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20 Sentences With "dressed smartly"

How to use dressed smartly in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "dressed smartly" and check conjugation/comparative form for "dressed smartly". Mastering all the usages of "dressed smartly" from sentence examples published by news publications.

While dressed smartly, the couple are seen exchanging a look of love.
Taking no chances, the three of them dressed smartly in shoes and trousers.
She doesn't look glamorous, exactly, but for a 21-year-old college junior, she is dressed smartly.
Even on a brutally hot day in July everybody is dressed smartly, the men in jackets and ties.
"You can see the workers cleaning the stage, and they are not dressed smartly enough," she said before walking off.
In one photo, Altintas - dressed smartly in a suit, necktie and white shirt - is seen standing just behind Karlov as the ambassador spoke.
People dressed smartly to come to the square in the old days, said Sevim Isbilir, 70, sitting on a bench in the square as she waited for a friend.
He's 4 years old, dressed smartly like a golfer in all red, and perhaps that's why the Italian Ryder Cup hero Costantino Rocca, shortly after finishing a distant fifth to Tiger Woods at the 20123 Masters, picked Manassero out of a crowd and challenged the young golfer to a five-hole putting contest on the eve of the Italian Open.
At the top of the line, riverboat gamblers dressed smartly, wore expensive jewelry, and exuded refined respectability.
Said Jordan, "Cars are too dull and drab." He reasoned that since people dressed smartly, they were willing to drive "smart looking cars" as well. Today the company produces replica models of their defunct line.
She served as flagship for the Commander-in-Chief from 24 October 1884 to 1886 and for Victoria's birthday celebration and fleet review at Portsmouth in 1896 "dressed smartly for the occasion" (despite having been paid off on 31 March 1888).
Sloley went by the nickname “Gog”. He had studied at the Islington Arts and Media School and was attending City and Islington College. Sloley was 16 years of age when he disappeared and was only two days away from his 17th birthday. Sloley was described as someone who dressed smartly and was not scruffy.
Their betting shop was in the town centre, and its business was obvious. The shop employed a man to read aloud the ticker tape as it arrived creating a professional and very profitable betting shop. The resulting business is considered a model for later (legal) betting shops. Bella dressed smartly and was known for her honesty in paying out on bets two years after the race had finished.
Having fallen out of a window, Karen walks into the office dressed smartly and feistier. However, she has lost a hand and her nose whistles when she has an orgasm. When the girls realise that Joanna is not there to control them they start going wild. They start off by doing mild things such as swapping desks and tipping up litter, then become wilder by interviewing people and asking people to pull their trousers down.
On the day of his execution, 17 June 1747, he dressed smartly in clean clothes and, as he mounted the cart which took the prisoners to the gallows at Tyburn, he tossed his shoes into the crowd. Going up to the gallows he saw a man who had been arrested as a result of Simms' fictitious assassination plot, and asked his forgiveness. As they were about to be hanged, he joined hands with Mary Allen.
However, tension began to build up in the mid-sixties following the formation of the Kenya People's Union party, and following the assassination of Tom Mboya. Joyce Nyamweya clearly recalls one incidence during her April 1969 School holidays while at their rural home in Kisii when Tom Mboya made a surprise visit. Ordinarily, Tom drove very beautiful cars and dressed smartly whether in a suit or in casual wear. However, that morning he arrived looking different, driving a ramshackle of a car accompanied by his daughter.
It was reported that there was also a group of middle-aged people who were trained separately from the majority and who drove luxury sedans like Mercedes-Benzes and BMWs despite being only in their early twenties. These "car achievers" were also known as managers who always dressed smartly in black suits and carried Montblanc pens and wallets. According to a former member of Sunshine Empire, these managers would take other members out for supper after the training sessions because they said it would foster bonding and that it was an opportunity for other members to see the cars they drove.
These were court-martialed in Cuenca and the principal leading rebels condemned to death: Colonel Vargas Torres (of Esmeraldas), the lieutenant colonels Filomeno Pesantez (Santa Rosa, El Oro), Pedro Jose Cavero (Loja) and Jacinto Nevarez (Manabi) and master sergeants Manuel M. Piñeiros (Guayaquil) and Rafael Palacios (Esmeraldas). On March 2, 1887, the sentence was upheld by a majority vote of the Council of State. On the eve of his execution Vargas Torres was assisted to escape from prison, but – realizing that he alone would succeed in absconding – returned to face his punishment in support of his less fortunate comrades-in-arms. Early the next morning, dressed smartly in black and with impressively dignified comportment, he refused a blindfold and glared intently at his executioners as they discharged the fatal volley.
According to Ghil'ad Zuckermann, the Israeli periphrastic construction (using auxiliary verbs followed by a noun) is employed here for the desire to express swift action, and stems from Yiddish. He compares the Israeli periphrasis to the following Yiddish expressions all meaning “to have a look”: (1) ‘’gébņ a kuk’’, which literally means “to give a look” (2) ‘’ton a kuk’’, which literally means “to do a look” (3) the colloquial expression ‘’khapņ a kuk’’, which literally means “to catch a look”. Zuckermann emphasizes that the Israeli periphrastic constructions “are not nonce, ad hoc lexical calques of Yiddish. The Israeli system is productive and the lexical realization often differs from that of Yiddish”. He provides the following Israeli examples: hirbíts “hit, beat; gave”, yielded ‘’hirbíts mehirút’’ “drove very fast” ( ‘’mehirút’’ meaning “speed”), and ‘’hirbíts arukhá’’ “ate a big meal” ( ‘’arukhá’’ meaning “meal”), cf. English ‘’hit the buffet’’ “eat a lot at the buffet”; ‘’hit the liquor/bottle’’ “drink alcohol”. The Israeli Hebrew periphrasis ‘’dafák hofaá’’, which literally means “hit an appearance”, actually means “dressed smartly”.
According to Ghil'ad Zuckermann, the Israeli V+N compound verb is employed here for the desire to express swift action, and stems from Yiddish. He compares the Israeli periphrasis to the following Yiddish expressions all meaning “to have a look”: # געבן א קוק gébņ a kuk, which literally means “to give a look” # טאן א קוק ton a kuk, which literally means “to do a look” # the colloquial expression כאפן א קוק khapņ a kuk, which literally means “to catch a look”. Zuckermann argues that the Israeli V+N compound verbs “are not nonce, ad hoc lexical calques of Yiddish. The Israeli system is productive and the lexical realization often differs from that of Yiddish”. He provides the following Israeli examples: # הרביץ hirbíts “hit, beat; gave”, yielded ## הרביץ מהירות hirbíts mehirút “drove very fast” (מהירות mehirút meaning “speed”), and ## הרביץ ארוחה hirbíts arukhá “ate a big meal” (ארוחה arukhá meaning “meal”), cf. English hit the buffet “eat a lot at the buffet”; hit the liquor/bottle “drink alcohol”. The Israeli Hebrew compound verb דפק הופעה dafák hofaá, which literally means “hit a show”, actually means “dressed smartly”.

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