How To Use Well-to-do In A Sentence

  • well-to-do members of the community
  • Many well-to-do households have VCRs, and rented videos are available in the bazaars (markets).
  • Instead, they only serve to ease the consciences of the well-to-do while keeping the poor out of sight.
  • You should be happy that your daughters have married into this well-to-do and respectable family.
  • Of the tea and coffee it might be said, as once it was said of two bad roads – "whichever one you take, you will wish you had taken the other;" the beefsteak was a problem of impracticability; and the chickens – Fleda could not help thinking, that a well-to-do rooster which she saw flapping his wings in the yard, must, in all probability, be at that very moment endeavouring to account for a sudden breach in his social circle; and if the oysters had been some very fine ladies, they could hardly have retained less recollection of their original circumstances. Queechy
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  • The Roman Catholic Religion was a pwerful force through much of Venice's history, so during carnival's the well-to-do Venitians would don masks so that if the behavior became "uncatholic" the bishops would not now who they were. TravelPod.com TravelStream™ — Recent Entries at TravelPod.com
  • The large well-to-do families those great houses were built for left long ago.
  • Hotels and the more well-to-do families on the hillsides would set off fireworks.
  • This was especially the case among the well-to-do, who had ample space for guests and the means to travel.
  • Her family are very well-to-do. The Sun
  • The well-to-do stared through their lorgnettes in delight at quaintly dressed fisherfolk and their families. Times, Sunday Times
  • During the wretched interwar years, Europeans — and Americans as well — had tended to regard refugees either as well-to-do speculators living high on the hog from illegal gain or as a subproletariat ready to snatch jobs from native workers. Who Saved Jews? An Exchange
  • Diana is from a well-to-do family and lives in a London penthouse.
  • The Touhys, a well-to-do white family, can't ignore the needs of a homeless African-American boy.
  • The omnifarious assembly included pale, prim-whiskered young clerks; shabby, lonely, sallow young women, whose sallowness and shabbiness stamped them with the mark of integrity; other females whose specious splendor was not nearly so reassuring; old men, broken-down men, middle-aged men of every description, except the well-to-do. Short Story Classics (American) Vol. 2
  • Some of the inmates are from well-to-do families and they pay for their stay, while others benefit from sponsorship by philanthropists.
  • Some of these purchases were financed by funds extorted from the well-to-do elite hacienda owners. Pancho Villa, re-evaluated
  • Her valetudinarian but masterful father, son of a wool merchant, became sufficiently well-to-do to retire from business. Ada Leverson.
  • Most artists, however, either hold full-time jobs or come from well-to-do families.
  • It is the usual "gros bourg" of Alsace, with comfortable old houses in espaliered gardens: dull, well-to-do, contented; not in the least the kind of setting demanded by the patriotism which has to be fed on pictures of little girls singing the Marseillaise in Alsatian head-dresses and old men with operatic waistcoats tottering forward to kiss the flag. Fighting France
  • Considering how popular shellwork was in Britain, it is not surprising that this form of ornamentation appealed to some well-to-do colonial Americans.
  • They wore the standard uniform of the well-to-do American out of office hours.
  • Sewing, shopping, and beautifying themselves were the only activities that gave well-to-do women any outlet for personal expression.
  • They wore the standard uniform of the well-to-do American out of office hours.
  • He was born into a family of well-to-do doctors and scholars in Cairo. The Sun
  • It retells the rise and fall of a boastful but unenterprising man who marries a well-to-do, enterprising woman named Mary.
  • In sharp contrast with the bare simplicity of the cob cottage is a sitting room furnished in the fashion of a 1905 home of a well-to-do family.
  • In 1868 Manet met Berthe Morisot, an aspiring young artist from a well-to-do family. Still Turning Black to Light
  • An orphan, Doris was brought up in the respectable home of well-to-do foster parents, and was educated by a governess.
  • The houses of well-to-do Mexicans have been inward looking, towards a patio, since colonial times.
  • The mistake led the government to waive thousands of pounds in stamp duty in a well-to-do suburb instead of poor areas of Manchester.
