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"gowned" Definitions
  1. wearing a gown

60 Sentences With "gowned"

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

Think of it as the Ball-gowned Lady of the Instagram side show.
"She looks like Elsa," said a young "Frozen" fan about a silver-gowned mannequin.
On Monday, they received honorary diplomas and the capped, gowned feting they had been denied.
Gone is the white-gowned Puritan nun, and that infantilized charmer, the Belle of Amherst.
Gone is the white-gowned Puritan nun, and the Belle of Amherst, that infantilized charmer.
"Everyone that comes in is completely gowned — head-to-toe covered — that was really weird," said Driscoll.
In the director Jonas Akerlund's visualization of "Hold Up," a yellow-gowned Beyoncé smashes car windows with a bat.
Perhaps you have, like I have, wondered what happened to the momentum of last year's #TimesUp black-gowned solidarity.
After a sparkly-gowned walk in the park, they reprise their first kiss as silhouettes against a gorgeously lit fountain.
" He also told the judge and a room full of black-gowned lawyers, "I was informed of these crimes, but I plead not guilty.
There are no aerial shots of tailcoated men tearing through fields on horseback, no silken-gowned gentry at balls; it's as spare as a monk's cupboard, both by design and necessity.
We were there with a quartet of male garden gnomes in gray seersucker skirts, a golden-gowned mermaid, an iridescent jelly fish and a sea gull in a feather-bedecked knickerbocker suit.
That is impossible in Ebola wards, however, because proximity to the sick is too dangerous for anyone who is not fully gowned, gloved, masked and goggled — and trained to remove all those items safely.
The Federalist Society's annual dinner last week looked like any other black-tie affair in Washington — a sea of tuxedoed and ball-gowned lawyers gathered in an ornate hall in Union Station to sip wine, hobnob, and celebrate the year's achievements.
Then Abbink—gloved and gowned, draped in a sterile blue smock in the isolation room—prepared the so-called challenge virus, which had been kept in tissue-culture flasks brimming with red broth, and they injected the mice with the virus.
The movie launches promisingly enough, its Pepto-Bismol font curling across the credits in the spirit of Sofia Coppola's The Beguiled (a film to which LaBruce's bears striking plot similarities, if you swap the white-gowned maidens for surly lesbians in matching knee-high socks).
We still had to have a nurse gowned up with the appropriate equipment, but the robot made it easier to listen to the heart and lungs with a digital stethoscope and talk to patients without having to get suited up multiple times a day.
The windows, unveiled on November 14 and overseen by David Hoey, Bergdorf Goodman's senior director for visual presentation, have flashy fashion at their center, whether the Zac Posen-gowned conductor of the layered neon instruments in the NYPO window, or the glitzy Halpern dress surrounded by gleaming AMNH dinosaurs.
There is a fair amount of humor in some of the images, such as INRI Cristo (his name taken from the inscription put by the Romans on the crucifix) cruising around his Brazilian compound on a cross-adorned pedestal pushed by blue-gowned disciples, yet Bendiksen's photographs are never judgmental.
The author Lao She, who in 1956 charted a Beijing teashop's woes over a half-century in his play "Teahouse", drew on life when he had the establishment's manager pin up signs pleading "No talk of state affairs", or when he showed grey-gowned secret police arresting customers for questioning the government.
Though it's unclear what lyrics Houston wrote (Babyface didn't return a request for comment), the line "'Cause I ain't nobody's angel / What can I say / I'm just that way" mirrors sentiments she shared with Rolling Stone at the time, complaining about her ball-gowned image: "I am nobody's angel," Houston told the interviewer.
155 The illustration shows the Bard, a gowned bearded old man, playing a large celtic triangular harp to the listening youths and maidens: two children standing in the middle of the group, and six older youths. There are two young females standing to the left who embrace.
To the French, the Vietnamese did not conform to European gendered idea(l)s and naturalized, normative behaviour that was properly attributed to the respective genders. According to French gender norms, “cultivated and civilized” women were expected to be “corseted and gowned,” creating a seductive hourglass figure indicative of sexual fecundity.Proschan, “Eunuch,” 442.
