Made from net tissue, this brick-coloured dress is perfect for your easygoing regular style. |
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Despite modern trends, regional and traditional forms of dress have developed their own significance as a symbol of native tradition. |
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Muslims adopted indigenous customs and traditions, including dress, food, and way of life. |
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May Bell ironed the last ruffle and then hung the dress in the wardrobe next to her other lovelies. |
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From 1916 to 1930, Fleischer would dress up as a Coney Island clown and have animators rotoscope films of him as Koko the Clown. |
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The lady did not want to bebother her stylist for an extravagant dress design. |
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The exertion of walking in a tight dress over rough fields made her momentarily more beetrooty. |
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The PhD was often distinguished from the earlier higher doctorates by distinctive academic dress. |
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That's a good little boy, shoot all your cummies on mommy's favorite dress while we have Peeking Phone Sex. |
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Academic dress is required for examinations, matriculation, disciplinary hearings, and when visiting university officers. |
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There are some variations in the school dress worn by boys in authority, see School Prefects and King's Scholars sections. |
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He saw how the candlesticks shone darkly in the vicinity of the diamond flames in Shevele's ears and on her silk dress collar. |
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When I went inside, there was this very pretty blond headed lady in a nice dress and her hair all doodied up. |
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Elders would dress, take a breakfast by 11 o'clock, have a nap and in the afternoon or evening would generally go to the Forum. |
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The woman's stola was a dress worn over a tunic, and was usually brightly colored. |
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Evidence for this may be found in his desire to associate himself with the Duke of Wellington in his form of dress. |
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Marc Valeric, a Beverly Hills milliner, sold 125 bespoke hats in two weeks to women desperate to dress properly for royal receptions. |
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I don't mean that you are to Grecianize their dress, any more than medievalize it. |
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Wherever they are, they wear their native dress and their music is known throughout the world. |
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The 1959 novel Absolute Beginners describes modernists as young modern jazz fans who dress in sharp modern Italian clothes. |
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In 2011, Madame Tussauds unveiled a wax statue of her draped in the Elie Saab dress she wore at 63rd Primetime Emmy Awards. |
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Crewe steals a kiss, to Alice's disgust, but as she is changing and preparing to leave, he takes her dress from the changing area. |
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We've got three dress rehearsals before the opening night to prepare ourselves for any potential technicalities. |
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We're having a party on Saturday, but you must dress up as a famous historical figure. |
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After college, she started blimping and could no longer wear her favorite little black dress. |
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The female equivalents were called Merveilleuses and adopted Greek dress and espoused a neo-classical nostalgia. |
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Wimbledon traditions include a strict dress code for competitors and Royal patronage. |
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Although they had eloped in Vegas, she'd insisted he wear a tuxedo and she buy a wedding dress at one of the local stores. |
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She was a very lovely woman in her late thirties, in a silk dress of screaming scarlet that would have etiolated a white woman to bled veal. |
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As such, it is seen on the dress uniforms of the Yeomen Warders at the Tower of London, and of the Yeomen of the Guard. |
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The traditional Faroese national dress is also a local handicraft that people spend a lot of time, money, and effort to assemble. |
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Both men's and women's national dress are extremely costly and can take many years to assemble. |
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She wore a beaded dress that required many hours of handwork. |
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Since tickets to the live shows are often scarce, tickets are also sold in order that the public may attend these dress rehearsals. |
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At universities like Oxford, middle-class students hold 'chav bops' where they dress up as this working-class caricature. |
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Historically, the Irish nation was made up of kin groups or clans, and the Irish also had their own religion, law code and style of dress. |
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This was one flirty dress. Way too sultry for a first date, especially with someone she might have no real interest in. |
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I'm going to masquerade as the wikipede. What are you going to dress up as? |
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Holly flung herself on an upholstered sofa, her cute retro dress floofing around her. |
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As to my dress, I covered my Hussar uniform with a long cloak, and I put a grey forage cap upon my head. |
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She unfastened her dress, her arms arched thin and high, her shadow anticking her movements. |
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Acteon found the air hostess trying to pull on her damasse dress and realign cleavage in the gentleboys' bog. |
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His boss was always getting on his case about his standards of dress, even though he worked well and seldom left the back room. |
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It caused quite a brouhaha when the school suspended one of its top students for refusing to adhere to the dress code. |
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The student's shirt was not compliant with the school's dress code. |
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Lady in a heliotrope dress with a lace collar, three flounces on the skirt? |
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Her dress is wool too, brown and black houndsteeth that belonged to her mother. |
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The cloth and the dress distinguished one class of people from the other class. |
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I only meant to buy one new dress, but I got carried away and ended up with five. |
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Cavalier was not understood at the time as primarily a term describing a style of dress, but a whole political and social attitude. |
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Next month the Four Winds, an old cafe and the last basket house in the Village, will close to make way for a dress shop. |
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The Commons assemble in their own chamber, wearing ordinary day dress, and begin the day, as any other, with prayers. |
