Marked by up-to-dateness in dress and manners.
Sinònims
Examples for "dashing"
Examples for "dashing"
1War today, Kane, isn't won by romantic animals dashing at forlorn hopes.
2I look older every year, but you're still pretty dashing, you know.
3Families are dashing about like chickens, trying to hide food and animals.
4Goodness me, that's not the dashing young officer I used to know.
5Come quick! Solandia's second daughter Neladia came dashing in, then ran out.
1Yet, the burden will be on government to spruce up education first.
2Good for a multitude of uses, spruce boughs also make great snowshoes.
3And he would point to the lonely grave under the guardian spruce.
4The collision system has also been given a bit of a spruce.
5Brooks says common resident in the spruce zone on the Coast Range.
1The line above comes from the jaunty Matrimony; such an old-fashioned word.
2The feeling in the court next morning was good tempered, even jaunty.
3But the ice-boat was as fearless and as gaily jaunty as Siegfried.
4The jaunty music appears to be pointing us in a jokey direction.
5She was even jaunty in her recital of the weather's minor hardships.
1They write short snappy, songs that get directly to the point: Girls.
2Great, now she probably had a reputation for being snappy and emotional.
3Another glossy, snappy, remake-friendly French comedy with a light but sturdy concept.
4The script by Kevin Hench actually has a lot of snappy dialogue.
5But at least it works on telly, because it's short and snappy.
1Unhappily, she answered in French some simple query of the dapper officer's.
2The men around me were clean and dapper to a remarkable degree.
3Always this dapper little man, with the violets and the simpering smile.
4There the startlingly agile dapper figure struggled to throw off his captor.
5He was in his early to mid-forties, small, dapper and prematurely gray.
1No ragamuffin was ever so tattered and torn as this rakish individual.
2Ambrose knew the runner by his rakish, broad-brimmed hat and flying sash.
3She smiled cheerily at him and he swung his rakish hat low.
4He tilted his white hat to a rakish angle and marched away.
5He looked rakish and wretched as he bumped about upon his mule.
1There's a lot more to it than a spiffy new box, however.
2But at least you'll have this spiffy Run Free 2013 sticker, anyway.
3And this won't be the company's last foray into spiffy data visualization.
4There was even time to feel bad about my formerly spiffy convertible.
5He'd imagined her arriving in a limo, or some spiffy rental car.
1There's also that raffish wink at the end of the first stanza.
2Reg Rogers channels the out-of-control John Barrymore as Julie's raffish brother Tony.
3But then, on the other hand, I don't want to be raffish.
4In 1990, this jeans-clad group of purported raffish outcasts earned seventeen million dollars.
5It was more glittering, more raffish, more clamant of the tenderloin than ever.
1William found a natty young Negro smoking from a long cigarette holder.
2But everything about the rig was fresh and natty, in the sunshine.
3The sight of the natty bedroom across the way moved Desmond strangely.
4Men in natty suits surveyed the scene, pleased with the excellent turnout.
5The man's hair was pulled back in a natty, almost prim ponytail.
6Oh, well, don't worry; the Lieutenant has lost his natty appearance also.
7He was short, pompous, a natty dresser in his advanced age.
8The reason is that he is extraordinarily natty in his person.
9Lieutenant Bryant joined them, brisk and natty in his naval garb.
10Get this natty gown off me and I'll be on my merry way.
11A couple of burly men came sliding into the natty little motor boat.
12Plume struck a light on the sole of his natty boot.
13It is really a very natty arrangement, although you regard it so scornfully.
14She had natty new clothes on and bore a prosperous look.
15You look pretty natty yourself this morning, it seems to me.
16Steban peered at me, taking in my natty Hawaiian shirt and gabardine slacks.
Natty per variant geogràfica