According with custom or propriety.
1The house I speak of is comme il faut to the utmost.
2The Hartels are quite comme il faut in their personal and business relations.
3One of them was quite a handsome boy, and looked so comme il faut.
4Only with the " comme il faut" man does this rarely happen.
5M. Brotherson est un monsieur comme il faut.
6He is très comme il faut.
7Every unmarried daughter of every peer in England would have envied me,-butit would have been comme il faut.
8I was " comme il faut" and smoked.
9This " comme il faut"-ness of mine lay, first and foremost, in proficiency in French, especially conversational French.
10The soup was too salt; the cutlets were not exactly comme il faut; and the pudding was hardly enough boiled.
11If a man is a man, un homme comme il faut, he need fear no ill-treatment from others of like calibre.
12Teresa declared that "The god-mother was surely a 'très comme il faut,'" but she did not explain to us why.
13The corrected score has been sent at once to the copyists, and in six weeks the work will be rehearsed comme il faut.
14With a note from Prince Ivan Michaelovitch, Nekhludoff went to Senator Wolf-unhomme très comme il faut, as the Prince had described him.
15This may be de rigueur and comme il faut and umslopogass on Long Island, but it does not go in Katonah-peaceful ,pureKatonah!
16You see, Aunt Hobson, she's very kind, you know, and all that, but I don't think she's what you call comme il faut.