How To Use Pepper-and-salt In A Sentence

  • There was a man on board this boat, with a light fresh-coloured face, and a pepper-and-salt suit of clothes, who was the most inquisitive fellow that can possibly be imagined. American Notes for General Circulation
  • Her hair was pepper-and-salt, and she smiled when she saw him look at her. AMERICAN GODS
  • Hes a fit, camera-friendly man in his mid-40s with bright blue eyes, neatly trimmed pepper-and-salt hair and a gentle demeanor. The Foie Gras Wars
  • He begins to pull at his dark pepper-and-salt fringe, or at least he did until he recently had it shampooed and trimmed. Archive 2007-06-01
  • I smiled at the face in the mirror, scraped at the pepper-and-salt stubble, and gave myself a very close shave.
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  • He is dressed in a coarse pepper-and-salt suit excessively patched and darned American Notes for General Circulation
  • After the war, her costume ‘is covered, winter and summer, by a frayed macintosh… and she now wears a hat as well - a thing like a basket pulled down over her straying, pepper-and-salt hair’.
  • And though he wore corduroys at work, and a slop-made pepper-and-salt suit on Sundays, strangers would turn round to look after him on the road.
  • Monsieur Guillaume wore loose black velvet breeches, pepper-and-salt stockings, and square toed shoes with silver buckles. At the Sign of the Cat and Racket
  • Her hair, a vibrant red in her youth, had faded to pepper-and-salt, and she had the pale skin usual with such colouring. DEATH SPEAKS SOFTLY
  • There was a vociferous red-faced polyglot personal conductor in a pepper-and-salt suit, very long in the arms and legs and very active. Twelve Stories and a Dream, by H. G. Wells
  • After the war, Miss Stuart's costume ‘is covered, winter and summer, by a frayed macintosh… and she now wears a hat as well - a thing like a basket pulled down over her straying, pepper-and-salt hair’.
  • He was dressed in a pepper-and-salt suit, which was all the rage in those days.
  • His big problem, as he might admit in the lonely watches of the night, is located just below the pepper-and-salt moustache of which he is so proud.
  • The man who now stood forward was shortish and solidly built with pepper-and-salt hair, perhaps in his mid-forties. HIDING FROM THE LIGHT
  • And though he wore corduroys at work, and a slop-made pepper-and-salt suit on Sundays, strangers would turn round to look after him on the road. Amy Foster

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