How To Use Pique In A Sentence

  • Squire Western, who, surrounded by piqueurs, and girt with the conventional cor de chasse of the Gallic sportsman, sings the following ariette, diversified with true Fielding
  • Such is a part of tire strange medley that is before and around me; and amidst them and the blue streams of smoke that are rising from the tops of these hundred "coal-pits," can be seen in distance, the green and boundless, treeless, bushless prairie; and on it, and contiguous to the piquet which encloses the village, a hundred scaffolds, on which their "dead live", as they term it. Letters and notes on the manners, customs, and conditions of the North American Indians
  • Paige Craven, a sophomore at Souhegan, found out about the program via the intercom, and the idea piqued her interest. CabinetPress.com | Web Feeds
  • _philosopheress_ Madame du Châtelet, who managed, at one and the same moment, the thread of an intrigue, her cards at piquet, and a calculation in algebra, was a very clever woman! Characteristics of Women Moral, Poetical, and Historical
  • This phenomenon piqued Dr Morris' interest.
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  • Miss Margland, extremely piqued, vented her spleen in oblique sarcasms, and sought to heal her offended pride by appeals for justice to her sagacity and foresight in the whole business. Camilla: or, A Picture of Youth
  • Channing Crowder, hands-down winner of this week's chowderhead award for confusing Anne Frank and Helen Keller in a fit of pique, has struggled with history and geography before. Channing Crowder hears from Le'Ron McClain over spitting allegation
  • The requisite clowning, braggadocio and hip-hop historicism are in place and well articulated, and an unprecedented, post-9/11 political pique has surfaced.
  • Their curiosity piqued, they stopped writing.
  • Like when Maradona went in a huff with Pele, piqued at not getting player of the 20th century.
  • This week's pompous, poncey, high-handed antics could pique the infamous Tauran temper, impelling you to channel that feisty, fiery Hawaiian volcano deity Pele, who loves to erupt in Vesuvian pyrotechnics.
  • 3D Realms has made this title freeware though, so it can be worth a look if the side scrollers of yesterday pique your interest. GameSpot's News, Screenshots, Movies, Reviews, Previews, Downloads, and Features
  • Fabrics include canvas in different weights, linens, cotton and silk poplins, piquets, silk canvas, shantung, cotton jersey and all the classic ‘suit’ fabrics.
  • It is pretty clear that they were to some extent under the influence of pique and irritation when they noticed his deviations from the established faith, and applied to him the epithet of "babbler;" but Paul was not the man to be put down either by irony or insult; and at length it was found necessary to allow him a fair opportunity of explaining his principles. The Ancient Church Its History, Doctrine, Worship, and Constitution
  • She wore her new white piqué dress and bolero -- made by herself with a Vogue pattern -- of which she was very proud. THE GOLDEN LION
  • The other guys will notice how much those guys enjoy your company - it might pique their interest.
  • I admittedly was pretty uneducated about this disease but it has piqued my interest in the last few months as these clients are close relatives of someone very dear to me.
  • The bowsprit of the _Pique_ passing over the starboard-quarter of the _Blanche_, Captain Faulkner, aided by his second lieutenant and two others of his crew, was in the act of lashing the _Pique's_ bowsprit to her capstern, when he was shot by a musket-ball through the heart. How Britannia Came to Rule the Waves Updated to 1900
  • To pique" is a French word meaning to anger or to excite or arouse a feeling in someone. SeeLight:
  • Last night, in a fit of pique, just to show me up for a liar, she took her first steps with the cane.
  • Bloomies' spring hats range from fun and practical (how about a red Lacoste rain hat or a pink cotton piqué cap?) to stylish straws and felts.
  • He opened with a seven-minute monologue in which he guaranteed—for the third straight year—that the Jets would win the Super Bowl, a moment of rote audaciousness that seemed designed to pique people's interest. The Allure of Playing for Rex
  • Nixon's instructions may have been triggered by personal pique; they nevertheless reflected Presidential necessities.
  • And she really looked a bit piqued, and I said, ‘What's up?’
  • NELSON Piquet Jr, the driver at the centre of "Crashgate", has broken his silence over what he described as a nightmarish episode in his WN.com - Articles related to MTDC to hold tourism expo along with Singapore's CEMS
  • The contention continued for four years and the underlying reason for it was pique.
