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How To Use Saloon In A Sentence

  • The car, a dark four-door saloon, drove off, leaving him behind.
  • Maybe the cowboy in us prefers the saloon tart to the civilizing schoolmarm.
  • And then you've got the work in the luxury saloon sector, where people are phoning out for still bigger pieces of aluminium and ordering up even larger chunks of birchwood, in accordance with a mission to go faster, fatter.
  • Cats were slumbering noisily beneath the TV set and a smallish party of utter strangers were drinking Harp in the saloon lounge. DEATH OF AN UNKNOWN MAN
  • The music is the best thing about the film, which includes spirituals, work songs, a lullaby, and a great sequence in a saloon with honky-tonk jazz.
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  • The bouncer very roughly bounced him out of the saloon.
  • In the working-class saloons that lined the roughest sections of late nineteenth-century Chicago, refusing a man's treat violated rules of plebeian sociability and thus frequently triggered brawls.
  • As we came level with the silver saloon, I was absolutely amazed to see the driver holding a camcorder to his face.
  • Out of the saloon he went and met Sylvester West the druggist stumbling along in the kind of heavy overshoes called arctics.
  • Set in 1912 New York, The Iceman Cometh spotlights the failed lives, empty hopes, and perpetual pipedreams of the stewbums, anarchists, and hookers of Harry Hope's seedy saloon.
  • They exited the saloon after paying the barkeep and began to walk the streets until they received a call from Chidori reminding her to pick up the wire they needed for the guns.
  • This is a versatile four-door saloon that can out accelerate supercars costing almost ten times as much.
  • The Audi saloon was parked at the side of the road when it was hit by the Toyota.
  • On the ground floor is a saloon bar with a food servery, kitchen and customer toilets.
  • If a babymoon is the holiday equivalent of the last-chance saloon, it makes sense to go for broke. Times, Sunday Times
  • Can this city survive without its traditional battalions of colorful characters swaggering through saloons and newspaper columns?
  • Victoria would be called shanties -- huts built of wood and canvas -- some of the larger of them being labelled "Saloon," "Eating-house, A Boy's Voyage Round the World
  • Last night was spent with good friends at McSorley's Old Ale House, memorialized by Joseph Mitchell in his story McSorley's Wonderful Saloon, a work I had read several times without realizing the actual place was so close.
  • On the ground floor is a saloon bar with a food servery, kitchen and customer toilets.
  • So, the bikers party at the River Bottom Saloon and camp in trucks and tents behind it.
  • It's sleeker but too anonymous, but the curvy rear is sportier than the saloon. The Sun
  • Sporty hatchbacks, coupes and saloons would be tearfully exchanged for the bigger, sensible and practical but dull to drive estates.
  • Medicine Lodge, Kansas, small as it was, contained seven saloons for the comfort of local drinkers.
  • The upper deck houses a large saloon and another bar. Times, Sunday Times
  • A wooden door now closes off the forecabin from the saloon.
  • Silence falls as he limps up the the bar - no sound anywhere in the saloon except for the jingle of his gunbelt. Making Light: Open thread 137
  • To tie together a book that covers the colonial-era tavern, the frontier barrelhouse, the high-toned New York City saloon, the German beer-garden, the speakeasy, the cocktail lounge, the gay bar and even the contemporary neo-speakeasy, a writer needs a grand theme. The All-American Place
  • The mayor finally asked the governor for assistance, whereupon eight companies were sent in and the saloons ordered closed.
  • By 1910, San Francisco’s red-light district, known as the Barbary Coast, contained more than 300 concert saloons within a six-block radius, and the South Side of Chicago had more than 285. A Renegade History of the United States
  • It is expected to sell well in Ireland, where, unusually in Europe, saloons outsell hatchbacks in the small car segment.
  • In 1880, the city directory enumerated a total of 1,042 saloons, with 6.72 saloons per 1,000 individuals.
