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21 Sentences With "habiliments"

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

Their habiliments belonged to that order which is pointedly termed the decent.
In another moment I stood garbed in the habiliments of a Holy Thern.
Arabian and Moroccan habiliments, even feminine ones, are apparently enhanced by flesh and bulk.
He was made to array himself in mourning habiliments, and to sleep on a truckle bed.
Within lay the body, robed in costly habiliments covered with gold embroidery and starred with scintillating gems.
The figure was tall and gaunt, and shrouded from head to foot in the habiliments of the grave.
At the head of the notables and of the Horticultural Committee shone Mynheer van Systens, dressed in his richest habiliments.
Bananas with their great ragged leaves, like the tattered habiliments of an empress in adversity, grew close up to the house.
And even if such be needful, why must the personal essence be trammeled by the same old worn-out habiliments of error?
He wore his usual working habiliments, consisting of varipatched trousers, a blue jean shirt, out at the elbows, and a ragged straw hat.
He says that Sands' habiliments constitute a form of intimidation, especially in a region of the country that has not lost its respect for the military presence.
His garmenture was that of the ordinary Malay boatman, but there was that in his mien and his attitude toward his companions which belied his lowly habiliments.
As she again though of her dusty boots she almost pitied those habiliments for the quizzing to which they had been subjected, and felt how hopeless life was for their owner.
By dispensation we own the habiliments of the legal profession — suits, shirts, ties, polished shoes — which we don for those occasions when we must meet with our counterparts in the world outside.
He, just seems to press one key and out comes a raga in the true Jaipur colours, another to obtain a melody attired in the Agra style and still another to get a raga in the Gwalior habiliments. One can only imagine Kashalkar's questionless loyalty to his various gurus, and his own prodigious capacity to assimilate and consolidate the incoming knowledge.
As described in a film magazine, Florence Lanham (Mansfield), married in France while a Salvation Army worker to Captain Sam McGinnis (Meighan), returns to society life in America after receiving word that he was killed in battle. She keeps news of her wedding secret and permits the attentions of Billy Arkwright (Hickman), an early lover. When McGinnis suddenly appears on the scene, clothed in startlingly bold habiliments, the Lanham stubbornness asserts itself. To impart upon her his own gospel of democracy, McGinnis obtains the place of a discharged butler in the Lanham household.
The ball was reproduced on the London stage in Drury Lane in September 1897 "to the scandal of nobility and the amusement of the commoners." The ball was utilized as the setting for the last act of a new play entitled The White Heather by Cecil Raleigh and Henry Hamilton. The New York Times stated "the very possessions of royalter were 'desecrated' by exhibition on the stage, for the managers, with enterprise almost America, had purchased from the costumers some of the most gorgeous habiliments worn at that revel." The play inspired the 1919 film, The White Heather.
Lamshaw's obituary concludes It is said, it was the intention of Earl Percy to have had him introduced to the theatres in the metropolis, but a consumption has put an early period to his mortal existence. The title Earl Percy refers to the heir of the Dukedom of Northumberland. He played at various events in the next few years, such as the Tynemouth Fair, which was opened for the first time on 27 April 1804,Tyne Mercury, 24 April 1804. with ...the duchess of Northumberland's own bagpiper, in his proper habiliments, mounted upon a white pony, and playing the favourite air of 'My Jockey stays lang at the Fair,' in the van ….
Rex Rossmore (Moore) disgust at the hairpin-strewing, straggly locks of his young bride Muriel (Bennett) and her concentration upon extra-particularness in her housekeeping make it easy for him to forsake her company outside the home for that of his stenographer Effie Wainwright (Livingston). Overhearing her husband's confession of her failure as a wife to him as he makes it to his employer, she considers suicide. Making herself orderly for death, she discovers that she is beautiful in life, and conceives a plan whereby she plays an affair of her own against that of her husband and stenographer, acquaints herself with the ways of the gay world and practices them until her husband's rage brings issue to their artificial existences. This reveals to the man that his love is to the woman herself, after all, and not to her fashionable habiliments.
Senator Wade Hampton III of South Carolina, a former Confederate general, next spoke to praise Hancock, saying "we of the South would feel safe in his hands", but said that Bayard was ultimately his choice "because we believe he is the strongest man". Richard B. Hubbard, a former governor of Texas and Confederate soldier, spoke in favor Hancock as his state seconded the Pennsylvanian's nomination. Hubbard praised Hancock's conduct as military governor of Texas and Louisiana, saying, "in our hour of sorrow, when he held his power at the hands of the great dominant Republican party ... there stood a man with the constitution before him, reading it as the fathers read it; that the war having ended we resumed the habiliments that as a right belong to us, not as a conquered province, but as a free people." The last few states were called and the nominations ended.
This general orientation continued until March 1870, when a new ownership group took control of the paper, making Samuel L. Simpson the new editor of the paper. Simpson immediately noted the change in an editorial, writing: > Temperance ceases to be the speciality of this paper, as, in fact, it is not > the forte of the present editor..... Right here the bright habiliments of > neutrality are laid aside forever, and wheeling into line the good champion > of prohibition goes down in the smoke and fury of political war. This third iteration of the paper would become a vigorous partisan supporter of the agenda of the Republican Party. Carter would soon return to the editorial chair, with the paper's new political line unaltered. In January 1876, the size of the Gazette was enlarged and in December of that same year the publication was made into a corporation, with editor William Carter one of the three incorporators.

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