  • However, Carême, the "king of chefs, and chef of kings" thanks Wikipedia, piques my interest with a particularly tricksy method, in which the egg yolks and water are heated gently until thickened, and "pats of whole butter" are then whisked in to emulsify the butterfat and thin the cooked eggs. How to make perfect hollandaise sauce
  • Broughan is hardly alone in feeling piqued at the dearth of vision amongst the suits at Queen Margaret Drive.
  • I am almost grateful (though I’m not sure Publius is) to Whelan for his puerile display of pique, since it at least has brought this conversation to the fore, and has highlighted why pseudonymity is an integral part of Internet media. Pseudonymity and Accountability
  • Even those with only a passing interest in the subject matter should find something to pique their curiosity within.
  • The subject of fakes, forgeries and deceptions is intriguing enough by itself to pique the curiosity of those who have only a passing interest in the world of art and antiques.
  • Some have accused Stoiber of deliberately trying to sabotage Merkel in a fit of pique at her rapid rise.
  • Listening to Kyan talk about all the ancillary benefits of relaxation and mental discipline piqued my interest.
  • We know she's no good, but the two trade enough saucy barbs to pique our interest, and both actors flash enough flesh to push the boundaries of the PG - 13 rating.
  • What can I say, h-dog: I'm just not as impressed as you are by the guy who took his pique out on the poor innocent fig tree, and told me he came bringing not peace, but the sword, to reave apart families. Muslims praying in the cathedral.
  • Writing from Dorset, I am piqued that he overlooked the wealthy owners with empty spare houses, of which this sceptred county has more than its fair share. Letters: Treading on housing footprint dreams
  • Whether you're going to work or hitting hole-in-ones with your buddies, polo piqué T-shirts are where it's at.
  • Made of soft cotton rich pique, knitted with subtle two-color yarn, if features a self-fabric banded collar, contrasting inside locker patch, full button placket, hemmed sleeve, and vented tail.
  • Granny was astounded and a little piqued, I think, because it had all been arranged without her knowledge.
  • And finally: One's interest is "piqued," one "peeks" around a corner, and a "peak" is found atop a mountain. Archive 2010-01-01
  • So I think senior colleagues made the wrong decision - but I can't say they made the decision in a fit of pique or envy.
  • She wrinkled her nose, piqued by his total lack of enthusiasm.
  • After bringing color to its twills early on some seven catalogs ago, the company has expanded its color offering in twill and denim for 2004 to 34 colors in men's and 23 colors in women's - and now in both woven and matching polo piques.
  • Since it's now 11 pm, I'm a bit piqued at wasting an entire evening.
  • Dodd and Pendleton were the piquets on the Quinta's driveway and when they saluted him Christopher just touched the ivory heel of his riding crop to one of the tasselled peaks of his bicorne hat. Sharpe's Havoc
  • The fourth I can see scrambling and hear fizzing with a little pique. Times, Sunday Times
  • She looked disappointed, and her expression piqued his curiosity. The Summer Girl
  • It piqued my interest enough to care about where this story, and these characters, are going.
  • The solitary stranger was mounted upon an able horse, fit for military service, and for the great weight which he had to carry, and his rider occupied his demipique, or war-saddle, with an air that showed it was his familiar seat. A Legend of Montrose
  • Unfortunately, Reigart's hands are tied by Admiral Piquet (Joaquim de Almeida), a French NATO officer who shadily puts a halt to Reigart's rescue operations.
  • But no sooner had she gone, than he rang for Mrs Bolton, and asked her to take a hand at piquet or bezique, or even chess. Lady Chatterley's Lover
  • ‘I can still ride okay,’ he said, sounding piqued.
  • For short-term political ends, and what looks like personal pique, NZ is undermining an independent nation's system of checks and balances, and right to free speech, while seemingly threatening to withdraw aid if bruised NZ egos are not salved. Cleo Paskal: How New Zealand's Petty Politics Undermines Stability and Security in the Pacific
  • This is the kind of Mensa-level question posed by the D.J. on the radio show I sometimes listen to in the A.M. It piqued my curiosity because just mere minutes before there was a commercial for a bariatric surgery clinic that went like this: Charlotte Hilton Andersen: Can You Tell If Someone is Obese Over the Phone?
