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21 Sentences With "fashionable woman"

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

It's for the fashionable woman on the go who wants to be updated about everything she wants to know.
"Melania's a very gracious and fashionable woman," Spicer said at the exhibit's opening, in between promoting his soon-to-be-published book.
"What we have is an idea of her as a cultured and fashionable woman, independent and irreverent, perhaps the first among true Parisiennes."
The energy of the scene comes from the frank stare of the fashionable woman, looking in the direction of whoever left the still-burning cigar on the foreground steps.
Fitness trackers have been a hot gift item since Black Friday, but if you've got a fashionable woman in your life, you know she won't want to sport a black rubber band with her outfits.
"The archetype of a strong, angry, intelligent, fashionable woman didn't necessarily exist in the public consciousness," says Jenny Schlenzka, the director of Performance Space New York, the newly renovated and renamed incarnation of the former Performance Space 122.
The painting shows a woman in a black hat with a veil and feathers; nearby hangs Degas's "Woman Viewed from Behind (Visit to a Museum)" (1879–85), depicting a fashionable woman in a plumed hat looking at paintings in the Louvre.
Ahead, we've rounded up 25 gifts for the most fashionable woman in your life, because besides the last-night phone calls, home-cooked meals, and well, everything else, nothing reminds us how much we love her like borrowing something from her closet.
Simon Doonan (born 1952Meet the Most Fashionable Woman in the World: The Queen of England. The Queen's Jubilee: Why she's the most fashionable woman in the world., Simon Doonan, Slate, 15 March 2012, accessed 16 March 2012) is the Creative Ambassador-at-Large of the New York City-based clothing store Barneys.
Miss Cordwin accuses Henrietta of stealing from her, which is debunked by the fact Henrietta was no longer working with Miss. Cordwain when the item went missing. Mrs. Autumn: Makes her first appearance on page 174. She is a vain, eccentric, fashionable woman who employs Henrietta upon leaving Ms. Cordwain.
In 1901 she was in the cast of Paul Hervieu's play, The Trail of the Torch, when it debuted at the Théatre du Vaudeville. In 1903, she was described as "particularly good" in a production of L'Adversaire by Alfred Capus. She was considered a fashionable woman; reports and photographs of her gowns were published internationally.
In 2009 she got a third award in a competition Mistrz Mowy Polskiej 2010 in a Vox Populi category. In 2013 she has been claimed as "the best fashionable woman in medias". In 2018 she got a prize of a Character of a year and won the award of a magazine "Party" for a debut of a year.
The Heiress is a comedy play by the British playwright and soldier John Burgoyne. The play debuted at the Drury Lane Theatre on 14 January 1786. It concerns the engagement of Lord Gayville to Miss Alscrip, a fashionable woman he believes to be an heiress. Gayville later discovers that the woman who really stands to inherit the fortune is his true love Miss Clifford.
Although the Single Girl was economically, socially and emotionally self-sufficient, the ideal body form was difficult for many to achieve. Therefore, women were constrained by diet restrictions that seemed to contradict the image of the empowered 1960s Single Girl. Fashion photographers also photographed the Single Girl wearing business wear, calling her the Working Girl. The Working Girl motif represented another shift for the modern, fashionable woman.
Pushkin, who regarded Tolstoy as the finest of contemporary Russian artists, referred to him, not surprisingly, in his novel Eugene Onegin. In an 1825 letter to his brother, Pushkin asked him to procure a vignette for the new edition of his poems: "What about having it done by Tolstoy's magic brush? No - too expensive, but how terrifically sweet" (the last line is taken from Ivan Dmitriev's fable "The Fashionable Woman").Vladimir Nabokov.
Helen was a fashionable woman and had some of the first "faux fur" in Connecticut. During a quarter of a century of animal advocacy, she had rescued many animals who suffered the exploitative intentions of humans. She began her compassionate work with horses whom (while she was still married) she brought back to her farm from slaughterhouses and "killer auctions" in Connecticut and New York. The scope of her concern included rehabilitating injured turtles, deer, and other wildlife.
The Hess Brother's dry goods business became more and more successful and in 1901, the Hess store expanded to take over the entire Grand Central Hotel. Hess Brothers store about 1915 Perhaps the best example of the early Hess Brothers store was Hess's French Room. Created by Charles Hess, he filled it with fashions primarily from France. Charles Hess made frequent trips to Paris, and in Allentown newspaper articles, he wrote what the fashionable woman in the French capitol were wearing for social engagements or to the Paris Opera.
The newsreel (one of the first of its kind) was started by the Sales Company in March 1912 and continued by Universal (Éclair's distributor). The Newlyweds started life as a newspaper comic strip by George McManus in the New York World. The three main characters are a fashionable woman drawn in the style of the "Gibson Girl", her obliging husband, and Baby Snookums, an absolute hellion of a child who nevertheless gets everything he wants (usually at the expense of the father). The series was popular both in the United States and in France (under the name Le Petit Ange).
All four dresses are examples of the bustle style, which was a way of exaggerating the size and shape of the bottom through the use of specialised underwear. A purple silk dress highlights the fact that new technologies were being developed in the Victorian era. In the 1850s aniline dyes, the first synthetic dyes were invented and one of the first to be developed was aniline purple. This dress would have been worn by the most fashionable woman in the room as its shape and ruched, or gathered, detailing is typical of styles that can be seen in fashion plates and journals of the early 1880s.
The rest of the canvas consists of a series of geometric forms of greater or lesser abstraction, of convex and concave gradations that stem from the teachings of Georges Seurat and Paul Cézanne. The Divisionist brushwork, mosaic-like 'cubes', present in Metzinger's Neo- Impressionist phase (circa 1903 through 1907) have returned giving texture and rhythm to vast areas of the canvas, visible both in the figures and background.Art of the 20th Century, Louis Vauxcelles, 1907, describes the brushwork of Delaunay and Metzinger as mosaic-like 'cubes' Femme à l'Éventail portrays a strikingly fashionable woman at the height of Parisian fashion in 1912. The artist depicts the figure and background as a series of subdivided facets and planes, presenting multiple aspects of the scene simultaneously.
Carmen Isabella Sandiego is a fictional character featured in a long-running edutainment series of the same name created by the American software company Broderbund. As an international lady thief, a criminal mastermind, and the elusive nemesis of the ACME Detective Agency, Carmen Sandiego is the principal protagonist and anti-villain of the video game series and the head of ACME's rival organization, V.I.L.E. She is depicted as an extremely intelligent, stylish, fashionable woman whose signature look features a red, matching fedora and trenchcoat. Most of her crimes depicted in the games involve spectacular and often impossible cases of monument theft, which are used as a pretext to teach children history and geography via the simulated process of tracking Carmen, the stolen monuments, and her accomplices all over the world. Carmen Sandiegos authors were Gene Portwood, Lauren Elliott, and Dane Bingham.

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