  • The saloon/cowgirl look is reflected in suedette boleros, fringing and faded denim. Independent.ie - Frontpage RSS Feed
  • The two companies are planning a full range of new models, including hatchbacks, saloons and sports cars.
  • A cowboy rides into town and stops at the saloon for a drink.
  • Wards with vice districts consistently elected important tenderloin businessmen, usually leading saloon keepers.
  • It was the kind of music you'd hear in music halls, saloons, whorehouses, or barbershops.
  • Being debarred from the deck by incessant showers of spray, sleet, and snow, and the cold of mid-winter being unbearable in the dark, damp saloon, I went to bed at four for the first two days. The Golden Chersonese and the Way Thither
  • They were the same four that he'd encountered in the barroom of the First Chance saloon.
  • What the saloon bar lacked in creature comforts it made up for by the complete absence of journos.
  • However, being derived from a car designed to be driven by granddads in hats there's no shortage of headroom in the front, while being a four-door saloon it's quite commodious for average size adults in the back too.
  • Then follows the tying of the skirt of the dress, which is suspended on hooks round the bottom of the corset, the buttoning of the corsage, the preliminary tapping and caressing necessary to make the folds of the skirt sit well, and then madame la baronne makes her appearance triumphantly before her friends assembled in the adjoining saloon. Lippincott's Magazine, October 1885
  • But anecdotal and scattershot as it may be, it's also one of the most acerbically amusing books ever written on bars and gives one a real appreciation of saloon talk. The All-American Place
  • The town consists of two rustically elegant cabins, a ranch office, paddocks with shelters, a covered round pen, stables, and at the center of it all, Sniffy's Saloon.
  • Saloon life in the Old West at its rowdiest and most colorful. The All-American Place
  • We knew we were drinking in the last chance saloon. The Sun
  • About eleven a saloon car of baffled tourists - French registration - whined miserably through. THE TARTAN RINGERS
  • Around the mizzenmast is the after-saloon, with eight cabins leading out of it. The South Pole; an account of the Norwegian antarctic expedition in the 'Fram', 1910 to 1912
  • Then there was the saloon-keeper's collared and ribboned ratter, which got an extra lump because the 'barkeep' was liberal; and the rounds-man's Cat, that brought no cash, but got unusual consideration because the meat-man did. Animal Heroes
  • The dance-hall girls would fawn over him each time he stepped into the saloon for a drink.
  • ‘Yes, he owns the saloon and has a rough crowd hanging around all the time,’ she explained.
  • Kalandars sit upon a sofa at the side of the estrade, and seated the Caliph and Ja’afar and Masrur on the other side of the saloon; after which she called the Porter, and said, “How scanty is thy courtesy! now thou art no stranger; nay, thou art one of the household.” The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • All of these men, along with gunfighters, banditos, soldiers, Indians, lawmen, saloon girls, even ladies dressed in the height of fashion, gathered for one purpose.
  • How perfect is the verdure -- how rich the blossoming shrubberies that screen with verdurous walls from the possibility of intrusion, whilst by their own wandering line of distribution they shape and umbrageously embay, what one might call lawny saloons and vestibules -- sylvan galleries and closets. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Vol 58, No. 357, July 1845
  • The range still includes stodgy saloons and people-carriers; there are no sports cars or racy coupés.
  • It is available as a five-door hatchback and a four-door saloon.
  • There is a large saloon and four cabins for the eight guests, beamy decks for relaxing topsides and a good-sized stern dive platform.
  • They were very poor and my father would go into the saloons with a banjo he had repaired and would sing and dance, accompanying himself with the banjo.
  • There was a long silence, such as falls over a saloon bar in a Western at moments of confrontation.
  • For a four seater saloon, the car is very engaging and you're certainly left wondering how well its composure would translate onto a track.
