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How To Use Hatless In A Sentence

  • They were both about sixty, both very short, pink, and chubby, and both hatless. Notable & Quotable
  • He was hatless; his Crimean shirt was torn into ribbons; his moleskin breeches were covered with blood and dirt; the strap belt, with its sheath-knife and various pouches, was gone, and this, judging from the state of his legs and feet, had been forcibly removed. Lady Bridget in the Never-Never Land
  • He may be as much a patron saint of hatlessness as John F. Kennedy is said to have been. Men without hats: James Ellroy and Eddie Muller on "Crime Wave"
  • He was hatless with his hair slicked back and parted down the middle.
  • stood hatless in the rain with water dripping down his neck
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  • But it was not quite time for that yet: it would be inartistic to suggest that just a couple of weeks of hatlessness had produced so desirable a result. Queen Lucia
  • Tom, wigless and hatless, arrived after breakfast to say that he has hired men to remove all the costumes and paintings in the theatre to a safer location and to stand by with water buckets in case the fire reaches Bridges Street. Exit the Actress
  • Until the 1950s, many women would go hatless in their own quartier, something they would not do if they were to go beyond its informal limits.
  • And what would their parents think of me, if they saw or heard the children rioting, hatless, bonnetless, gloveless, and bootless, in the deep soft snow? Agnes Grey
  • But she looked crazy: wild-eyed, wild-haired, coatless, hatless, and dragging a gray blanket behind her through the snow. Uprising
  • In the end, hatless, disheveled, with streaming nose and one eye closed, Watson won to the sidewalk and into the arms of a policeman. The Benefit of the Doubt
  • I think the hatlessness is because of the dreaded 'hat hair.' Madison schools canceled for cold.
  • It was very hot in the Brazilian sun on a hatless balding head.
  • Until the 1950s, many women would go hatless in their own quartier, something they would not do if they were to go beyond its informal limits.
  • Akimbo an hatless rhinal for usb wireless modem, arillate help marxist on magnanimity, dutifully than coast. Rational Review
  • Actress Diahann Carroll caused a stir when she strode hatless through the airport in a blue-and-orange minidress. Burial for a King
  • But she looked crazy: wild-eyed, wild-haired, coatless, hatless, and dragging a gray blanket behind her through the snow. Uprising
  • Pumpkin Bill, the dunce of the boomer's camp, "a nobody from nowhar," to use Cal Clemmer's words, came rushing along, hatless and with his wild eyes fairly starting from their sockets. The Boy Land Boomer Dick Arbuckle's Adventures in Oklahoma
  • She was wandering the streets like any outcast, late at night, without a hat — and her condition of hatlessness she felt to be the chief stigma. Maurice Guest
  • Headwear had, at points, indicated the marital status of a woman, with unmarried women sometimes allowed to go hatless or with hair down. Fashion: A Bygone Era of Hats « Colleen Anderson
  • Greeks were everywhere -- swarthy men in sea-boots and tam-o'-shanters, hatless women in bright colors, hordes of sturdy children, and all speaking in outlandish voices, crying shrilly and vivaciously with the volubility of the Mediterranean. CHAPTER XI
  • Simon notes that he's going hatless and being a bit smarmily please-the-parents-y: ‘I prefer the other side of you, to be honest.’
  • And the men appeared, some of his watch, others of the second mate's watch, routed from sleep -- men coatless, and hatless, and bootless; men ghastly-faced with fear but eager for once to spring to the orders of the man who knew and could save their miserable lives from miserable death. CHAPTER XXXVIII
  • And the men appeared, some of his watch, others of the second mate's watch, routed from sleep -- men coatless, and hatless, and bootless; men ghastly-faced with fear but eager for once to spring to the orders of the man who knew and could save their miserable lives from miserable death. CHAPTER XXXVIII
  • Presidents have helped shape clothing trends since Woodrow Wilson wore a cutaway frock coat; a hatless John F. Kennedy helped kill his era's fedora craze. Candidates Figure What Voters Need From Them Is a Good Dressing Down
  • Hatless, in evening clothes with blue lapels upon the coat, splashed liberally with mud, his feet equipped only with embroidered socks and saturated pumps, his shirt-front bestarred with souvenirs of all the soils for thirty miles, Count Bunker made a picture that lived long in their memories. Count Bunker: being a bald yet veracious chronicle containing some further particulars of two gentlemen whose previous careers were touched upon in a tome entitled the Lunatic at Large
  • He goes hatless for the first time, and we get to see that he is not bald, but has a headful of curly hair.
  • There was an item on Dustbury last week about refineries post-Katrina, linking to Hatless in Hattiesburg's suggestion to replace refineries which were destroyed or disabled by Katrina with new refineries on military bases slated for being "realigned," and to Engine of the Future's suggestion to lift for three years the EPA regulations requiring different fuel blends for different regions, so that gasoline can be shipped wherever it's needed, avoiding artificial shortages. Oily residue - BatesLine
  • The man came out of the darkness, impeccable as always in his well-styled coat - hatless this time, he noted, in spite of the wind.
  • But if a religionist is granted the right to wear a hat, then you can’t prove endorsement unless you demonstrate a reason for hatlessness viz. you are granted unfair advantage over or damage to everyone else, in which case the right won’t be granted anyway. What Does Cutter Mean for Creationism? - The Panda's Thumb
  • During the shelling hundreds of women and children, breakfastless, their hair hanging, hatless, and even penniless, except for their mere railway fares, had rushed to the station and taken tickets to the first safe town they could think of. The New York Times Current History: the European War, February, 1915
  • Of her hatlessness at the State Opening, he says: "I assume maybe she was just uninformed about protocol, but it is her prerogative - maybe she just doesn't feel comfortable in hats. Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph
  • Hydrogen Guy, unmasked and hatless, sits on a pile of rock next to a demolished computer console - possibly it was the Spy Satellite Relay, it's hard to tell.
  • And the men appeared, some of his watch, others of the second mate's watch, routed from sleep -- men coatless, and hatless, and bootless; men ghastly-faced with fear but eager for once to spring to the orders of the man who knew and could save their miserable lives from miserable death. CHAPTER XXXVIII
  • I might have posed before your butler, perhaps, as belonging to what you call the hatless brigade, but the mud upon my clothes, and these unfortunate rents in my garments, would have necessitated an explanation which I thought better avoided. The Zeppelin's Passenger
  • In contrast to many of the self portraits, it shows him dressed informally, tieless, hatless and with his shirt sleeves rolled up.

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