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1
The nobleman's face, usually
so
debonair
,
was now white and seamed with anger.
2
The smiling officer,
so
debonair
,
so proud of his hidden battery, where is he?
3
To meet
so
debonair
and care-free a specimen of humanity warmed the cockles of his heart.
4
It was worth something to have tamed
so
debonair
a dare-devil as Dingwell had the reputation of being.
5
In all England one would scarce have found upon that morning so high-mettled and
so
debonair
a pair.
6
This man,
so
debonair
and masterful among his fellows, was put all out of countenance by a wearied girl.
7
But his spirit always answered to the call of courage, and Gordon's pluck was
so
debonair
he could not refuse a reluctant appreciation.
8
For all there agreed that so handsome a warrior had never come to the Rhineland, so fair of body,
so
debonair
was he.
9
Many a night in the trenches I had a mental vision of Francis,
so
debonair
and so fearless, facing a firing squad of Prussian privates.
10
So
debonair
was he and chivalrous that his fame and praise crossed the water, and were noised abroad in his own land.
so
debonair
so