" Variety agreed: "Taylor, fashionably gowned and bejeweled carries the film almost single-handedly. Fonda is excellent in his climactic appearance, an unusually superb casting idea. Taylor's performance also is very good, and relative to many of her recent roles, this is one of the strongest and most effective in some time. Her Beauty remains sensational.
The grieving Alphans then depart, much to Elizia's satisfaction. Koenig is brought to the reception hall where an enticingly- gowned Elizia awaits. A hunter at heart, she finds the thrill of seduction in the chase as well as the conquest. In the face of his defiance, she reminds him that his people believe him dead.
Six couples dance joyfully around the board on which the lone female now reclines. The pianist briefly interrupts the rag to reprise the ominous beat as a somber white-gowned, chignoned figure crosses the stage in a series of swirling turns. As she exits, the ensemble returns to joyous movement. The ballet is approximately 15 minutes in length.
Weekend Wives is a 1928 British silent comedy film directed by Harry Lachman and starring Monty Banks, Jameson Thomas and Estelle Brody. It was made at British International Pictures's Elstree Studios. The film is set in Paris and resort town of Deauville. One reviewer described it as being "as beautifully photographed, gowned and set as the average Paramount picture and as silly".
Thomas Muir circa 1793 Muir's education began at the age of five when his father hired William Barclay, a local schoolmaster, as a private tutor. In 1775, at the early age of 10, he was admitted to the "gowned classes" of Glasgow University. After five sessions he matriculated (1777) and took up divinity: like his parents he supported the Auld Licht or popular party in Kirk politics.
The church is also known because on the Friday of Holy Week, the Procession of the Dead Christ (Processione del Cristo Morto) leaves from this church. This elaborate ritual procession commemorates the passion of Christ. In the past, participating confraternities, including the one of this church, included flagellants. However, the procession still includes white gowned members anonymously parading under capirotes, carrying statues of the dead Christ and the Madonna Addolorata.
Of the 30 total figures, 27 were nude--the angel was gowned, and both infants were swaddled in cloth. Some Pennsylvania legislators and local religious leaders opposed the nudity of Barnard's sculptures. He responded: The Prodigal Son (modeled 1904), Speed Museum > There has been some criticism, because these 30 figures I have executed are > nude. Only in the nude could I have given adequate expression to these > figures.
When performing his poems at events, he wore a 'wine-red-purple' gowned donned with native symbols on the arms. This gown was made and given to him by the woman's literacy club in Saint Catherine's. Robb had even received letters from Queen Elizabeth II congratulating him on his poetic work. The Queen had received a copy of 'Hail Canada!' after it was forwarded to her by the Governor General's residence in 1967.
In Miss Rosamunde Lumsdaine's acting there is > much to be thankful for. She has not cultivated Mary Pickford's curls, and > she behaves like an ordinary girl. Mrs, T. H. Kelly makes a dashing, well > gowned figure of the designing matron, and some of the best work of the > picture is done by Mr. James Osborne... The photography is good. Another film to aid the Red Cross, His Only Chance (1918), was made in Melbourne.
Mrs. Mallory (Williams) persuades Mary Maddock (Ayres), her unhappily married seamstress, to take the place of an absent guest at her dinner party. Gorgeously gowned and very beautiful, Mary wins the heart of Nelson Rogers (Stanley), who asks her to marry him. Mary realizes what she is missing and remains faithful to her abusive and idle husband Steve Maddock (Burton), whom she supports. After a final insult from him, she remains with the Mallorys.
The waterfront is also home to the Everett Yacht Club, which was founded in 1907, although it existed in some form as early as 1895. During summer months, the marina is home to the Waterfront Concert Series, part of a citywide free concert series. Each September, Tenth Street Park on the waterfront is home to the annual Everett Coho Derby, while each August the marina promenade is gowned in local art during the Fresh Paint Festival of Artists.
The archbishoprics and religious provinces corresponded with the audiences, the bishoprics with the gobernaciones and alcaldias mayores, and the parishes and curateships with the corregimientos and alcaldias ordinarias.Paredes-Van Dyke p.8. These civil divisions were not uniform, with numerous exceptions being made based on the specific circumstances. The Viceroys were presidents of the audiences at the capitals of their Viceroyalties, with other audiences being presided over by captains-generals, or by persons known as gowned presidents.