  • That's unfortunate, because the aviation game has gone up completely in this country, except for hydro-aeroplaning and military aviation, and possibly it never will come back," said Carl, a hint of pique in his voice. The Trail of the Hawk A Comedy of the Seriousness of Life
  • He piqued himself, indeed, upon his courtesy.
  • Mansell was third in the title chase with Piquet fourth, the top four covered by 17 points. Chequered Conflict
  • The film has certainly piqued public interest in this rare bird.
  • She tried to laugh it off dismissively, but her words seemed to pique his interest.
  • On the heavier and better grades of piqué coarse picks called wadding are used to increase the weight, and also to give more prominence to the cord effect. Textiles For Commercial, Industrial, and Domestic Arts Schools; Also Adapted to Those Engaged in Wholesale and Retail Dry Goods, Wool, Cotton, and Dressmaker's Trades
  • Keel killed the pay-raise bill with a last-minute point of order in a fit of pique.
  • I could not count a single point: so had been piqued, and repiqued, and capotted to the devil.
  • That would certainly scandalize Madame Piquemal - a young lady of Monique Colin's persona seeking him out in his bedroom at this hour. MOONDROP TO MURDER
  • It is true she never performed above one or two at most; but what she did, she piqued herself upon executing with a degree of spirit, which made all the operators in cotillon steps, and allemands, 'hide their diminished' heels. The Old Manor House
  • In addition to its comfort and coolness, Cross Creek's Cool Knit fabric is really a variation of a pique stitch that creates an interesting waffle texture.
  • The trussing, for which the demipique saddle of the day afforded particular facility, is alluded to in the text; and the author, among other nickcnacks of antiquity, possesses a leathern flask, like those carried by sportsmen, which is labelled, "King James's Hunting The Fortunes of Nigel
  • Bon..., cela dit, ... la prochaine fois que Kristin ira à Châteauneuf-du-Pape, j'espère qu'elle prendra quelques photos de maisons typiques, comme vous nous les décrivez - avec quelques marches, petit perron, grille de protection et plantes fleuries, minuscule porte au ras de la rue … La routine - French Word-A-Day
  • One does attempt to make the government actually represent us by demonstrating and the like, but Aaronovitch seems to get piqued when people do that.
  • So instead, we played bridge and piquet the whole morning.
  • Je vis au pied d'un buisson, à vingt ou trente pas de moi, une espèce de soldat qui, sur deux batons croisés, appuyoit le bout d'une escopette, qui me parut plus longue qu'une pique, et avec laquelle il me couchoit en joue. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 55, No. 344, June, 1844
  • Piqued by such an obvious dismissal, Mary turned her back on the stranger and yanked off her wool-lined gloves. One Night in Scotland
  • Assume, for a moment, that the French and the Germans aren't thwarting us out of pique, but by design, long-term design.
  • On the track the team have again failed to conjure notable results, were tainted by Piquet Jr's attack on Briatore when he was axed - describing him as his "executioner" - and then hit the headlines again in Hungary when Alonso's tyre fell off, resulting in a one-race ban that was overturned on appeal. Planet F1 | Formula 1 News
  • Martin Ramin for The Wall Street Journal Hand-scrimshawed burgee buckle For the Salty Dog This hand-scrimshawed burgee buckle jibes well with a canvas belt, salt-faded chinos and a simple pique polo. Shoot From the Hip
  • Sa figure était une pomme rouge, un bouton de pivoine prêt à fleurir, et là-dedans s'ouvraient, en haut, deux yeux noirs magnifiques, ombragés de grands cils épais qui mettaient une ombre dedans; en bas, une bouche charmante, étroite, humide pour le baiser, meublée de quenottes luisantes et microscopiques. French Word-A-Day:
  • He piqued himself on being so with them more than with any one else.
  • I could not count a single point: so had been piqued and repiqued, and capotted to the devil. The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman
  • What exasperated driver hasn't wanted to scream at the person in the passenger seat and snatch the map in a fit of pique?
  • It sort of simmers and bubbles and from time to time erupts into a lava-like spasm of vexation, pique and peevishness.
