Encara no tenim significats per a "inexpressible charm".
1There is an inexpressible charm in thus living in the open air.
2To Zelma the romance and secrecy of this love had an inexpressible charm.
3These soothing images diffused an inexpressible charm over their conversation.
4Those words "daily nearer God" have an inexpressible charm for me.
5All her bearing towards him was marked by an inexpressible charm, half-playful, wholly gracious and womanly.
6His "Fair Ines" had always for me an inexpressible charm:-
7The wild, free life of the hunter, has for an ardent and romantic temperament an inexpressible charm.
8Ah, what pen could describe that face, so mobile, piquante, and filled with light and inexpressible charm.
9He has travelled much; and there is an inexpressible charm in his relation of his adventures in different countries.
10This vagabond taint gives an inexpressible charm to a face for which the Hungarian strain has already done much.
11Her voice, which always possessed a certain inexpressible charm, was endued with new sweetness through the influence of affection.
12Even her great pallor did not lessen her wonderful beauty; on the contrary, it conferred upon it an irresistible, inexpressible charm.
13But what more than all else constituted the inexpressible charm of the Empress's presence were the ravishing tones of her voice.
14She knew that, and the sense it gave her of her own beauty shed upon her whole person an inexpressible charm.
15The noise is three times as loud by night as by day, and gives an inexpressible charm to these solitary scenes.
16In reading him we feel that what he says is true, it is life indeed; but we also feel an inexpressible charm.
Aquesta col·locació està formada per:
Inexpressible charm a través del temps
Inexpressible charm per variant geogràfica