As Cinderella's stepsisters get ready for the Ball, hoping that they will catch the Prince's eye, they laugh at Cinderella's dreams. After they leave Cinderella imagines having gone with them ("In My Own Little Corner" (reprise)). Cinderella's Fairy Godmother appears and is moved by Cinderella's wish to go to the Ball. She transforms Cinderella into a beautifully gowned young lady and her little mouse friends and a pumpkin into a glittering carriage with footmen ("Impossible; It's Possible"); Cinderella leaves for the Ball.
George Lancaster, G.O. Howard, and Forest Scales, of Holcombe Rock, and C.S. Hutter, D.A. Payne, and Dexter Otey, of Lynchburg. The ushers were followed by eight groomsmen Messers. E.R. Hutter, R.T. Watts, Samuel Adams, R.C. Blackford, Keene Langhorne and Henry Johnson, of Lynchburg: Robert Rose, of New York, and Colonel Joseph Button, of Richmond. Bridesmaids were exquisitely gowned in white mousseline and lace trimmings over taffeta with large white picture hats and long gloves, and carried bunches of maiden hair fern.
A 20-year old Laura Nyro gave one of her earliest performances at The Monterey Pop Festival. Critics at the time were divided in their opinions of her performance, some claiming that the black-gowned Nyro was out of sync with the psychedelic sensibilities of the event. Upon the conclusion of her set, Nyro was upset, claiming to have heard “boos” from the audience and refused to believe otherwise for many years. Her performance was not included in the original film’s release.
Fashion-gowned women, bankers, tradesmen and merchants sought Margaret's counsel. Seated in the doorway of the bakery in the heart of the city, she became an integral part of its life, for, besides the poor who came to her continually, she was consulted by the people of all ranks about their business affairs, her wisdom having become proverbial. "Our Margaret" the people of New Orleans called her. The locals said she was masculine in energy and courage but gifted with the gentlest and kindest manners.
Gowned St Andrews undergraduates on the town pier Undergraduate gowns are a notable feature of academic dress for students at the ancient universities in Scotland.For a comprehensive account of this topic see: Cooper, J. C. ‘The Scarlet Gown: History and Development of Scottish Undergraduate Dress’, Transactions of the Burgon Society, 10 (2010), pp. 8-42. (Available here) The most famous form of Scottish undergraduate dress is the red or scarlet gown. It is differentiated slightly according to the university at which it is worn.
Ana Maria Varela-Lago, Conquerors, Immigrants, Exiles: The Spanish Diaspora in the United States, (Proquest, 2008), p. 63. Instead of an original work by Miranda, Central Park commissioned a copy of sculptor Jeronimo Suñol's Columbus statue in Madrid, which was dedicated in 1894. Following the Boston Public Library's notorious 1896 rejection of Frederick William MacMonnies's nude sculpture Bacchante and Infant Faun, Miranda prepared a replacement work for the courtyard's fountain. The Spirit of Research was a sober figure of a gowned woman lifting a veil--a metaphor for education.
Bristol also specifies that undergraduates are to wear gowns "of the approved pattern" in certain circumstances, although the pattern itself is not specified. This is not too important since, in practice, undergraduates are never required to be gowned except when graduating. As at most universities, when graduating, graduands wear the dress appropriate to the degree to which they are to be admitted. This appears to be a de facto rather than legislated practice since there is no specific provision in Statute, Ordinance or Regulation for how graduands should dress.
Relying on his general warrant to return to England, given under the great seal, Essex sailed from Ireland on 24 September 1599, and reached London four days later. The Queen had expressly forbidden his return and was surprised when he presented himself in her bedchamber one morning at Nonsuch Palace, before she was properly wigged or gowned. On that day, the Privy Council met three times, and it seemed his disobedience might go unpunished, although the Queen did confine him to his rooms with the comment that "an unruly beast must be stopped of his provender." Essex by Isaac Oliver, c.