  • John Seifert, the watchman in the factory, August Beck, a saloonkeeper, directly across the street from the building, and Gustaf Haas, who lives in the house formerly occupied by Adolph Luetgert, are three of the many persons who have seen the apparition. Robert Loerzel: In Search of Mrs. Luetgert's Ghost
  • The three storeyed red and white bawdy houses of Upper Queen Street extended into Grey Street, and mingled happily with Chinese grocery shops, masonic clubs, and pakapoo saloons.
  • Nor was it long, catching their spirit, ere she was singing to them and teaching them quaint songs of early days which she had herself learned as a little girl from Cady -- Cady, the saloonkeeper, pioneer, and ax-cavalryman, who had been a bull-whacker on the Salt Intake Trail in the days before the railroad. CHAPTER VIII
  • From launch, buyers had a choice of hatchback or saloon, with the same price tag. Times, Sunday Times
  • Meanwhile, a countdown to the end of the universe has begun, a suicidal madman engraves a mandala on the floor of an emptied swimming pool, a sleep-deprived astronomer cruises the dunes in a white Packard saloon, a raven-haired temptress named Coma plays the men off against each other. The stars of modern SF pick the best science fiction
  • Barleycorn will have been banished out of existence along with the other barbarisms, some other institution than the saloon will have to obtain, some other congregating place of men where strange men and stranger men may get in touch, and meet, and know. Chapter 13
  • The saloon-type room, designed by Italian designer Piero Lissoni, has comfortable sofas, a private balcony and an attached walk-in humidor, selling Cuban and Dominican cigars. Dusting Off the Stogie's Stodgy Image
  • Most large, luxurious saloons are designed to blend in as opposed to boast. Times, Sunday Times
  • Further aft the main saloon has an L-shaped dinette to port and settee to starboard followed by a good-sized galley to port and navigation station to starboard.
  • With its row of riverfront saloons Catlettsburg, between the Big Sandy and the Ohio Rivers, was then called the wettest spot on earth. Blue Ridge Country
  • Bookmaking and policy syndicates were often backed by Irish Americans in saloons, barbershops, and other neighborhood outlets, so that syndicate backers became important local political figures.
  • In all, 22 manufacturers exhibited at this year's show, demonstrating vehicles for every fleet need; from superminis to luxury saloons, and even pick-ups.
  • In a dusty Mexican border town called Manchester, an aged gunslinger downs his last whiskey in the Cornerhouse Saloon before a vicious high-noon shoot out with the local scallies, nay… banditos…
  • And across the Inland Empire, in a multitude of saloons called ‘Mint bars’ and ‘Stockmen's bars,’ silver-dollar-jangling miners and cowpokes speak up loudly in a man's world, while the roads to something-else are still walked by cocky, freewheeling itinerant ranch hands, gandy dancers and bindlestiffs.
  • This, however, was not run of the mill saloon rotgut.
  • Wash shoved through the doors and into a dim lighting and raucous noise of the saloon.
  • The author argued that ‘the obsession with virility, potence, bodybuilding and the sports that characterized turn-of-the-century America permeated saloons.’
  • This remains an extremely comfortable, practical family saloon. The Sun
  • My friends at the Literary Saloon will be pleased to note not a "Gabo" in sight. The Elegant Variation:
  • Can you suggest what the next best choices of fun, four-door sports saloon would be? Times, Sunday Times
  • This layout provided a stateroom with a double berth forward followed by a similar head and galley, although moved slightly forward, and main saloon aft with opposing settees.
  • T1 will see readily identifiable versions of everyday saloon cars visually spectacularly modified with big flared wheel arches, wings and bumpers.
  • The restaurant takes its name from a local saloon of the early 1900s, when Winthrop was a thriving frontier town serving trappers, prospectors, and homesteaders.
  • When Americans lived on farms in isolated towns where they grew, made, and bartered for everything they used, they could not purchase beer at a saloon, sex from a prostitute, contraceptives and pornography from a corner shop, or flashy clothes from British importers. A Renegade History of the United States
  • The shows would feature “cowgirls” who did rope tricks, “cowboys” who played the guitar and sang, “scouts” who had knife throwing acts, and saloon girls who danced the can-can lifting their skirts high for the bored dads in the audience. Buffalo Bill! The thrill of my life to have invented you!
