(Ballet) quick gliding steps with one foot always leading.
1We also crossed Menier's équipage de chasse, horses and dogs being exercised.
2He longed to fire, to use the thin sharp bayonet on his chasse-pot.
3We will have a little chasse, and then we will smoke.
4Aix-la-Chapelle is proud of the veritable chasse, or thigh-bone of Charlemagne, which cures lameness.
5It is her application of the word "chasse" that drew down the simile.
6When I got there I was told that he had driven out to the chasse.
7A rendezvous de chasse was a very pretty sight.
8But guess my surprise, when the fellow told me, they were gentlemen a la chasse.
9Tells about attending a chasse a la palombe with an energetic priest named Don Bernardo.
10Eh bien, le bon chien chasse de race!
11All the Citizens gathered together, and such as they met bare them company running towards the chasse.
12By this time, however, the chasse marees were under full sail, and were rapidly following in pursuit.
13Our gallant friend, apparently chagrined that we should have been disappointed in our fishing, proposed a chasse.
14The real chasse is done with shovels.
15And you want to remember that a chasse machine is almost never brought down by anti-aircraft fire.
16Neutral vessels and 'chasse-marees', manned by young naval officers, were proposed, and many other plans were devised.