B.Tauris, 2006):22. James Lafayette Hutchison, on his return to the Astor House in the 1930s after several years absence in the United States, noticed no changes: "I walked across the bridge and registered at the old Astor House Hotel.... The same subdued, cavernous lobby with the same white-gowned boys leaning against the tall pillars, the same mystic maze of halls leading to a sparsely furnished bedroom." Further, he described the Astor House as "a faded green, cavern-like wooden structure, with tall rooms smelling of must and mildew".James Lafayette Hutchison, China Hand (Lothrop, Lee and Shepard company, 1936):273, 220.
She was superbly gowned in silk that had a touch of purple or > lilac about it, just the tone for her full black, calm eyes and war, tawny > skin. For these of chiefly blood are many shades fairer than the commoners. > Jack London and Charmian London agreed that they could not expect ever to > behold a more queenly woman. The descriptive powers of these were > exasperatingly inept to picture the manner in which the Princess stood, > touching with hers the hands of all who passed before her, with a brief, > graceful droop of her fine head, and a fleeting, perfunctory, yet graciouse > flash of little teeth under her small fine mouth.
Nonetheless, les pours distinguished the court's inner circle from its hangers-on. The tabouret was even more highly valued. It consisted of the right for a woman or girl to sit on a stool or ployant (folding seat), in the presence of the king or queen. Whereas the queen had her throne, the filles de France and petite-filles their armchairs, and princesses du sang were entitled to cushioned seats with hard backs, duchesses whose husbands were peers sat, gowned and bejewelled, in a semicircle around the queen and lesser royalties on low, unsteady stools without any back support -- and reckoned themselves fortunate among the women of France.
At St Chad's College the College feastday begins with a proclamation of the feast and includes an early rise, college invasions, green breakfast, as well as a host of competitions that see students spread out into the City vying to win various awards. More serious highlights include a service in the Cathedral and musical performances in the Quad. Alumni have a parallel set of events on or around the same day in Durham and (usually) in London. Previous events that were termed 'gaudies' are now more often called 'feasts' (by the college) or 'mega-formals' (by the JCR): these are all black-tie and gowned affairs that occur several times a term to mark major feasts and special events.
This typical happens at some point in the early winter of the first semester. Similar traditions remain at Dundee's erstwhile parent institution, the University of St Andrews, but are however incorporated into a Raisin Weekend and the term gaudie night is not used for the first night. Many traditions surround this event including Raisin receipts in Latin, a foam fight and Raisin strings given by the academic mother to be hung on the Bejant/Bejantine's academic gown. St Andrews has a separate ceremony known as the gaudie which involves a gowned torchlight procession and singing of the Gaudeamus in memory of a student, John Honey who risked his life in 1800 to save survivors of a shipping accident offshore.
Ignorance, the king, Suspicion Botticelli reproduced this quite closely, down to the donkey ears of the seated king, into which the women that flank him speak. A richly gowned Slander (or Calumny), with her hair being dressed by her attendants, is being led by her slender, robed companion. The victim she is dragging, nearly nude and with his ankles crossed as if to be crucified, raises his hands in prayer. According to Lucian, the painting was made after Apelles had himself been slandered, denounced to Ptolemy IV Philopator of Egypt by Antiphilos, a rival artist, of conspiring in around 219 BC with Theodotus of Aetolia to hand Syrian cities such as Tyre to the rival Seleucids.
The modern meaning of the American flag, according to Harold Holzer in 2007 and Adam Goodheart in 2011, was forged by Anderson's stand at Fort Sumter. Holzer states that New York City: :responded with a "feast of the American flag." Eyewitnesses estimated that as many as 100,000 flags quickly went on display across the city. To punctuate this feast of national colors, New York's graphic artists rushed out patriotic engravings and lithographs depicting avenging soldiers or gowned goddesses, bayonets upthrust, carrying "The Flag of Our Union" into future battles....Composers dedicated songs like "Our Countries Flag" to President Lincoln, and adorned their published sheet music with colorful images of resolute soldiers gripping the national banner.