  • The marble chimney piece of the saloon.
  • The main saloon of the Mariner has a settee to starboard just inside the companionway and a convertible dinette to port.
  • He's outside the gents hair salon that I always misread as saloon.
  • In one scene the townsmen assemble in the saloon to chose a delegate to the statehood convention. Mira Schor: Will Obama Shoot Liberty Valance?
  • The saloon deck was a Noah's Ark of Labradorians: there were Celts two by two, pairs of Indians, a brace of hunters and thick, hot knots of Inuit and icemen.
  • I was given a chance in saloon cars but after crashing the first two times I was refused a third drive. The Sun
  • They are both inexpensive four-door saloons, so you get all the practicality of a vacuum cleaner. Times, Sunday Times
  • Bounty Hunter's ‘saloon keeper’ Andy Herbert (also called wine maverick and desperado) and his co-saloon keepers Glen Hugo and Eddie Huntz don't take themselves too seriously, but they know their wine.
  • There's the forepeak, up in the boat's bow, with the chart table set by the forward windows: the ‘saloon’ a little further back, a deep, square ‘room’ littered with comfortable cushions.
  • I stepped after him into the saloon. It was like entering a grand drawing-room.
  • Buying a coupé cabriolet is not like buying a family saloon. Times, Sunday Times
  • For the price of a family saloon. The Sun
  • One month after his dishabilitation a saloon-keeper plucked him by the neck from his free-lunch counter as a tabby plucks a strange kitten from her nest, and cast him asphaltward. The Trimmed Lamp, and other Stories of the Four Million
  • That meant an evening full of saloons, drophead coupes and plenty of classic roadsters. Autoblog
  • At Paddington, her wedding party entrains in a private saloon for the journey to Shropshire, enjoying ‘the low, rich purr of a Great Western express’ as far as Shrewsbury.
  • He stopped at Joe Frenna's saloon and bought a pitcher of steam beer.
  • For beyond-the-pale rhetoric it's hard to beat Carry Nation, the God-fearing temperance zealot she used a hatchet (and hammers, rocks and bricks) to attack saloons in the first decade of the 20th century who celebrated the assassination of President William O. McKinley in 1901 by calling him a "whey-faced tool of Republican thieves, rummies and devils. Temperance Tantrum
  • Even the hot Seat Leon has torque steer - it's all part of the fun of driving a cranked-up small saloon.
  • So, pretty soon we wuz workin 'like bees, an' chattin 'by spells, as neighbors should, about the harvestin', an 'the hard work, an' the aguey, an 'the Republican rally, an' the thrivin 'business of them wicked saloons when politics wuz flyin' all abroad, an 'other subjects harmonious to the company. Dialect Tales
  • This is how the Senate Bar, a Topeka saloon favored by state officials, fell to a Nation attack or, using another of her neologisms, a “hatchetation”: “I ran behind the bar,” she wrote, smashed the mirror and all the bottles under it; picked up the cash register, threw it down; then broke the faucets of the refrigerator, opened the door and cut the rubber tubes that conducted the beer. LAST CALL
  • Tall and chunky and fifty, Buster was a career comic who played at the fringes of his profession, whistle-stopping to saloons and dinner parties and second tier comedy clubs. Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine
  • The upper deck houses a large saloon and another bar. Times, Sunday Times
  • The roads resound with atrocious profanity, and the rowdyism of the saloons and bar-rooms is repressed, not extirpated. A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains
  • When the SS China, a wood side-wheel steamer, was brought to Tiburon's marine crematory to be burned for scrap metal, its social saloon and two staterooms were set aside, too beautiful to burn.
  • It also has two great restaurants, the Burra Inn housed in a former barber shop and billiard saloon, and Nick's, which serves up a selection of Italian, German and Swiss foods.
