It's a rose-pink bias-cut cocktail dress with a cowl neckline, and little rose-pink beads scattered down the front. |
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Davis's downstairs office has rose-pink floor-length curtains, a space heater, and a cat. |
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A little rose-pink ginger on the side tastes like a zingy pickled fruit salad. |
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Beige walls, rose-pink lampshades, halogen spotlights and downlights, and framed matador pictures lend a pleasing contemporary feel. |
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For example, the queen conch, a beautiful rose-pink shellfish from the Caribbean, was listed in 2003, due to its rapid decline. |
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Bill is puffing and blowing, but there is a look of ineffable peace and growing content on his rose-pink features. |
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She often colours her cheeks in a soft, rose pink and wears pale red or rose-pink lip gloss and on some occasions deep red lipstick. |
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Large, clear, rose-pink and veined with deep pink, loosely double, wavy petals. |
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The others were similarly disrobed, and in a few moments their three ladyships were busy before the toilet tables with their grease and rose-pink and black pencils. |
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By now the bird's breast and legs are a brilliant shade of rose-pink. |
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The species bears creamy white flowers with a yellow base and tepals often streaked with rose-pink. |
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Cyclamen neapolitanum produces rose-pink scented flowers in autumn, self-seeds for an increasing year-on-year display and grows to a height of 8-12cm. |
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