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"carroty" Definitions
  1. (of hair) orange in colour
"carroty" Antonyms

8 Sentences With "carroty"

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

"Mine was not a devil," Carol, an Old Mom with carroty curls, says.
And somehow, when I settle into the carroty (or is it cantaloupe?) Moondog-covered chair, it feels toasty and snug against the English rain battering the window.
New York, Harper & Brothers, 1855, p. 64. Southey wrote the poem, sometimes considered by critics as the most celebrated as British anti-war poems, while living at Westbury with his mother and his cousin (Peggy) in a renovated ale-house, which he shared also with a "great carroty cat".Speck, p. 74. It appeared in publication with several others, in the category of Ballads and metrical tales,Robert Southey, Poems.
Courland (Kurāmō) Livonians on the shores of Latvia are the source of the famous vegetable pastry, sklandrausis (sūrkak), to which the European Commission gave its ”Traditional Speciality Guaranteed” designation in the autumn of 2013. Sklandrausis pastries are regarded as a symbol of the sun, given their round shape and carroty yellowish-orange color. The sklandrausis embodies the natural energy of the sun on Livonian tables during spring equinox celebrations.
The police station, on Pembury Road, was previously the headquarters of the West Kent Police Division, prior to the West Division being again headquartered at Maidstone. Royal Mail's TN postcode main sorting office is located on Vale Road in the town. Tonbridge is also the location of Carroty Wood, an outdoor activity and residential centre run by Rock UK, offering groups of young people the opportunity to try out a variety of outdoor activities. A former oast house on the road to Hildenborough has been converted to a small theatre called the Oast Theatre.
Rock UK began its life in 1922 when a group of Sunday school teachers from London decided to take their groups on an adventure holiday. The groups purchased Belgrave House in Littlehampton so that they could return regularly and in 1924 also decided to rent a field at Climping, which was used as a canvas campsite. Camps continued to be run at both of these locations for 50 years under the name of the 'Belgrave Trust'. In 1977, Belgrave House was sold in order to expand the work, with the proceeds being used to buy Carroty Wood in Tonbridge which was turned into an outdoor pursuits centre.
Poster drawing for "Piano Study" On them followed other calendars, other title - pages, other covers, and posters. One advertising a piano course was a charcoal drawing of a demurely attentive boy and girl. Another for a linen sale set forth, in an admirable combination of a few colors, a mother in a white morning robe buttoning her little girl's starched frock beside an open bureau drawer wherein piles of embroidered garments could be seen. The two dainty figures were in themselves winning, but gathered artistic force from the child's carroty tresses against the pink-striped wall- paper, the flowered tester and hangings, the rich red brown of the old mahogany furniture.
He > commenced acting at a place called Waltham Abbey… [he was] Short and thin, > yet appearing broad; muscular yet meagre; a large head, with stiff, > stubborn, carroty hair; long, colourless face, prominent hooked nose, > projecting large hazel eyes, thin lips, and large mouth, which could be > twisted into a variety of expression, and which, combining with his other > features, eminently served the purposes of the comic muse - such was [his] > physiognomy...'Dunlap, William, A History of the American Theatre, J. & J. > Harper, (1832) Dunlap does not mention whether Twaits had any experience of acting in London, but The London Stage mentions two performances, separated by a year, held at Wheatley's Riding School in Greenwich. On 8 June 1798 he was among nine provincial actors who appeared in a benefit for five of them. Twaits played Glenalvon in Douglas and Tom Tug in The Waterman and also sang between the acts. On 17 May 1799 Twaits and some of the actors from June 1789 were back at Wheatley's in Greenwich where they performed She Stoops to Conquer (during which Twaits as Tony Lumpkin sang "a song in character") and The Agreeable Surprise.

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