  • He lived in a couple of trailers up in the mountains in Arizona and played his guitar, fiddle, and harmonica in dry-gulch saloons all over the state, occasionally taking little Stevie along for the ride. ɘloЯ
  • On the right hand of the saloon, are the common dining and drawing rooms; the first furnished with light green; the other, with a pale pink armozeen corded with white, and both trimmed with white silk fringe. Vicissitudes in Genteel Life
  • No, the saloonkeeper didn't know anything about Pat Glendon, had never heard of him, and if he was in that part of the country he must be out beyond somewhere. Chapter II
  • You can personalise it with the category of vehicle you prefer, too (hybrid, executive saloon or six-seater, say). The Sun
  • He might plead and tell his "hard luck story," but that would not help him much; a saloon-keeper who was to be moved by such means would soon have his place jammed to the doors with "hoboes" on a day like this. The Jungle
  • The saloon was made of sail cloth, not exactly in the form of a tent, for a slight frame was visible of a square order, and to the joist was the cloth tacked. The Gold Hunters' Adventures Or, Life in Australia
  • Faster, safer, more economical and with a striking restyle, Subaru's new-look Impreza is now on sale, costing £19, 995 OTR for the WRX saloon.
  • Moreover, he found there immense treasures; amongst the rest more than an hundred and seventy crowns of pearls and jacinths and other gems of price; and he found a saloon, wherein horsemen might throw the spears, full of vessels of gold and silver, such as no description can comprise. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Tanya pleads, in whichever bar, office, restaurant or sunbed saloon she's stalked him to, chucking him her trademark satanic glare, turning on a six-inch Roberto Cavalli heel and stropping off. Grace Dent's TV OD
  • The main saloon features a port side dinette and, on the three-cabin model, there is a starboard galley in the main saloon.
  • The main saloon is amidships over the engine room and features a sofa along the starboard aft bulkhead that converts to a fore and aft berth.
  • Our motoring correspondent has derided my safe family saloon choice.
  • This remains an extremely comfortable, practical family saloon. The Sun
  • There is almost no trace of the bustling mining town in which there were countless brawls and shootouts at bars with such evocative names as The Bucket of Blood Saloon.
  • One of these saloons, built in 1905, had two double and seven single berths, and accommodated eleven passengers.
  • How perfect is the verdure -- how rich the blossoming shrubberies that screen with verdurous walls from the possibility of intrusion, whilst by their own wandering line of distribution they shape and umbrageously embay, what one might call lawny saloons and vestibules -- sylvan galleries and closets. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Vol 58, No. 357, July 1845
  • Of course there are horses, gunfights, fistfights, saloons, and all the typical stuff you'd expect to find in a Western, but this film is more than that.
  • Provided you know the rules, investing in a classic car is an ideal way to get your hands on a sporty roadster or upmarket saloon for a fraction of the price you'd pay for a new model.
  • It all adds up to a super saloon car with supercar performance. The Sun
  • Tonight there will be karaoke in the saloon bar from 8pm, tomorrow night is steak night and Sunday is the Hare and Hounds' Baranados Charity Race Night.
  • Fuel economy, emissions ratings and performance are equivalent to the standard wheelbase XJ saloons.
  • We progress through days of calms, settling down into the sea's rhythm, sleeping on three-hour watches, ignoring the rasp of ropes in wooden blocks, the whistling kettle, the glow of the paraffin light in the saloon, or the biting cold.
  • Sports cars, saloon cars and estates were crowded together, all gleaming and shiny as if they had just come from the factory.
  • He had as good a chance of chipping into my drinking money as a Central Park wino hitting up the president of the Anti-Saloon League for a fifth of bourbon.
  • Trent sat on the saloon deck, holding his coffee mug cupped in his hands.
  • Clear-eyed, from her childhood days with the saloonkeeper Cady and Cady's good-natured but unmoral spouse, she had observed, and, later, generalized much upon sex. CHAPTER IV
  • Saloons, cathouses and gambling establishments were the norm.
