How To Use modishly In A Sentence
- In others, such as Alessandro Allori's image of a magnificently dressed and bejeweled, strong-minded young woman c. 1580s, the name of the subject is unknown, while in still others, such as Jusepe de Ribera's imaginary portrait of an ancient philosopher or Lucas Cranach the Elder's modishly attired 16th-century Saxon charmer, we are given an ideal or a general type, rather than a specific individual. See Their Worlds in Their Faces
- “Oh, I dunno,” says our informant, another sprightly juvenile, modishly clad in jellaba, brass-buttoned jacket, and pirate head-scarf. Flashman on the March
- Her poems are modishly experimental in style and recondite in subject-matter.
- Emotionally, he keeps the film in the same modishly cool gear, mirroring the 19-year-old's detachment to the consequences of blindly following a wanted felon.
- The Graves-designed toilets and sinks are modishly rounded, and the Graves-designed white kitchen is packed with Graves products, including his signature blue-handled teapot, toaster, coffeepot and whisk. Michael Graves: Miami Twice
- When one arrives at the platform, attractive and modishly adorned stewardesses usher you to your berth.
- Reporters noted that Carmichael, unlike the denim-clad SCLC supporters and somber-suited politicians, was dressed modishly. Burial for a King
- Even the most puritanical, old-style theorist, or the most modishly self-conscious, context-seeking musicologist will be hugely entertained, as well as enlightened, by this book.
- Box one: modishly rustic ingredients such as pork belly and shoulder of lamb, the latter served with bubble and squeak. Feast fit for a king
- It should be subtlely cheesy, creamy and soft – not too dense, or modishly al dente, it's a dish that embraces the Victorian values of modesty and quiet, plain simplicity. How to cook perfect macaroni cheese