  • All the beauty of youth, first discovered when it is passing — and all the commonplaceness of a well-to-do unmarried man encountering a pretty girl at the time when she is slightly weary of her employment and sees no glory ahead nor any man she is glad to serve. Main Street
  • Or what about the fact that once upon a time the well-to-do liked to indulge in something called the Roti Sans Pareil, which involved playing Russian dolls with game birds – a hulking bustard on the outside, teeny tiny garden warbler at the very centre. Food Britannia by Andrew Webb – review
  • According to one person who attended, the gatherings attracted twenty-somethings from well-to-do Irish families.
  • The products of well-to-do middle-class Argentine upbringings, both wanted to fulfill a restless urge to see the rest of South America before settling down to their medical careers.
  • But by normal standards I am quite well-to-do. Times, Sunday Times
  • She traces its itinerary from the colonial epoch to the 19th century, the period in which the suburban house comes to represent an alternative to the cities for the well-to-do classes in search of privacy.
  • His wife Tina is from a well-to-do family that owns much of the land and property in the Valley.
  • Out-of-doors, well-to-do Elizabethans wore two pairs of shoes, an inner slipper and the outer shoe (pantofle), which required some practice to keep on while walking.
  • Of him whose creation is sufficient to render the year 1849 memorable in the annals of the land much has ere now been written -- that type of a well-to-do British householder, delightful for his follies and endearing by his pluck, something of a lunatic, it must be admitted, yet more of a sportsman, and most of all a "muff" -- _Punch's_ "simple-minded Philistine paterfamilias. The History of "Punch"
  • We sat down in the "horsehair" chairs of a well-to-do farmer's parlor -- furnished in black walnut, with the usual organ against one wall, and the usual marble-topped bureau against the other. Under the Prophet in Utah; the National Menace of a Political Priestcraft
  • Larger women often are favored as brides because they appear to come from a well-to-do family that can provide a significant dowry and seem strong enough to carry heavy loads.
  • It's like diffusion of innovation: whenever innovation comes along, the well-to-do are much quicker at adopting it.
  • Born into a well-to-do family, he was destined for a career in engineering. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘And Carmel, begun by starveling writers and unwanted painters, is now a community of the well-to-do and the retired.’
  • The radicals attacked not freedom but liberalism, which they interpreted as concern for the privileges of the well-to-do masquer - ading as concern for freedom. LIBERALISM
  • According to reports, he was fulminating before a ‘small, but appreciative ‘crowd of well-to-do people in Amritsar.’
  • Born in London, he was raised in a well-to-do family, and given an undergraduate education.
  • She camped it up about her "marvy-poo" beads and dress, and I sat transfixed, destined to join legions who enjoy following the foibles of the well-to-do. Michael Henry Adams: Book Review: Admiring Rich Peoples Houses?
  • He had been a doctor from a well-to-do family, but found he was unable to practise in Britain because he had no certificates to prove his qualifications.
  • carbonadoes", normal multifarious flesh fare for the well-to-do dinner table. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • This was once a luxurious holiday pad that likely belonged to a well-to-do Spanish family. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the early 1960s Tio Andrés moved to La Jolla, Calif., where he developed a "ruta," or route, maintaining the landscaping for several well-to-do residents. The United States Is Still the Land of Opportunity
  • He was born in 1679, of well-to-do parents, but started his working life as a drover, that is to say a person who drove great herds of cattle from the countryside to the great cities like London, for consumption there. John Deane of Nottingham Historic Adventures by Land and Sea
  • Most of these people are well-to-do, have money to spend and more importantly time in which to spend it.
  • I associate this brand of feminism with a certain variety of white, coastal-city dwelling, fairly well-to-do heterosexual cisgendered woman, a woman with a comfortable white-collar job that is so very comfortable and so very white-collar that she is free to spend her spare time yearning for, and semi-believing that she could attain, something with more “meaning.” Already Thursday! How? « Gerry Canavan
  • ‘There is no room even for a mouse,’ shrilled the wife of a well-to-do cultivator — a Hindu Jat from the rich Jullundur, district. Kim
  • The builder of Temple Heights, Richard Thomas Brownrigg, a well-to-do planter and businessman, was a native of the colonial tidewater city of Edenton, on North Carolina's Albemarle Sound.