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Many of the church dignitaries are distinguishable by peculiarities of dress, as the shovel hat and kirtle. |
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His successor John Bercow abandoned traditional dress, wearing a plain black gown over his lounge suit when presiding. |
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Besides the basic black dress, Chanelisms include pearls, sling-back pumps in beige and white, gold chains, and flame red and navy suit braiding. |
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She used cloth patterns from his Pattern Sample book to dress her characters. |
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A totally different liassic stone is Blue Lias, a whitish-grey stone obtainable only in relatively small pieces and difficult to dress. |
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The lingerings of decent pride were visible in her appearance. Her dress, though humble in the extreme, was scrupulously clean. |
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He held one gigantic hand in front of her eyes so she could see it and smell it, then rammed it clawingly down her dress front. |
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The Gaels had their own style of dress, which became the modern belted plaid and kilt in Scotland. |
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Today, Pakistani fashion is a combination of traditional and modern dress and has become a mark of Pakistani culture. |
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He gave in to the social pressures to act and dress like everybody else. |
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A wiry little girl in a starched, lemon-colored party dress, she sassed along with a grownup mince, one hand on her hip, the other supporting a spinsterish umbrella. |
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Wearing a collarless jacket called the abacost that relfected the style of chairman Mao, Mobutu outlawed the traditional suits and business dress of the West. |
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She has on her blue barege dress, which implies her unvarying constancy. |
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Resembling Murat in personal enterprise and fearlessness, he also resembled that prince of beaux sabreurs in carrying his love of dress into the very field of battle. |
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Penny was in the scullery, pressing the body of her new dress. |
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Your borderline remarks about my aunt's dress destroyed my evening. |
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And he would have relished the juxtaposition of the wedding dress with the infamous bumster trousers that are, as of this week, on show in the Metropolitan Museum. |
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She cast away her bridal dress along with other reminders of the marriage. |
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There was a striking black coatdress with square gold paillettes streaking down the sides, and a lovely black sleeveless dress with silvery panels. |
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The young bride's friends confected a dress from odds and ends of fabric. |
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Her crimson dress inflames grey corridors, or flaring in a sunshaft through high branches makes of the deep green shadows a greenness darker yet, and a darkness greener. |
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Earlier that day, seeking festoonery, she tore the trim from a dress. |
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Other valleys are inhabited by other ethnic groups but it is Drukpa culture that dominates when defining the national language, dress, religion, and architecture. |
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If I lose a few kilos, the gorgeous wedding dress might fit me. |
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The dress really did not look very flattering on her figure. |
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Every wardrobe needs an all-purpose cocktail dress, but these are often funner if you can find a retro party dress in flawless shape at a vintage clothing store. |
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She'd swapped the print dress for a plain white blouse and brown gymslip. |
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We mastered the intricacies of jerseys, hoods, and lures pretty well, but nowhere did it say in that book what the proper dress of the hawkist should be. |
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Wearing that skimpy dress, you are bound to invite attention. |
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Whilst presiding, the Speaker or Deputy Speaker wears ceremonial dress. |
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The current Speaker no longer wears the traditional court dress outfit, which included knee breeches, silk stockings and buckled court shoes under their gown, or the wig. |
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Who, excepting fictional fanged creatures of the night, doesn't love a bit of garlic? It goes in anything and is like the little black dress of the food world. |
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Besides the national dress, domestically tailored suits and neckties are often worn by men, and are customary in offices, schools, and social gatherings. |
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Squatting, Dewey Dell's wet dress shapes for the dead eyes of three blind men those mammalian ludicrosities which are the horizons and the valleys of the earth. |
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The council prohibited marriage, concubinage, and drunkenness to all those in holy orders, condemned sodomy and simony, and regulated clerical dress. |
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During religious ceremonies, many adherents choose to wear clothing that imitates the styles of dress worn in Iron Age and Early Medieval Northern Europe. |
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The phrase Town and Gown is employed to differentiate inhabitants of Cambridge from students at the university, who historically wore academical dress. |
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There is great variety shown in how Morris sides dress, from the predominantly white clothing of Cotswold sides to the tattered jackets worn by Border teams. |
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In keeping with the theme of an inversion of rules, and of disguise, crossdressing was a common strategy, and men would sometimes dress as women and women as men. |
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He called one collection of poems Pansies, partly for the simple ephemeral nature of the verse, but also as a pun on the French word panser, to dress or bandage a wound. |
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And two years ago I was asked by the Stuckists to dress as a clown and come and be on the steps outside, so I am thrilled and slightly surprised to be here. |
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Those members not entitled to wear colours, dress in a black hunt coat and unadorned black buttons for both men and ladies, generally with pale breeches. |
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Boots are all English dress boots and have no other distinctive look. |
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A dress length of 8 metres of the best quality costs 58 francs. |
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Some supporters even wear face paint or crazy costumes or they dress up as their favourite player via their trademark attire or customary nickname. |
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Many people also mark the occasion by wearing the national Faroese dress. |
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Me, I've spent my whole life studying native militarians. They are an interesting people, clad in colorful native dress and participating in bizarre social customs. |
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