Straight route with a line of trees or large shrubs running along each side.
1Almost at the same instant a man stumbled out of the allée and ran down the boulevard.
2A man was walking in the allée.
3You know the court of the Athénée is on the other side of the high wall bounding your walk, the allée défendue.
4He found her walking slowly up and down an allée of elms, through the leaves of which the bright September sunshine sifted down.
5The second dolmen had also a grotto or allée couverte, in which was found an earthen pot, containing ashes and three gold necklaces.
6He would ride to the end of the Grande Allée and return.
7O Georgics of the Rue Madame, and of the Allée de l'Observatoire!
8He selected seven o'clock in the evening in the Allée de la Muette.
9The Chevalier de Pean rode the length of the Grande Allée and returned.
10Truxton leaned against the low wall alongside the Allée.
11Land S. E. of the Grande Allée to the Cime du Cap and between Nos.
12They make their curé quite regularly, like any one else, walking and sitting in the Allée Dante.
13I walked towards the Allée des Acacias.
14We revolve an unhappy fact, as we ramble on along the brilliant Allée, this clear summer evening.
15On certain maps of Paris, there is a street named Allée Samuel Beckett (Samuel Beckett Way).
16A long promenade, now called the Allée Royale, extended to a vast basin named the Lake of Apollo.