  • On what modest saloon car was it based? Times, Sunday Times
  • You pay a comparatively heavy price in terms of fuel economy and driving style compared with a saloon car or hatchback. Times, Sunday Times
  • Music is the bridge between the old Italian saloon singer and the barefoot Canadian songbird.
  • They are to elect honest men, with whom one can do business -- instead of the peasant saloon keepers and blatherskite labor leaders whom they choose at present. Samuel the Seeker
  • When his knees were stiff with cold, he stepped into a saloon and drank a glass of whiskey, then at a general store purchased a pair of scissors.
  • However, being derived from a car designed to be driven by granddads in hats there's no shortage of headroom in the front, while being a four-door saloon it's quite commodious for average size adults in the back too.
  • A saloon car had suddenly surged past mine, and then pulled up, forcing me to stop. Times, Sunday Times
  • Beyond, near the bow, was a large saloon with a round table and wicker chairs.
  • The Superb saloon is a good car spoilt by an awkward bulky rear end. The Sun
  • Accomodation consists of a double forecabin and double aft cabin with additional berths in the saloon.
  • Her hubby gives me the thumbs up from their family saloon. The Sun
  • At one time it is a pompous banquet in a superb saloon festooned with gold, with tall lustrous windows and pale crimson curtains, the doge in his simarre dining with the magistrates in purple robes, and masked guests gliding over the floor; nothing is more elegant than the exquisite aristocracy of their small feet, their slender necks and their jaunty little three-cornered hats among skirts flounced with yellow or pearly gray silks. Seeing Europe with Famous Authors, Volume 7 Italy, Sicily, and Greece (Part One)
  • The main saloon is nicely arranged with a transom berth and pilot berth to port and a settee/berth to starboard.
  • The original, unfaded colour of the damask in the saloon is found behind a state portrait.
  • It was quite luxurious - lounge and dining saloon, deck - tourists, and how!
  • And now there is a four-door saloon to go with the hatchback. The Sun
  • It's a real four-seater saloon car with serious pace when you need it, rather than a supercar draped in a saloon's body.
  • It's neither a saloon, hatchback, MPV nor an estate - it is a premium vehicle that defies a label, but is a mixture of all the above.
  • The botel can offer our exclusive saloon for conveying business conversations and conferences.
  • The new A-class range features both five and three-door models which it labels deceptively with Saloon and Coupe designations, boasting a completely new look designed to distinguish the new model from its controversial predecessor. Australian Car Advice | News Blog
  • Their march will take them to the old Town Hall, which has been replaced by ‘The Palace,’ a saloon that features vaudeville acts and dancing girls.
  • Into the cabin went the saloon table and the skipper's chair, tied down in a secure corner to avoid any chance of their crashing about. IN FORKBEARD'S WAKE: Coasting Round Scandinavia
  • Or a collection of hobby-horse oddballs led by a saloon bar political cowboy? The Sun
  • A dark coloured Audi saloon parked at the roadside was badly damaged with traces of white paint left on its smashed panels.
  • Clear-eyed, from her childhood days with the saloonkeeper Cady and Cady's good-natured but unmoral spouse, she had observed, and, later, generalized much upon sex. CHAPTER IV
  • The saloon bar saved us from the euro. Times, Sunday Times
  • CTS-V is the fastest production V8 saloon in the world, but extreme car fettler Hennessey Performance clearly doesn't think this is enough. BBC TopGear: Cars and Autos News
  • One of Nissan's show stoppers this year is the Fusion, a prototype design of a future four-door saloon.
  • The new communist masters decided that Skoda would produce cars for the proles while the politburo and their apparatchiks would get a new luxury saloon built by Tatra.
  • Men, particularly bachelors, gathered in concert saloons, neighborhood bar-rooms, and pool-halls where no respectable woman would be seen.
