Completely neat and clean.
Sinònims
Examples for "immaculate"
Examples for "immaculate"
1They take immaculate care of their bodies as far as health goes.
2It's not immaculate by any means; but it's certainly not an eyesore.
3The more cleanly the pupils are, the better; they should be immaculate.
4One was in soiled every-day clothes, the other in immaculate evening dress.
5At any rate his ashes always look immaculate, even in late afternoon.
1The walls were spotless and the red-tiled floor shone in the half-light.
2The ladies soon reappeared in spotless white; emblems of their pure minds.
3The robe must be of spotless white; the mantle or scarf blue.
4Their stalls spotless, their water bin scrubbed and filled with fresh water.
5The wind is a great warm caress; the sky a spotless blue.
1It was all in order-allspick and span-French ,everytouch of it.
2Others sat spick and span and ready for supper on the porch.
3Mary slipped from the gate and confronted the spick-and-span damsel of Ingleside.
4Sometimes it was a coatless dump-boss blaspheming his toiling army of spick-a-dees.
5The little people are there to keep the world spick 'n span.
1You'd never catch me hanging around this place with a goddamn spic.
2As a matter of fact I went to a spic university.
3When was the last time you ever wandered a spic-and-span midway?
4Emily glanced at the signature once more, then looked down the Preserve's joyless, spic-and-span hallway.
5Paul makes sure the apartment is spic and span before Marijana arrives, even orders flowers.
1Her little house was in spotless, speckless order from top to bottom.
2But the sky was speckless and no sounds came from the Gratz farmhouse.
3And his simple evening dress of speckless black became him well.
4I gazed horror-struck at my speckless matting and pale Oriental rugs.
5It is spotless, speckless, and of a certain quality by no means despicable.
1When was the last time you ever wandered a spic-and-span midway?
2Emily glanced at the signature once more, then looked down the Preserve's joyless, spic-and-span hallway.
3It foams, making inroads into every millimeter of my face, giving a psychological spic-and-span impression.
4It's conceivable that O'Brien is just one of those neatnik sailors who keeps his boat spic-and-span.
5Back in the 1920s, when Prohibition was king, some pretty substantial people lived here and the houses looked spic-and-span then.
1Mary slipped from the gate and confronted the spick-and-span damsel of Ingleside.
2Lilly thought she had never beheld such spick-and-span efficiency as this woman's.
3But even they had to admit that Dickie was a spick-and-span young chap.
4And Harry Loder no longer looked the spick-and-span polo-playing dandy of the Indian army.
5At least, the churches must be put in spick-and-span order.
6The church is so offensively spick-and-span brand new and modern.
7I went to hear the mass, which was a spick-and-span new composition of Vogler's.
8He had recognized, despite disguising superficialities of garb and manner, Bertha's once spick-and-span butler.
9Each was freshly attired in a spick-and-span clean gingham, and they wore large shade hats.
10The courses are beautifully landscaped well appointed and spick-and-span.
11You shan't put me to shame, wearing that spick-and-span suit, neither shall you spoil it.
12I ask, who can fulfil all their duties and remain "spick-and-span"?
13Ruth noted the railings, that they were spick-and-span as paint could make them; the dainty window-blinds.
14Nurse Duckett and Nurse Cramer kept him spick-and-span.
15She would not settle for less than spick-and-span.
16It was neat as a pin, though, the bed made, the plates put away, everything spick-and-span.