Dress or groom with elaborate care.
Sinònims
Examples for "dress"
Examples for "dress"
1This was a beautiful dress, great price and good quality, one wrote.
2On good days he's able to feed himself, but cannot dress himself.
3She went to Bullock's, bought a 'new dress, new hat, new shoes.
4America has certainly reached its egalitarian summit as far as dress goes.
5In India, specially in June, they are not particular about the dress.
1However, there is still debate about whether the inferred plume actually exists.
2The breeze catches the plume in his hat and flutters it smartly.
3In the distance, a plume of dust was billowing off the road.
4The Captain had a sword and a white plume in his shako.
5From somewhere in the city a black plume of smoke was rising.
1Even wild kakapos are known to approach, climb on, and preen people.
2Carefully, he began to preen, pulling out some feathers and smoothing others.
3He said you'd pine and you'd preen, and how very right he was.
4There were many store-windows to preen before, as in a mirror.
5Birds came there to drink and bathe and preen and dress their feathers.
1Even in his primp he would have struggled to pull this off.
2Renée would primp for the shows, sew herself a new skirt.
3Why I thought when folks got married they did not primp at all.
4I straighten up and primp my hair for our march down the aisle.
5I'd never seen a guy primp so much in my life.
6Some immortals would always primp and preen for the media, and some simply wouldn't.
7She ran to the mirror for a final primp before he should see her.
8He ordered the drinks and I went upstairs to primp.
9Subway riders primp in front of full-length mirrors installed throughout the stations for that purpose.
10It's just that never in my life could I bathe and primp in mere minutes.
11But I brought you something more to primp with.
12She used one hand to primp her braids.
13Retracting the blade, he slipped the box cutter into his back pocket, and continued to primp.
14Have to primp and smile for once.
15The girls may want to primp a little before luncheon; we don't have a young man every day.
16None of this 'wait two minutes till I primp an hour or two' kind of business, now, Dele.