How To Use Revelry In A Sentence

  • Voting has slowed down as everyone strolls off to their debauchery and revelry.
  • The revelry is short-lived, however, for the monster Grendel (Crispin Glover) shows up and kills people in graphic fashion. Archive 2007-11-01
  • Carnival revelry usually involves large crowds of people packed together - a perfect opportunity for pickpockets.
  • There she has remained since as a show, and moreover as a sort of dining-hall for jovial parties from the city; one of which would seem to be on board this afternoon, to judge from the flags which bedizen the masts, the sounds of revelry and savory steams which issue from those windows which once were portholes, and the rushing to and fro along the river brink, and across that lucky bridge, of white-aproned waiters from the neighboring Pelican Inn. A great feast is evidently toward, for with those white-aproned waiters are gay serving men, wearing on their shoulders the city-badge. Westward Ho!
  • Coates-Jones's paintings, also newly commissioned, convey her revelry in light, colour and life.
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  • From all sides came sounds of revelry from cafés and restaurants.
  • The feasting, drinking, dancing and revelry continued for several days.
  • In Vila Madalena, a bohemian outpost set in rolling hills, the nighttime vibe is one of all-out revelry. Sao Paulo: Brazilian Beauty
  • Rachel daintily arched one eyebrow as if I had mentioned inviting her servants to some feast or revelry.
  • Then she went on into the dining-room, where she joined the Spanglers ' revelry. MISS MELVILLE REGRETS
  • For a taste of beery revelry Australian style, all you have to do is linger until late.
  • The chief feature of the revelry was the distribution of gifts on the Bride of the Mistletoe
  • Angry, he went back to Moscow and once again engaged in a life of revelry, drinking, gambling and womanizing.
  • My friends got old too, and now when we have a rare night of all-night revelry, we pay for it for about a week afterwards.
  • Despite the presence of bacchantes and the references to wine, the bacchanalian aspect of the scene is greatly subdued, reducing the feeling of revelry and recklessness.
  • a night of bacchanalian revelry
  • No longer is the voice of Davis heard in the crowd of merry youth; no longer is the voice of music heard from the hands of the rudy youth; no longer was the secret places of revelry cheered by his presence; or his associates prompt by his example to immerge any further in the way to death! The Life of the Rev. Dandridge F. Davis, of the African M. E. Church. With a Brief Account of His Conversion and Ministerial Labors, from August 1834, till March 1847. Also, a Brief Sketch of the Life of the Rev. David Conyou, of the A. M. E. C. and His M
  • Pipes in the middle of the day's regular revelry," ejaculated Anthony, whose way of holding the curved pipe-stem displayed a mind bent on reckless enjoyment, and said as much as a label issuing from his mouth, like a figure in a comic woodcut of the old style: -- "that's," he pursued, Rhoda Fleming — Volume 1
  • It was a fitting room for revelry, with its gaily painted walls and ceiling, now with its ropes of natural blossoms festooning windows and chaining gasalier to gasalier. A Heart-Song of To-day
  • Well, Sushisamba is a place of Latinate revelry by night, and even during the placid lunch hour, it is not an ichthyological version of a Zen temple. The Sashimi Challenge
  • But what one remembers is the the mournful downstage revelry, while upstage a fleshy, ageing chanteuse is mimetically seduced by the MC.
  • It has become the Jewish Mardi Gras, a day of revelry, drinking, and masquerades.
  • His favourite part of the revelry is the march by different infantry, cavalry and mechanised regiments. Daily News & Analysis
  • Amidst this revelry the Prince of Bohemia falls headlong in love with the long-lost Sicilian princess.
  • Some twirled around while others puddled about forcing some of the pedestrians to stop and take note of their revelry.
  • It was also drunken frenzy which suggested to Nietzsche the ecstatic abandonment and orgiastic revelry of the ancient cult of Dionysus.
  • Angry, he went back to Moscow and once again engaged in a life of revelry, drinking, gambling and womanizing.
  • Saturday sees a day of music and revelry in Parliament Street, while an Indian festival will bring the Royal Ascot experience to a close tomorrow.
  • There seems little of the chaotic revelry that typifies many other Arab souks.
  • Such revelry was worsened by the heavy betting involved: £1, 000 could be staked on one game as players competed for such prizes as gloves and pieces of lace.
  • Expect much debaucherous revelry and free CD giveaways!
  • And, there were, of course, a few who protested against the revelry.
  • Amongst the replete pink faces and careful best clothes there was an atmosphere of revelry almost forgotten in Nantlas. THE WHITE DOVE
  • But what have I, a continuing PhD, done to deserve to join in the debauched bacchanalian revelry of undergrads?
  • Oliver eagerly accepted it, raised it to his head with a trembling hand, imbibed the contents with lips which quivered with emotion, and, though the potation was as thin as he had requested, so much was he exhausted with the combined fears of alarm and of former revelry, that, when he placed the flagon on the oak table, he uttered a deep sigh of satisfaction, and remained silent. The Fair Maid of Perth
  • Students returned to campus on the traditional Labor Day move-in, and the normal amount of revelry and disorderliness ensued.
  • They come with the fanfare and revelry of a merrymaker to cast a wider net and test their own luck in this prime market.
  • And it is much the same with his addiction to vinous revelry, and to the moister kind of minstrelsy; an addiction that proceeds in part from his keen gust of fun, and the happiness he finds in making sport for others as well as for himself: he will drink till the world turns round, but not unless others are at hand to enjoy the turning along with him. Shakespeare His Life Art And Characters
  • The feasting, drinking, dancing and revelry continued for several days.