Many of Harbin's Russians were wealthy, which sometime confused foreign visitors who expected them to be poor, with for instance the American writer Harry A. Franck in his 1923 book Wanderings in North China writing the Russian "ladies as well gowned as at the Paris races [who] strolled with men faultlessly garbed by European standards", leading him to wonder how they had achieved this "deceptive appearance". The Harbin Institute of Technology was established in 1920 as the Harbin Sino-Russian School for Industry to educate railway engineers via a Russian method of instruction. Students could select from two majors at the time: Railway Construction or Electric Mechanic Engineering. On 2 April 1922, the school was renamed the Sino-Russian Industrial University.
In that position he wrote very favorable reviews of Show Boat (1936), and of The Wizard of Oz and Gone with the Wind (1939). One account of his output at the Times says that "He was known for his acerbic wit and poison-tipped pen, and even his news articles had verve and voice; his features were chatty, clever, and intimate, if occasionally smug." He praised director John Ford without reservation, writing of Stagecoach in 1939: And of Ford's The Grapes of Wrath, released the following year, he wrote: His critiques were sometimes sharp-tongued. He called Mannequin with Joan Crawford and Spencer Tracy a "glib, implausible and smart-gowned little drama, as typical Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as Leo himself".
The two maids of honor, Miss Edna Hutter, sister of the bride, and Miss Florence Langhorne, of Campbell County, were handsomely and becomingly gowned in white mousseline over white taffeta and wore large white chiffon hats with pink roses and carried la France roses. The bride followed the maids of honor, and proceeded up the aisle on the arm of her father. She wore an elegant and lovely bridal costume of heavy white satin with white chiffon over dress and point lace, with a long veil caught with a cluster of dainty orange blossoms, and carried a bunch of graceful Easter lilies. On reaching the foot of the chancel steps, the bride was joined by the groom, who had approached from the vestry room accompanied by his best man, Mr. Marion Scales, of New York.
The show, in which Harris co-starred with Alan Alda and Larry Blyden and was directed by Mike Nichols, opened at the Shubert Theater on October 5, 1966 and closed on November 25, 1967. The show was based on three tales by Mark Twain, Frank R. Stockton, and Jules Feiffer and Harris starred in all three. She played Eve in Twain's The Diary of Adam and Eve, a melodramatically campy temptress in The Lady and the Tiger, and two roles in Jules Feiffer's Passionella. She was the forlorn, soot-stained nasal-congested chimney-sweep who wants only to be "a beautiful glamorous movie star, for its own sake", and, by virtue of an instantaneous costume-change, the huge- bosomed, gold-gowned, blonde bombshell of a movie star she always dreamed she'd be.
He sees the red-gowned hooded figures of Luciana, Mr. Julio and the witch, as well as Vilma and Eugenio side by side. The constant sounds of tortured screams fills the room. After the dancers raise their arms, some sparks fly and Coffin Joe appears. Marins is shocked to see his creation in flesh and blood, shouting rants and pronouncements typical of Coffin Joe, such as “may the blood of those who don't deserve to live burst out of their bodies!”, and “may lightning burn the scum!”. Coffin Joe walks up a staircase of human bodies to witness the festivities, mainly topless women dancing exotically to the constant screams of torture and terror that fill the background. When the wedding starts, Coffin Joe places the rings on Carlos' and Vilma's fingers, announcing “may pain and blood spread among us!”. The scenes that follow are a series of vivid depictions of torture, mutilation, dismemberment, and live cannibalism.
Although ivy and grapevines are the regular vegetative attributes of Dionysus, at Athens roses and violets could be adornments for Dionysian feasts. In a fragment from a dithyramb praising Dionysus, the poet Pindar (5th century BC) sets a floral scene generated by the opening up of the Seasons (Horae), a time when Semele, the mortal mother of Dionysus, is to be honored: Ariadne (1898) by the pre-Raphaelite John William Waterhouse: the sleeping red-gowned Ariadne is surrounded by roses, with the sailing background implying both the departure of Theseus and the advent of Dionysus, foreshadowed by his leopardsKarl Kilinski II, Greek Myth and Western Art: The Presence of the Past (Cambridge University Press, 2013), p. 106. > ... as the chamber of the purple-robed Horai is opened, > the nectar-bearing flowers bring in the sweet-smelling spring. > Then, then, upon the immortal earth are cast > the lovely tresses of violets, and roses fitted to hair > and voices of songs echo to the accompaniment of pipes > and choruses come to Semele of the circling headband.