  • Probably a vast saloon number that makes up in style what it lacks in fuel efficiency. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now there is barely a hint of scuttle shake, and the odd shimmy and wobble you do still sense is no worse than in many saloons.
  • Most men his age would be down the local bar sinking a few pints and eyeing up the saloon girls.
  • And the straight run of the roof even gave me more headroom than I sometimes get in a D-segment saloon.
  • Ordinarily the term canteen is another name for a drinking saloon, though a great variety of articles, such as soldiers need, are on sale and the profits go to the soldiers. History of Negro Soldiers in the Spanish-American War, and Other Items of Interest
  • He had already delayed long enough in a saloon down by the Bourse, slaking his thirst and playing poker with three Armenians and a Cypriot. THE LONELY SEA
  • We found him standing on a table in a saloon, with an old tin lantern in one hand and the school report in the other, haranguing a gang of "corned" miners on the iniquity of squandering the public money on education "when hundreds and hundreds of honest, hard-working men were literally starving for whiskey. Mark Twain`s speeches; with an introduction by William Dean Howells.
  • Forward and beneath the main saloon is a second head with shower, two large hanging lockers and a cuddy cabin with port and starboard berths.
  • As a youngster, he sings for pennies in his parents' saloon.
  • About eleven a saloon car of baffled tourists - French registration - whined miserably through. THE TARTAN RINGERS
  • It was from here that they were to travel in a saloon carriage provided by the Midland Railway Company to Galway.
  • I found our guide to be of an interesting breed - a bartender at a local saloon and an experienced outdoorsman.
  • She fell in love with the saloon, with the satinwood panels, with the little racks and cupboards, with the recording aneroid in springs. Movie Night
  • The two-door saloon was soon joined by a four-door and a drophead coupe. Autoblog
  • The superlative handling seems at odds with the ride height, which is greater than your average saloon, adding to the unfashionable ‘upright’ feel of the package as a whole.
  • The eight-year-old collapsed unconscious in the road while the driver sped off, leaving behind the front nearside wing mirror of the car - thought to be a blue Mazda saloon.
  • Prices are keen, starting at €19,500 for the 1.4 litre saloon and an extra €200 for the estate body.
  • The Saloon Madam sings and the whores seem to really love their johns.
  • The Saloon's doors open onto a terrace and wide lawn bordered by bright flowers.
  • Johnny Heinold, "boss barkeeper, cash-register and swamper" of the First-and-Last Chance Saloon recalls the exploits of a noted California author. Heinold's First and Last Chance Saloon
  • The new premium model is deliberately neither saloon, hatchback, MPV nor estate.
  • A cowboy rides into town and stops at the saloon for a drink.
  • The mayor finally asked the governor for assistance, whereupon eight companies were sent in and the saloons ordered closed.
  • The airport car park was filled with gleaming new luxury saloons. Times, Sunday Times
  • The author traces the roots of New Orleans' last and smallest zone of prostitution to antebellum bordellos and post-Civil War concert saloons.
  • In the olden days, the four-door saloon was the only real choice for the consumer. Times, Sunday Times
  • A pool of light from a flashlamp preceded the visitor down the four steps from the wheelhouse to the saloon. When Eight Bells Toll
  • Once in the saloon, Val overheard two cowhands discussing the matter.
  • Like a scene from a Western when the gunslinger walks into the saloon, the conversation dips to a low whisper, men freeze with their lips inches from their beer.
  • For Kid Russell, as he was called, Lewistown was the place he came to kick up his heels, and, it is said, exchange sketches for drinks in local saloons.
  • And now there is a four-door saloon to go with the hatchback. The Sun
  • The upper deck houses a large saloon and another bar. Times, Sunday Times
  • The bill would allow the impecunious tramp, corner loafer, pimp and saloon bummer, who have no interests at stake, to go to the polls and make their voices heard.
  • As Leo said, the saloon was soon full of miners, cowhands, and other people from around town.

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