  • Special police were drafted in to rein in the revelry.
  • The whole scene -- as the cooks moved actively about upon the lawn, and children romped round the fires, and settlers came flocking through the forests -- might have recalled the revelry of merry England in the olden time, though the costumes of the far west were, perhaps, somewhat different from those of old England. The Dog Crusoe and his Master
  • Join in the revelry with the six-man entertainment group as they perform hula dances to the tune of Hawaiian guitars and songs.
  • The room is furnished with a set of Roman emperors, -- they are not placed in their proper order; for in the mad revelry of the evening, this family of frenzy have decollated all of them, except Nero; and his manners had too great a similarity to their own, to admit of his suffering so degrading an insult; their reverence for _virtue_ induced them to spare his head. The Works of William Hogarth: In a Series of Engravings With Descriptions, and a Comment on Their Moral Tendency
  • A glimmer of either joyful revelry, criticism, or downright condemnation.
  • An antiquated licensing law may put a dampener on New Year's Eve revelry across the county and give licensees and police a major headache.
  • His father, having found out the contrivance by which he raised money for this kind of revelry adopted, in his own imagination, a wiser course. Anecdotes of Painters, Engravers, Sculptors and Architects, and Curiosities of Art, (Vol. 2 of 3)
  • That evening and well into the night, the coffee flowed freely to the townspeople, who engaged in revelry unlike the town of Plum Rose had ever seen. 365 tomorrows » The Bitter Kiss Of The Ronin’s Cup : A New Free Flash Fiction SciFi Story Every Day
  • ‘These days it's sibling revelry, mate,’ Tim jokes in his soft New Zealand accent.
  • That test included words to spell such as ‘revelry’ and ‘triskaidekaphobia.’
  • Some twirled around while others puddled about forcing some of the pedestrians to stop and take note of their revelry.
  • The arrival of the guests, the welcomes, and the "revelry" of the assembly. Ontario Teachers' Manuals: Literature
  • In a shockingly inaccurate critique of QuAM for focusing on "revelry" as opposed to "awareness", the Editorial Board not only passes judgment on an arbitrary conception of education, but participates in the stigmatization of LGBT sexuality. Columbia Spectator - News, sports, and entertainment coverage for the Morningside Heights community in New York City.
  • In the City of Elua, the revelry would begin in earnest that day, and by evenfall, the salons of reception would be overflowing in the Court of Night-Blooming Flowers, as Kushiel's Avatar
  • And even in plays with twists and turns and convolutions of the storyline such as Bartholomew Fair where the names of the characters -- Littlewit, Winwife, Quarlous -- tell us what they are, their games of language and wordplay make the plot -- Puritans and rogues meet up at a county fair and fun and thievery ensue -- secondary to the fun and revelry. Play on Words
  • I am off to my sister's house for a night of drunken revelry and debauchery.
  • The angelic party gatecrashed their night watch and the angels invited them to join the revelry.
  • Expect beerhall revelry, stiff-legged dancing and lots of ruthlessly efficient singing.
  • Can no inventor make something to do this -- something to lie in the palm and bring all colours and divisions of colour ready made to the finger tips so that you might put them down in a revelry of colour as unconsciously and freely as the improvisator can use the notes on the piano to express his feeling. From Edinburgh to India & Burmah
  • Hyderabad changed the calendar and ushered in New Year amid revelry and a celebration mood that pervaded every nook and corner.
  • Even from the island they could perceive that everything known as festal pleasure was rife in Alexandria, and bore along in its mad revelry the court and the citizens. Cleopatra — Volume 08
  • Join in the revelry with the six-man entertainment group as they perform hula dances to the tune of Hawaiian guitars and songs.
  • After a night of drunken revelry they ended up in the dock.
  • O Thebes, nurse of Semele! crown thyself with ivy; burst forth, burst forth with blossoms fair of green convolvulus, and with the boughs of oak and pine join in the Bacchic revelry; dor; - thy coat of dappled fawn-skin, decking it with tufts of silvered hair; with reverent hand the sportive wand now wield. The Bacchantes
  • Ostentation and revelry were ceased, for the sake of separation.
  • He took delight in game hunting, dousing himself in good drink and revelry.
  • He was also presenting ballets in a similar format to Rustic Revelry.
  • Asked why he promoted such libidinous revelry, he replied, “Why should the devil have all the good times?” A Renegade History of the United States
  • So when he appeared outside the dressing room on Saturday afternoon sporting a glorious shiner it seemed there might be yet another unedifying tale of late-night revelry to tell.
  • Colum looked at them, shamefacedly remembering his own revelry, and winked apologetically at Kathryn. A SHRINE OF MURDERS
  • Besides the religious connotation of the festival, it is seen as a time for revelry.
  • Since medieval times their annual fair was famous not only for its heights of bacchanalian revelry but also for the ferocious brawls that would inevitably break out.
  • Touristy places to avoid – especially in August – would be Balearics, Canaries, and North Africa … because they are going to be filled with thousands of French & Brits on family holidays & teenage revelry variations. Calling in favours
  • An antiquated licensing law may put a dampener on New Year's Eve revelry across the county and give licensees and police a major headache.
  • Revelry and bonhomie everywhere, but not a drop to drink.
  • The place was packed, we drank beer, ate chips and crab sticks, indulged in much drunken revelry with loads of laughing friends.

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