  • The art of writing popular science is the art of satisfying the curiosity you have piqued. Times, Sunday Times
  • So eggheaded am I about much of what I watch, I was rather piqued that I couldn't have both sets of subtitles on the screen at the same time.
  • Come, come, Mr. Saddletree," said his wife, "we'll hae nae confessions and condescendences here; let them deal in thae sort o 'wares that are paid for them -- they suit the like o' us as all as a demipique saddle would suit a draught ox. The Heart of Mid-Lothian, Complete
  • When she was in high school, Lisa Pietrusza took a social studies course that piqued her curiosity about politics.
  • The incident piqued his pride.
  • Imagine how miffed I am at the pique of Joe.
  • President Theodore Roosevelt, who in a fit of pique coined the term ‘muckraking’, called him a potent influence for evil.
  • Pink Lacoste or Ralph Lauren piqué polo shirts were probably the biggest sellers and they reflected the image of a distinguished and well-mannered preppy boy.
  • Of course this time it's ‘Chinese-Canadian’ Gen-X angst that piques my interest.
  • Right all, we need to organise piquet tonight.
  • Shrouded in etiological puzzles, the place continues to pique the minds of scholars and travel show hosts. Richard Bangs: Skullduggery on Easter Island (Part I of II)
  • If it was (as she claims) an accident, it was unfortunately timed to appear like a vindictive fit of pique.
  • Mimi had gotten over her pique at Susan's refusal to accept the job.
  • The first thing that catches your eye is the incredible mother of pearl handles with piquet .
  • There was a fine demipique saddle, said to have been that of James II. The Journal of Sir Walter Scott From the Original Manuscript at Abbotsford
  • Use beverage menus or spirits lists to pique customer interest in your selection.
  • If Babyface wants his cards back, he can play piquet for them. A Hellion in Her Bed
  • As Martin Brundle, who had been lapped three times in the fifth-place Tyrrell-Renault, observed: If Nigel can outdrive Piquet in equal cars, then hes ready to become world champion. Chequered Conflict
  • Whether or not you find the repeated use of what we called "scare quotes" in graduate school a sign of pique or merely snarky is up to readers. McCain Campaign Gets All Ironic in Obama’s Grill - Swampland - TIME.com
  • An apt title excites and piques the curiosity almost as much as does the story itself. Short Story Writing A Practical Treatise on the Art of The Short Story
  • McMurtrey, with poorly concealed apprehension, followed as well as he could what went on at the piquet table. A GOBOTO NIGHT
  • Speaking at a Belfast news conference, Mr Ervine denied that his party had left the talks in a fit of pique.
  • If that sort of bluntness piques your interest, then the debut LP from Milwaukee's finest is made for you.
  • When the buzz begins to build about a film, my curiosity is piqued.
  • That way, when you've done the deed, your spurned lover can't burn your stuff in a fit of pique.
  • The novel's tragic irony serves to pique the conscience of the reader, as well as to spotlight Steinbeck's political concerns for the equality and happiness of all members of the human family
  • Even if they do — the way, for instance, picket, as in "picket fence," and piqué, "a stiff fabric with a raised pattern," do — that hardly implies that nowadays they're synonyms. Word Court
  • Freshfields's new marbled offices off Fleet Street would pique the ego of the grandest City banker.
  • That would certainly scandalize Madame Piquemal - a young lady of Monique Colin's persona seeking him out in his bedroom at this hour. MOONDROP TO MURDER
  • The boy has won a hand of piquet, and the spinster has noticed that he has difficulty enjoying triumphs.
  • He was piqued to discover that he hadn't been invited.
  • That was when his interest in Walsh was first piqued by a disparaging throwaway remark slung across the kitchen table by his mother.
  • These were the planters of the neighbouring country, many of whom came nightly to visit the theatre, and this from very considerable distances; forming such an audience as cannot be seen elsewhere in this hackney-coach age; indeed, to look on so many fine horses, with their antique caparisons, piquetted about the theatre, recalled the palmy days of the Globe and Bear-garden. Impressions of America During The Years 1833, 1834, and 1835. In Two Volumes, Volume II.
  • That matter piqued his curiosity.
  • Yes," Rhavas said again, but the unfamiliar word piqued interest of a different sort. Bridge of the Separator
  • But when they wrote about ‘little Gong Li,’ it piqued interest.
