[
US
/ˈɝvɪŋ/
]
NOUN
- United States writer remembered for his stories (1783-1859)
- United States writer of darkly humorous novels (born in 1942)
How To Use Irving In A Sentence
- She took a day off of classes to attend the event because she wants to help her mom, the current owner of Kchelly's Beauty Center in Irvington, N.J. "She's thinking of handing [the business] to me," explains Ms. Darden, who is currently a manager at the salon and beauty-supply store. Need Advice? We'll Give You 30 Minutes
- Irving's work bears comparison with the best of the modern novelists.
- A life-long penciller of rippling muscles and bosomy babes, he casually refers to Hamlet, Irving Berlin and Ira Gershwin as he describes a life's work in what is often seen as a trashy business.
- The Legend of Sleepy Hollow is an old short story by Washington Irving.
- She got nothing, for instance, out of the juxtaposition of "roaming" and "Romeo" in the verse of Irving Berlin's "I'm Putting All My Eggs in One Basket," a neat half-rhyme on which Fred Astaire for whom Berlin wrote the song never failed to put the sliest of spins. It Ain't (Always) That Serious
- It may prove difficult to change people's way of life by eliminating the use of high-emission off-road equipment like snowmobiles and four-wheelers, but Irving is optimistic.
- Sergeant Irving told his squad to sweep the area.
- Irving can't conceal his vicarious delight in this unconsummated passion, ‘which remained a crush, at room's length, no more’.
- Irving continued to sip a glass of lemonade. Somewhere East of Life
- Irving Kristol delivered the coup de grace in a letter dated June 12: they had decided to reject the proposal.