St John's College, Cambridge Formal Hall Formal Hall or Formal Meal is a meal held at some of the oldest universities in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland (as well as some other Commonwealth countries) at which students usually dress in formal attire and often gowns to dine. These are held commonly in the colleges and halls of Oxford,Formal Hall Etiquette , Jesus College, Oxford, UK. Cambridge,Meals & Formal Hall, Trinity Hall, Cambridge, UK. Dublin, Durham, St Andrews, Bristol, London, the Australian sandstone universities (Adelaide, Melbourne, Queensland, Sydney, Tasmania, Western Australia), and Toronto. In a number of red brick universities, some halls such as those at Bristol, Leeds and Exeter, also practise similar traditions in order to increase interaction between academics and students, and to enrich the students' overall learning experience. Colleges of some Australian red brick universities, including the Australian National University, Monash University, the University of New England, the University of New South Wales and the University of Southern Queensland, also hold gowned formal dinners.
Michael Arnheim was particularly close to his paternal grandmother, Martha Arnheim (née Bernhardt, always called "Oma"), from whom he learnt German and by whom he was entertained with her amusing tales of life in Baerwalde, Pomerania, in pre- World War I Germany. Oma's husband (Michael Arnheim's grandfather), Max Arnheim, a prosperous barrel manufacturer, served in the German army in World War I, and Oma's father, Julius Bernhardt, fought proudly on the Prussian side in the Danish- Prussian War of 1864, the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 and the Franco-Prussian War of 1870. As a 14-year-old student at King Edward VII School in Johannesburg, Arnheim was picked to join the "Quiz Kids" team of five capped and gowned teenagers, appearing on South Africa's Springbok Radio, and of which he became a stalwart member, "retiring" at the age of eighteen. He entered Johannesburg's University of the Witwatersrand at the age of 16, he took a first-class B.A. in History and Classics at the age of 19, first-class Honours at 20 and an M.A. with distinction at the age of 21.
As is the practice in many other Commonwealth jurisdictions such as Australia, Canadian litigators are "gowned", but without a wig, when appearing before courts of "superior jurisdiction". All law graduates from Canadian law schools, and holders of NCA certificates of Qualification (Internationally trained lawyers or graduates from other law schools in common-law jurisdictions outside Canada) from the Federation of Law Societies of Canada after can apply to the relevant Provincial regulating body (law society) for admission (note here that the Canadian Provinces are technically each considered different legal jurisdictions). Prerequisites to admission as a member to a law society involve the completion of a Canadian law degree (or completion of exams to recognize a foreign common law degree), a year of articling as a student supervised by a qualified lawyer, and passing the bar exams mandated by the province the student has applied for a licence in. Once these requirements are complete then the articling student may be "called to the bar" after the review if their application and consideration of any "good character" issues at which they are presented to the Court in a call ceremony.
Such treatment would be as false as > making the figures in a carpet stand up so prominently as to cause us to > experience a sense of striking against them as we walk. The Burning of the "Peggy Stewart" (1903), panels #1, #3 & #5, Baltimore City Courthouse Turner and assistants at work on the General Washington at Fort Lee mural for Hudson County Courthouse, 1910 His mural The Triumph of Manhattan (1896) was a cycloramic view of New York Harbor, that encircled the Hotel Manhattan's rotunda. In the foreground, it featured Native Americans, European colonists, and historical figures such as Benjamin Franklin, Washington Irving, Samuel Morse, Robert Fulton, and John Jay, all paying their respects to the Greek-gowned "Empress Manhattan," who was surrounded by female attendants. Turner later painted a mural of Greek gods and goddesses for the hotel's lobby. One of Turner's most famous murals is The Burning of the "Peggy Stewart" (1903), painted for the Baltimore City Courthouse. It depicts an incident from 1774--often called the "Annapolis Tea Party"--when the American boycott against imported British tea was at its height.

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