afghanistan: Market Relations and State Formation on a Colonial Frontier
  • Far out in the north Atlantic, they are now dredging down to 1000 metres or more and bringing up millions of bug-eyed denizens of the deep, many of which are regarded as delicacies in France.
  • For it is virtue that gives glory; that will endenizen a man everywhere. Discoveries Made Upon Men and Matter and Some Poems
  • The bath occupied most of the rest of the hour, and when he returned to the overbank desk he once more resembled a human being instead of a denizen of Hivehom's jungles. Orphan Star
  • He would play an equal part in rearing our children and help them become good denizens of the country.
  • The cuisine is based on those familiar denizens of the Adriatic - prawns, squid, mussels, fish of various kinds - that grace the tables of nine out of every ten Venetian restaurants; what is different is the way the finny tribe is prepared.
  • The shabby redbrick facades of Het Straatje, or the little street, drowse like its denizens in the midsummer heat.
  • denizens of field and forest
  • More to the geographic point, McDonagh is targeting life on Inishmaan in the Aran Islands, a collection of remote, scenic rocks where the rugged denizens have for centuries been tolerating the punishing elements - and one another. McDonagh's 'Cripple of Inishmaan': Fiendishly funny sendup of rural Irish life
  • V.F. contributing editor David Kamp and the saucy Marion Rosenfeld's The Food Snob's Dictionary (Broadway) enlightens denizens of Hooters-style breastaurants about the finer points of "forcemeat" whilst delighting those high-hat cuisinerds who can gas on about "fair trade" until the grass-fed, free-range cows come home. Hot Type
  • If he is that different from the present denizens, perhaps his influence may extend to more tolerance toward detector users?
  • To this callosity of nature it was due that William Castle, a foreign denizen of Bristol who had the hardihood to incur the marital tie there, was called upon, as related elsewhere, to serve at sea in the very heyday of his honeymoon. The Press-Gang Afloat and Ashore
  • denizens of the deep
  • Western Civilization needs to systematically rethink its notions of free thought, freedom of speech, denizenship, and citizenship. Latest Articles
  • To have called the pub the Elephant and Howdah would have consternated the denizens of the district. Your Letters: Military Suicides; Michael Caine
  • It should surprise no one that this bizarre scene inspired the first collaboration between gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson and artist Ralph Steadman, who companioned Thompson's addled prose with grotesque sketches of the race's denizens. Matthew DeBord: The Kentucky Derby: The Most Surreal and Seedy Spectacle in All of Sports
  • Ontario Moggs, who was at any rate honest in his philanthropy, and who did in truth believe that it was better that twenty real bootmakers should eat beef daily than that one so-called bootmaker should live in a country residence, -- who believed this and acted on his belief, though he was himself not of the twenty, but rather the one so-called bootmaker who would suffer by the propagation of such a creed, -- was beloved and almost worshipped by the denizens of the Cheshire Cheese. Ralph the Heir
  • In the case that there is no institution concerning denizenship in the country concerned but there is the equivalent right to the denizenship it will be acknowledged as denizenship.
  • Thanks to Alistair (an old net.friend from the long-ago days when I was still a practicing BOFH and denizen of the Scary Devil Monastery) and Ken at Telligent (the fine programmers of Community Server), the problem has been cleared up and anonymous posts are once again enabled. 2005 April
  • Magic ultimately brings only disaster to those in thrall to it; the denizens of faerie are singularly deceitful and inhumane; mankind is the better for having forgotten how to conjure and bewitch.
  • One of the stranger denizens of the coastal sandy plains we found was Euphorbia ipecacuanhae.
  • lost man, these brambles part for your boots, denizened to my lot your hand upon my stem now grasps the last shoots of summer choose me for your chaplet, sweetheart. wasted were my early flowers The Best American Poetry 2008
  • On such a morning, then, when the vast concave of the heavens, expanded in a perfectly spotless azure sky (such as in our foggy isle is never seen); and with the freshness of the bush developing its verdure in the odorous exudations of floriferous plants, and the blithesome exuberance of the songless denizens of nature's nemoral aviary; William took his departure on the mission we have detailed in the last chapter. Fern Vale (Volume 1) or the Queensland Squatter
  • In this telling of the tale, the Respectorate is defeated by the land of Oh-Tee-Tee, "whose denizens, the Otters, are devoted to all forms of excess", and who are led by Soraya, the Insultana of Ott, with her battle-cry "We expectorate on the Respectorate! Luka and the Fire of Life by Salman Rushdie - review
  • Leave such déclassé parlance to the denizens of Dunkin Donuts.
