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long-faced

ADJECTIVE
  1. having a face longer than the usual

How To Use long-faced In A Sentence

  • Cromwell's Ironsides and a long-faced, high-hatted Puritan cavalry-man, both on horseback, and a third on foot, with _musquetoon_ on shoulder. The Continental Monthly, Vol. 2, No 3, September, 1862 Devoted to Literature and National Policy.
  • Down La Canebière I stroll, heading for the glinting, faraway turquoise eyespot of the Old Port, following women dressed in ankle-length raincoats and Islamic head scarves, long-faced men in frayed djellabas and knit skullcaps, gangly youths with scruffy beards. Sunstroked
  • Cromwell's Ironsides and a long-faced, high-hatted Puritan cavalry-man, both on horseback, and a third on foot, with _musquetoon_ on shoulder. The Continental Monthly, Vol. 2, No 3, September, 1862 Devoted to Literature and National Policy.
  • A long-faced nurse in a sickroom is a visible embodiment and presence of the disease against which the eager life of the patient is fighting in agony. The Seaboard Parish, Complete
  • Long-faced, lantern-jawed old pelter, with a face like a coffin – they're the kind you have to look out for; they'd go through you like an electric shock! The Second Chance
  • “Certainly, Your Grace,” said the long-faced magicker, heaving a put-upon sigh. Conqueror's Moon
  • Long-faced, often sporting four horns, it resembles a creature in a medieval bestiary.
  • Although he may have seemed a natural screen actor with his light-haired, long-faced romantic looks, he preferred the stage. Times, Sunday Times
  • Everyone I meet, whether farmer, miner, railman, professor, cleric, or the long-faced Senator, and most especially the wives of these-everyone wants to know why I would submit to a marital practice so filled with subjugation and sorrow. Excerpt: The 19th Wife by David Ebershoff
  • He reckons he will do the same again ( "What chap don't, 'cept they mump-headed long-faced beggars?"), but at present he turns from liquor; he always does for a day and a half after 'going on the bust.' A Poor Man's House
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