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long-legged

ADJECTIVE
  1. having long legs

How To Use long-legged In A Sentence

  • Graceful, slender, and long-legged, she soon began winning modeling assignments from fashion photographers.
  • Recently, I was watching a cable channel that programs fashion shows almost continuously and noticed that the long-legged models prancing in high heels seem to walk peculiarly.
  • The moon over Miami was crescent, a warm breeze ruffled multi-lighted coconut palm fronds, dogs with hats yapped under the tables and around splashing fountains, long-legged Latinas and buff fellas, tourists and druggies and varied genders preened in an endless paseo. Lea Lane: South Beach: Then and Now
  • A siege of long-legged herons stand patiently in shallow water waiting for fish to pass within striking range.
  • Not among the group where a long-legged waitress stood serving canapes. COMPULSION
  • The elder brother, a long-legged stutterer whom they called Aristón in jest, was the most funereal fellow on the planet; he suffered from acute necromania; anything connected with coffins, corpses, wakes and candles roused his enthusiasm. The Quest
  • Long-legged animals with longer strides maintain contact with the ground for more time during each step than do short-legged creatures.
  • Tall, slim, long-legged, with the body of a dancer, he was generous with his encouragement and his money.
  • I have spent many hours here photographing the cock-of-the-rock, the brown capuchin monkey and many insects, including long-legged flies.
  • “A black-haired, red-cheeked, long-legged hobbledehoy of 26, though not looking or seeming near that age,” he wrote.12 Louisa May Alcott
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