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How To Use Parisienne In A Sentence

  • “Tipper Gore asked for the recipe for my salade Parisienne,” she shouted with glee over the din. Three Stages of Amazement
  • The average Parisienne of the street is not immoral; she is unmoral, that is to say she has no morals because she never did have any. On the Fringe of the Great Fight
  • He actually had to hide behind a rock to change into his bathers, which were in the boot of his Pontiac Parisienne car.
  • Manet's Olympia, one of the masterpieces of Realist painting, depicts unmistakably and shockingly a modern Parisienne… Olympia's challenging and unmaidenly stare no doubt had a great deal to do with the moral outrage which greeted the picture when it was first shown.
  • She discovered that I didn't revert to ballet steps, but with primitive glee made wild, exuberant jumps when we danced to Offenbach's Gaite Parisienne.
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  • Parisiennes, with their attendant cavaliers, while the orchestra played the passionate notes of the Hungarian czardas, resembled some vision of a painter, some embarkation for the dreamed-of Cythera, realized by the fancy of an artist, a poet, or a great lord, here in nineteenth century The French Immortals Series — Complete
  • Read as an example of modern fetidness, in the last number of the Vie Parisienne, the article on Marion Delorme. The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert Letters
  • La Parisienne"1815 Refrain Officiel de la restauration. cliquez ici... Archive 2008-03-23
  • From the Cheeseburger (ground beef and macaroni smothered in cheddar and American cheese) to the Parisienne Mac (brie, figs, mushrooms, and a certain je ne sais quoi), Sarita and her husband, Caesar, take this favorite to new heights. S'MAC
  • But the crane can also be read, and was meant to be read, as a Parisienne tittuping along the streets in search of adventure.
  • The final trying-on of the dresses of madame la baronne is a grand day, and often a few friends, both ladies and gentlemen, are invited to assist at the ceremony; for the Parisiennes recognize in some of their masculine friends, and particularly in painters, certain talents for appreciating dress. Lippincott's Magazine, October 1885

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