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How To Use Liveried In A Sentence

  • There were no liveried footman doffing their hats and opening glass doors with gloved hands.
  • When he opened the door, he was looking at a liveried flunky, a young boy who seemed very nervous and gaped in wonder at him.
  • By the entrance, a liveried doorman stands guard, watching the passers-by. LOVE YOU MADLY
  • ‘Good afternoon, sir, nice to see you again,’ the liveried porter smiles and doffs his hat.
  • Liveried men and gaily caparisoned horses filled the area to capacity. Secrets of the Tudor Court
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  • And the chauffeur was a liveried war veteran with a steel face and leather hands.
  • Coaches were not only expensive to purchase, but they were costly to maintain as they required a liveried servant to drive them and had a place for a footman.
  • Behind the archduke were his two liveried bodyguards, armed and vigilant. Tai-Pan
  • The skill of the kitchen is exemplary, the service was sniggeringly formal, with liveried waiters standing like footmen bearing trays. Times, Sunday Times
  • liveried footmen stood on the palace steps
  • When he opened the door, he was looking at a liveried flunky, a young boy who seemed very nervous and gaped in wonder at him.
  • Liveried slaves carried the litter of a wealthy man, and vanished with a wave of his hand after he descended.
  • A liveried footman was walking away from his front door as Croft rode by.
  • She nearly collided with one of the household's army of servants, but the liveried manservant didn't as much as flinch.
  • A liveried waiter comes across, bows obsequiously, and asks George if he would care for the salmon.
  • His sword circled into a direct thrust at the liveried swordman's throat.
  • Let Hobart thrill to levees and martial parades of Her Majesty's arms, and fêtes champêtre served by liveried flunkeys.
  • A liveried flunkey doffed his cap and drove the Peugeot away while others dutifully hauled luggage about.
  • Liveried flunkies rushed forward to open the doors, TV lights flared, cameras flashed and the crowd cheered as the celebrities stepped into the blinding glare.
  • Liveried flunkies rushed forward to open the doors, TV lights flared, cameras flashed and the crowd cheered as the celebrities stepped into the blinding glare.
  • Liveried guards admitted the majordomo and those he escorted into the marble pineapple.
  • A liveried flunkey doffed his cap and drove the Peugeot away while others dutifully hauled luggage about.
  • He glanced at the footman on the stairs as another liveried servant hurried down to whisper in the first's ear. WHOLE SECRET LOVE
  • Alas, visions of liveried footmen and Royal Doulton soon vanished as we pulled into the driveway of Clapped Out Estates, and the effusive greetings of a red-nosed investment banker dressed in plus fours and carpet slippers.
  • Let Hobart thrill to levees and martial parades of Her Majesty's arms, and fêtes champêtre served by liveried flunkeys.
  • The Weatherfords, multimillionaire mine-people, and so newly rich that the crisp bank-notes fairly crackled when Mrs. Weatherford spent them, kept their lackeyed and liveried state in a castle-like mansion in Mesa The Honorable Senator Sage-Brush
  • Joining the smart red and blue-liveried Maureen alone, I was, of course, interested in my fellow aquanauts: not least because one of them would become my buddy!
  • an unliveried chauffeur
  • Two constables and four police community support officers in their own liveried vehicle will keep the peace on service and school buses.
  • Many of the traditions survive in the modern firm: liveried commissionaires still take visitors' soggy umbrellas and hand them back, dried and furled, when they leave.
  • The comfortable rooms have breathtaking views across Mount's Bay, and liveried waiters serve cream-tea picnics on the lawn.
  • Some had black engines to pull them, some were liveried in maroon or green. WHISTLER IN THE DARK
  • “This man will carry you beyond Chradim for a _zwanziger_ a head,” said the landlord, pointing to the half-liveried fellow, who began gesticulating violently, and marking us off with his fingers as if we were so many sheep. A Tramp's Wallet stored by an English goldsmith during his wanderings in Germany and France

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