  • He grew up in Brooklyn, the son of a well-to-do family, a letterman in three sports and the most popular boy in the senior class at Erasmus High.
  • He serves as the amateur therapist of choice to his well-to-do clients, hearing all about their blowouts in the course of their blowouts, and I want to find out why.
  • Ethel Mellor was the daughter of a well-to-do check-weighman. The Prussian Officer and Other Stories
  • Many of the pieces contain that strange instrument, the harmonium - so unfashionable now, but an item in many well-to-do 19 th-century homes.
  • The 1999 figures showed well-to-do areas got four times as much in grants as their residents spent on tickets. The Sun
  • St. Thomas's Day, 21st December, is still at Otterbourne held as the day for "gooding," when each poor house-mother can demand sixpence from the well-to-do towards her Christmas dinner. John Keble's Parishes
  • In contrast, the lives of girls in well-to-do families were often very sheltered.
  • He looked more and more like a well-to-do old English sparrow, and chippered faster and faster. Deephaven and Selected Stories & Sketches
  • They wore the standard uniform of the well-to-do American out of office hours.
  • The story was that of a little girl who was born in a well-to-do family and was a top performer in her studies.
  • One of our well-to-do families volunteered the use of a mountain home for our family vacations. Christianity Today
  • Poor and sick with tuberculosis, Mansfield had neither money nor time to buy the two-storey house in the well-to-do Garavan quartier.
  • Most were fee-paying and came from well-to-do backgrounds.
  • It is obvious that this tendency cannot be reversed, no matter how rapidly the people's income is increased, unless it rises _more rapidly_ than that of the well-to-do. Socialism As It Is A Survey of The World-Wide Revolutionary Movement
  • Julia, John's mother, was the fourth of five sisters born into a well-to-do Liverpool family.
  • The most popular dance hall in the neighborhood was owned by Pete Williams, described as a “well-to-do, coal-black Negro, who has made an immense amount of money from the profits of his dance-house.” A Renegade History of the United States
  • Originally serving to shelter the gharries of the well-to-do, it was later converted for pedestrians with steps added to it.
  • Ann Street started life as an out-of-the-way address for well-to-do widows and spinsters.
  • So buckra is really, well-to-do, upstanding, well-padded white people. Oral History Interview with Modjeska Simkins, May 11, 1990. Interview A-0356. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
  • We had known it would be outside the town proper because Ben had come from a well-to-do family until banditos murdered his parents.
  • Well-to-do patricians were the usual patrons on the exclusive courses in England and America, partly because equipment was so expensive, but also due to the rigid caste system.
  • Commonly the groom or his family gave the infare, but often enough some generous and well-to-do friend, or kinsman, pre-empted the privilege. Dishes & Beverages of the Old South
  • A pair of bust-length portraits in silver, mounted on turned wooden socles, represent a well-to-do Dutch couple and seem - on the evidence of the costume - to have been made around 1645.
  • The sambo is a curiously shaped little table on which offer-ings are made to the Shinto gods; and almost every well-to-do household in hzumo has its own sambo -- such a family sambo being smaller, however, than sambo used in the temples. Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan Second Series
  • Well-to-do travelers prized manners because they are the best available evidence of the breeding and character of new acquaintances.
  • A well-to-do suburban couple are bickering over dinner preparations. Times, Sunday Times
  • He could have been a hero or a villain on the lam, the displaced son of well-to-do folk or just a boy from any one of a thousand dirt farms all over Texas.
  • In the seat in front of him a well-to-do matron and her paunchy husband were busy adjusting an expensive camcorder. YELLOW BIRD
  • These well-to-do, often politically connected professionals—including the increasingly intertwined wealthy of Wall Street, Hollywood, and Silicon Valley—espoused what might be called gentry liberalism, a creed according to which the middle classes had to be punished for their racism, sexism, and excess consumption. Who Lost the Middle Class?
  • Emma Watson, who has been brought up by a well-to-do aunt, returns to her family, who live unfashionably in genteel poverty in a Surrey village.
  • Her Austrian family had been well-to-do leather merchants in Vienna until her father died.
  • I remember one in particular prepared by a graduate student who came from a well-to-do family.

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