  • They left two-weeks ago after selling their house in a fit of pique over the fact that their grandchildren were not welcome in the complex's communal backyard.
  • In 1952, in a pique over bureaucratic language, then-assistant general counsel for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce coined the word “bafflegab."
  • Lawrence, in a fit of pique, left the Army and took up a career in the City.
  • From him, there are no fits of pique or drooping shoulders when the course takes its toll. Times, Sunday Times
  • Shortly after his release from captivity, he contemplates his pique at being served cold soup.
  • The subject of fakes, forgeries and deceptions is intriguing enough by itself to pique the curiosity of those who have only a passing interest in the world of art and antiques.
  • They may be even more piqued to find that Jim Wallace knew of the First Minister's heart problem three days before any of Dewar's Labour colleagues.
  • EpiQuery, an interactive database of communicable diseases from amebiasis to yersiniosis on the health department's Web site. NYT > Home Page
  • But our little dialogue is supposed to pique people's interest.
  • He doesn't even play trictrac, only piquet, and he says 'tyrant' when he should say 'king.' Tales of Passion, Tales of Woe
  • 'Well, sir, well,' said the old gentleman, now very much piqued, 'I can't but say I feel some concern for my old friend, to have his money doused about at such a rantipole rate. Camilla
  • Now that name piqued my curiosity, because the European version appears in the Thisweeknews.com: RSS
  • Becca was too young for the rec center class, but because her interest was piqued the family found a club where she could begin sabre instruction. Ward ready to slash her path to the Olympic podium
  • As I was first thinking about putting together a new version of my Outsider course, though, I came upon some references to Schreiner and this novel that piqued my interest and brought me back to it. The Story of an African Farm
  • CA: RLR 25: 24, Berg Valleij, agter Piquetberg, to Josias Engelbrecht, 24 Jan. 1777 – 8 Oct. 1791 (per L. Guelke data) back Belongings: Property, Family, and Identity in Colonial South Africa
  • The original form of the game, piquet au cent, is now obsolete, having been displaced in the late nineteenth century by the present game, technically known as rubicon piquet. Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
  • That's worse than having him blurt out some threats in a fit of pique, he actually thought he could bring New Europe to heel.
  • Piqué pee-kay • Group of durable fabrics characterized by corded effects either warp-wise or filling-wise, most notably created with a waffle texture similar to that of a honeycomb weave. Before You Put That On
  • The name piqued my interest, seeming to promise more than a run-of-the-mill grocery experience. E-COMMERCE
  • Kelley, piqued, took her purse from him, setting the teacup carefully down.
  • The Vancouver International Film Festival will likely have an opus or two that will pique your interest.
  • Is it not agreeable, when you are preparing a discard, at the decisive moment, with one hundred at piquet, which gives you 'quinte' or 'quatorze', to deliver unhappy Poland; and when one has the satisfaction to score a king and take every trick, what does it cost to let the Russians enter Constantinople? The French Immortals Series — Complete
  • With curiosity now piqued, let's dig a bit deeper into the wording.
  • Among gypsy women skill in begging implies the possession of every talent which they most esteem, such as artfulness, cool effrontery, and the power of moving pity or provoking generosity by pique or humor. The Gypsies
  • Are Europeans going on a buyer's strike in a fit of pique over Iraq?
  • Yes, authors and creators can suffer fits of pique that can hurt the markets for secondary works.
  • She abused passengers and crew then stripped off in a fit of pique.
  • No, I am not a glutton for drama, even if it does tend to pique my appetite.
  • Aussi apres je me suis rendu chez Darty pour acheter un appareil numerique parce que je shoot beaucoup et je suis toujours en train de piquer l'appareil de mon pere qui ne marche pas super bien! Pinku-tk Diary Entry
  • black white or brindle they are all bitchy - it comes from their personal sense of pique when they deem their dereistic entitlements are not realised upon which they dump their malice on the nearest target usually men MRA, Feministing, and Racism
  • For a day dress for town I seem to remember more of the dresses might have a white pique collar or even a lace one and a bit more fitting ... a finner material like a fine thin wool or crepe. .oh I can't remember the names of more of the materials at the moment. Living the Slow Life
  • Although secretly piqued by Jake's comments and judgment, Luke decided that the current situation didn't need extra strenuousness.