  • No author, excepting Pope, has done so much to endenizen the eminent poets of antiquity. The Dramatic Works of John Dryden
  • Ironically, the ultra-modern solar-powered weasel would appear to be some form of very powerful and incomprehensible magic to those actual denizens of the Stone Age who had to make do with napped-flint powered chickens and crude wooden pedals to drive their dormice. The Contrivances - A History (Part One)
  • The focus this time around is on the extreme environments of the deep ocean floor and the weird and wonderful denizens that flourish there.
  • It was as if they had landed on an alien planet, his fear that of awakening the denizens, giant and menacing.
  • The hilarious subtext is that the pirate ship is home to a cast of homosexual men (including denizens such as Peter Poop who has a wine-cork for a nose). Aargh?
  • Afterwards, we blundered through the back streets and alleys, and I met the everyday denizens, including the derelicts.
  • Denizens of the world of art naturally see the whole thing rather differently, viewing a critical platform as a useful vehicle for the dissemination of, say, the latest modish orthodoxies.
  • The denizens of this world are so lost in falsity and nothingness that they convict themselves even in their vain defenses of the disgusting behavior at issue. Matthew Yglesias » Penn Again
  • The man behind Mister H is Armin Amiri , who many denizens of the scene will recognize from his time at those Studio 54s of the last decade, Bungalow 8 and Socialista, the latter of which shut its doors just before Christmas in 2008. A Return to Nightlife Scene With Mister H
  • Interestingly, the Spectator notes that Romney's move to the right on gay marriage has left him caught in a kind of pincer movement between left wing activists and denizens of the religious right: Conservative Mag Smacks Romney For Pro-Gay-Rights Comments
  • Untouched by the refining force of kairos, wild nature and its savage denizens were shown in their original, unperfected state.
  • Then there are the denizens of the juke joint, shouting through their drunkenness that they'll be at confessional on Sunday morning.
  • The term denizen literally means 'citizen of the world,'" Klein said in a statement. Statesman - AP Sports
  • Denizens of the Seattle blogosphere and loyal readers of this site will recall the dustup which ensued when Capitol Hill’s Victrola Coffee & Art decided to turn off its free 802.11 wireless service on weekends. Free Coffeehouse Wireless Redux: University Zoka | Seattle Metblogs
  • The police team sees the worst that humanity has to offer, at all levels of society from streetwalkers and drug dealers to the wealthy denizens of high-priced suburbs.
  • When the rest of the city is shuffling off to work, the denizens of Allenby 40, dubbed the city's "sleaziest" club by Tablet Magazine
  • denizens of the deep
  • Kit Keith, a longtime St. Louis resident now based in Brooklyn, is a denizen of thrift shops, where she locates such early 1950s treasures as linoleum samples, flowered wallpaper and aging account ledgers.
  • The term denizen literally means 'citizen of the world,'" said Ross Klein, global head of Hilton's Luxury & Lifestyle Brands division. Interior Design Industry News
  • If your yard is wet, however, plant bog plants and denizens of the damp.
  • I asked Joe which moth he dreamt of seeing one fine night, and he chose the alchymist, a woodland denizen that feeds on oak and elm. Wildwood
  • However, the forest denizens took over the ceremony and brought the humans to judgment for unexpiated crimes against their own kind. Wole Soyinka: Africa's Role in the Slave Trade and its Consequences
  • How vaguely odd it was, he reflected, too, how alien in its effect to that of any other woman in sturdy England, and how associable it was, somehow, with every wild and gracious denizen of the woods which blossomed yonder. Chivalry
  • Within a week from the 10th of August, the denizens of the municipality had searched the rooms for any relics which might be discovered there indicatory of a feeling inimical to the La Vend�e
  • Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the Honey Badger or ratel mellivora capensis Not as cuddly as the other denizens of the Village Zoo, but it has 'tude to spare. July 13th, 2007
  • A twisted and wizened complex of apish features, perforated by upturned, sky-open, Mongolian nostrils, by a mouth that sagged from a huge upper-lip and faded precipitately into a retreating chin, by peering querulous eyes that blinked as blink the eyes of denizens of monkey-cages. THE RED ONE
  • • Board a pleasure boat on the Nile, where the capital's denizens come out to play in a fiesta of ear-splitting Arab pop beats and eye-watering neon. Back to the Middle East: Egypt needs your holiday money
  • This is not to say that Madame X's "provocative sexual power" and "supernatural ability" are purely the invention of Five Spice Street's busybodied denizens. Undefined
  • It is rather satisfying to imagine ‘neighbours from hell’ being confronted by an actual denizen of the infernal pits.
  • Andrew Alvarez Noguera was endenizened in England in 1679.
  • Leisure World denizens drive them around golf courses, students around campus.
  • I'd like to take you on a little jaunt through my backyard here in Ithaca to meet some of the plant denizens I spend much of my time admiring.

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