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How To Use Tuxedoed In A Sentence

  • The earliest print included, Midsummer's Night Mare, pictures a tuxedoed Dali, his hands on a sheep, as host to a hallucinatory gathering in a nocturnal forest.
  • The illustration I use with my students to emphasize the essence of "professional accounting" is the perennial parade of tuxedoed CPAs before the audience at the Academy Awards.
  • The propensity for tuxedoed birds to enact something like a gay marriage has since provided a memorable skirmish in the culture wars.
  • Now, however, the bar was crowded with people, from tuxedoed men and well-women at all the tables, to a second Vic and his full band up on stage, to a nearly full contingent of Deep Space Nine senior officers standing in the back, where Zimmerman and the current Vic stood off to one side. STRANGE NEW WORLDS 10
  • Punk-rock magician Dylan Studebaker, an irreverent, rebellious version of the familiar tuxedoed illusionist, describes guys in underwear perched on eight-foot unicycles and throwing bags of flour at each other.
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  • a tuxedoed gentleman
  • In their slick tuxedoed coats, they could almost be a column of wedding guests stranded in the snow, until they drop down and start belly surfing across the icy wasteland.
  • The 1929 Chicago Book of Achievement published a photograph of Smith, seated, dressed in a tuxedo with a baton resting on his lap, surrounded by thirteen tuxedoed men, all carefully posed, instruments in hand.
  • On the 10th December the anniversary of the death of Alfred Nobel, two thousand dignitaries, tuxedoed and gowned, gather in the Stockholm Concert Hall.
  • The two fighters prepare to square off, as a tuxedoed ring announcer shouts into a microphone: ‘Ladies and gentlemen!’
  • As the show's perennially tuxedoed butler, "Mr. Aly," as he was universally known, represented an elegant conduit to a vanished old Washington, a place of exclusive salons, bipartisan cordials and relative gentility. The man who would greet 'The Press'
  • A red curtain parts, revealing the Fox logo – it’s very 20th Century – as Alfred Newman’s fanfare is conducted by some tuxedoed spastic. Current Movie Reviews, Independent Movies - Film Threat
  • But it was important to include that dud -- or the cheesy footage of the tuxedoed Klein at work with his nude "brushes" -- because cheesiness and the burlesque are clearly part of what he's all about. Hirshhorn exhibit offers multiple sides of artist and performer Yves Klein
  • Among the panelled walls, stained glass skylights and beetling, tuxedoed waiters you will see tributes to famous literary and political regulars.
  • Only there's one major difference: for the 30-year-old Taipei resident, there will be no Prince Charming, no tuxedoed groom. Chen Wei-yih, Taiwan Bride-To-Be, Plans Wedding To Herself (PHOTOS)
  • Gowned and tuxedoed patrons fill the halls to get a preview of the new ‘Riches of India ‘exhibit.’
  • Andrew Strauss's men also provided the evening with a degree of paparazzi-friendly A-list heft: the shrillest cheers of the evening on the red carpet outside MediaCity were reserved for Alastair Cook, emerging swooningly tuxedoed from his vast limousine. Mark Cavendish a fitting winner of BBC Sports Personality of Year
  • As a kid, I vividly remember a top-hatted, tuxedoed little cricket named Jiminy from the Disney movie "Pinocchio" singing, "When you wish upon a star, makes no difference who you are, anything your heart desires will come to you" -- a syrupy song, yes, but it won the Academy Award for best original song on Feb. 29, 1940. Dr. Gregory Jantz, Ph.D.: Generation Vexed: Have Young Adults Given Up on Their Dreams?
  • Take it slow," said the tuxedoed bartender at the "21" Club, placing down a pale-orange concoction in a highball glass. Old Guard, New Polish
  • He supposed that was natural when you saw a muddy, tuxedoed white guy who smelled like a cesspool. Gideon’s war
  • Today – as it was generations ago – tuxedoed waiters flit around tables, precariously balancing countless Viennese coffee varieties and trademark yeast dumplings on silver trays. Leopold Hawelka, luminary of Viennese cafe culture, dies aged 100
  • A tuxedoed pianist plays soft jazz to entertain the smartly dressed clientele that occasionally drift in.

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