  • To two of his Captains, Smith and Carline, a piquet was a smart group of men who stood to attention at the boundary of a camp and had no purpose other than to salute officers. Sharpe's Regiment
  • Mutule Scalled Tellurite Markaz-ud-Dawa-wal-Irshad systematic desensitization Actuate aoudad rememberance dreaminess 7la0 test-market pyrolatry airlock genus Cystophora discharge successive side chain king salmon Psalmodic disconfirmation Platystemon openhandedness traffic circle infect ls61 egyptians, the Dead Sea Apple Languishment Pertinentness Mesitylol boundlessness 26mt Ruling elder nonalcoholic malaxator implemented setting hen Scraggy piquet gordon holster pitsaw splenetic christella Heptaglot phase I Kattegatt Culver approximately divisively virtu forebear Glide disheartened argument sonny Painted Wasteboard oxidation state centred rutile Brattleboro Able snakelike anionic detergent spiccato wholeness bench duffle bag Burmese connecter Amidships Meadow sage family Thelephoraceae stereomicroscopically hk eton jacket sign up valet de chambre Quercus lobata lumina black and tan Catchweight Genette Craigslist | all for sale / wanted in san diego
  • One cannot but fear that Sir Edmund Beckett, who can hardly bring himself to speak of a Nonconformist minister otherwise than as "Stiggins," or of a Nonconformist chapel otherwise than as "little Bethel," is a type of many laymen, who pique themselves on being particularly sound Churchmen, and who, in their open-handed liberality, as regards money, in support of the Church, are worthy of all honor.
  • The NBA is nothing if not a giant trade rumour but this one involving the Raptors piques your attention: The rumbling is the Raps considering sending underachieving point guard Jose Calderon to Sacramento for the Kevin Martin who doesn't curl. Toronto Sun
  • Eikenberry's pique seems to have been tweaked because a Brit, and not Eikenberry, was appointed "viceroy" -- a slight he seems to lay at the feet of a Karzai/McChrystal conspiracy. Latest Articles
  • She had piqued his curiosity, aroused his interest and disturbed by just a pin-prick his pachydermatous equanimity; she would not raise again before the draw. The Fifth Ace
  • When he realized nobody was listening to him, he left in a fit of pique .
  • This was the third grand prix in which Brabham had intended to use a fuel stop, but so far neither Piquet nor his team-mate Riccardo Patrese had lasted sufficiently deep into a race.
  • I'm sure God, long famous in moments of pique for hurling His thunderbolts about the place, cannot enjoy having this kind of intellectual sissy claiming to speak for Him.
  • This scenario is reproduced in various shades and according to different authorial temperaments in virtually all the power durée novels published after Le cercle des tropiques.
  • She was hostile to him, which piqued his curiosity.
  • The eyeglass chains hanging from her temples gave her pique a schoolmarmish edge. FATAL FLAW
  • Turns out that swingers are just like the rest of us: happy to bury their heads in the bush and then become piqued at people's lack of honesty in retrospect.
  • When some information is revealed about somebody, what piques your interest?
  • Rapin too gives his Vote on the same side, Rien n'est, says he, plus essentiel au Poem Epique, que la Fiction; and quotes Petronius to that purpose, Per ambages, Deorumque ministeria praecipitandus est Liber Epistle to a Friend Concerning Poetry (1700) and the Essay on Heroic Poetry (second edition, 1697)
  • To leave now would suggest that he'd gone in a fit of pique.
  • Bottega Veneta Bottega Veneta designer Tomas Maier 's white piqué jacket and culotte were inspired by the '20s tennis player Suzanne Lenglen . Stylish Short Suits for Summer
  • Grand Slam, Pique, Repiqued and capotted, call it what you will but you have nipped the demon of insurgence and despair in the bud.
  • There is an auberge there - the Auberge des Platanes - Madame Piquemal. MOONDROP TO MURDER
  • He was piqued by her indifference.
  • President Theodore Roosevelt, who in a fit of pique coined the term ‘muckraking’, called him a potent influence for evil.
  • This phenomenon piqued Dr Morris' interest.
  • A 'piquet' of 'gens d'armes', he said, was all that was necessary. Complete Project Gutenberg Collection of Memoirs of Napoleon
  • But in addition to the election-oriented questions, there were some other answers that piqued my interest.
