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10 Sentences With "raffishly"

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

In her youth she had been a renegade, raffishly dressed in miniskirts and combat boots.
Worn over the ears, or raffishly askew, the Francophile favorite keeps your noggin snug without sacrificing sophistication.
Cast members, especially the children, were encouraged to select what they would wear from a raffishly assembled communal wardrobe.
Her close-cropped hair and cat-eye makeup did the rest, bringing to mind a raffishly updated Audrey Hepburn or waiflike Mia Farrow.
In the image, Breitbart is dressed, raffishly, in a dark blazer and white button-down, his chest hair exposed; it looks as if he's making a point, or about to, and raising an index finger.
Ms. Deyn, who stars as a spunky Scottish farm girl in Mr. Davies's elegiac period film, bounded to greet him looking raffishly undone, and resolutely modern, in an outsize gray sweatshirt and jeans, her honey-tone hair hanging loosely to her shoulders, no discernible makeup brightening her face.
The company's fall 2017 collection includes such offerings as a slip dress topped by an outsize biker jacket stamped with the legend "Not Your Baby"; a shrunken T-shirt raffishly knotted over a ballerina-length tulle skirt; and a two-piece knitwear ensemble topped with a plushly overscale bathrobe of a coat.
As you enter the show, you may want to momentarily avert your eyes from the central wall where the freshly restored "Visitation" (1528–1529), the show's centerpiece, rests on a faux-altar, and turn instead toward the limpid "Portrait of a Young Man in a Red Cap (Carlo Neroni?)" (63–1530), a depiction of a raffishly handsome militiaman, one of the volunteer defenders of the Florentine republic during the siege of 1529–30.
Andy Gill of The Independent wrote that this new version was based around waltz-time harpsichord and "raffishly muted" trumpet.
Many critics blamed Paramount's initial ad campaign for the film not finding a mainstream audience. The Wall Street Journal's Joe Morgenstern praised Douglas' work in the film, but criticized the poster, which featured a headshot of Douglas: "a raffishly eccentric role, and he's never been so appealing. (Don't be put off by the movie's cryptic poster, which makes him look like Michael J. Pollard.)" The Los Angeles Times' Kenneth Turan also slammed the poster: "The film's ad poster brings Elmer Fudd to mind." Hanson said that the poster made Douglas look "like he was trying to be Robin Williams".

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