  • Would the Arab governments reject such an offer flatly, in pique, and turn UNRWA over to the Russians? The Arabs of Palestine
  • The trussing, for which the demipique saddle of the day afforded particular facility, is alluded to in the text; and the author, among other nickcnacks of antiquity, possesses a leathern flask, like those carried by sportsmen, which is labelled, “King James’s Hunting The Fortunes of Nigel
  • For men there is a solid-color 100 percent cotton pique available in 19 colors, and a mercerized solid-color 100 percent cotton pique in four colors, both in sizes S through 3XL.
  • Certainly in France it was an educated decision: it was not one taken in a fit of pique or absent-mindedness.
  • Her curiosity piqued, she gathered 10 exams from the past three years and discovered that most of the literary passages had been expurgated.
  • Event planners aim to give those varied interests plenty to pique their partiality.
  • Of course it didn't happen and I went out in a fit of pique in the next hand.
  • Since we're always looking for games that might stand apart, our interest was piqued to learn more.
  • Examples of fabrics produced by dobby weaving are pique, waffle cloth and shirting madras. Pique may utilize heavy yarns, called stuffer yarns, to produce an accentuated pattern.
  • Among the fabrics mentioned by Angelo Uslenghi in his Spring / Summer 2005 forecast developed for Moda In are satins, sateens, crêpes, piqués, seersuckers, crepons, voiles, georgettes, honeycombs, hopsacks, slubbed linens, jacquards and mesh.
  • Piqueuse plate tripe entrainement / IzplatÄ«tÄjs / EksportÄ "tÄjs Refinance 2nd Mortgage
  • That would certainly scandalize Madame Piquemal - a young lady of Monique Colin's persona seeking him out in his bedroom at this hour. MOONDROP TO MURDER
  • Then came three small, ambling, stoutish long -- tailed ponies, the biggest not above fourteen hands high; these were the barbs intended for mine host, the skipper, and myself, caparisoned with high demipique old -- fashioned Tom Cringle's Log
  • We already have one self-important narcissist who makes political alliances (and betrayals) based on personal pique. How the worm has turned in Virginia. - Moe_Lane’s blog - RedState
  • Our interest was further piqued when Shanghaiist's Chinese literature professor remarked that he too was glued to the television every night.
  • Well we recall all those charmingly piqued 'conservatives' who'd clutch the pearls as they shrieked, cried & caterwauled over & over & over again for Years about those 'nasty Clinton's!!' Awkward questions - poli
  • Her solo performance to the assembled guests in the variation towards the end of the Act is a magical blend of strength, vivacity and grace, culminating in a characteristically powerful medley of piqué and chaîné turns.
  • I was a bit piqued because I wanted to be known as the funny student.
  • The colors looked brighter, offensive and sharp on our senses, piqued and heightened.
  • A second example is currently not available for his teammate Nelson Piquet .
  • But one thing about the object piqued the curiosity of a team of astronomers: HE0450-2958 was shrouded within a dust cloud that appeared to be too small to hide a surrounding galaxy.
  • Better, I suppose, that I flame on about flaming out, rather than just quit in a fit of pique after biting my tongue bloody for a month.
  • PIQUE: Inclusions easily visible to the naked eye.
  • Saucy Girl" From nine to ten thirty she played a game called piquet, which her father had taught her, if she could get anyone with whom to play; but as this was seldom, she played as a rule patience by herself. The Country House
  • Mimi had gotten over her pique at Susan's refusal to accept the job.
  • Inside, delicious Puerto Rican food in very satisfying portions: Try the camarones criollos with tostones -- plantains flattened into a large disc, fried, salted, and garlicked; and go home with a bottle of their fiery pique sauce. 732 4th St. at Tamalpais, and another, smaller one about a block away on 3rd. Bay Area Roundup: The Rest
  • The president, apparently in a fit of pique, in October abruptly postpones a long-planned summit with Britain.
  • Back then, cards weren't mass-produced, so it's likely they're using a hand-painted 32-card deck called a "piquet". Another view Cézanne's The Card Players
  • The nub of the problem is the term District which allows clubs to transfer every season if they wish and move simply because of personality clashes or piqued perhaps at disciplinary decision.

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