Ainda não temos significados para "spanish grandee".
1I shall be, like you, a Spanish grandee, and, more than that, a prince.
2Since that time, Norman knights, Spanish grandees, and Napoleonic generals had all made their home here.
3The Princess was the daughter of a French peer, and the widow of a Spanish grandee.
4Now they beheld a table of solid silver, once the property of an old Spanish grandee.
5I saw P. Gnyeditch and E. Karpov, who imitated Leykin showing off as a Spanish grandee.
6He was a Spanish grandee-neithermore nor less.
7A Spanish grandee couldn't have been more punctilious.
8However, your rosy paper and your luminous letters, which looked like Spanish grandees, gave me real pleasure.
9I am an ill-favored Spanish grandee, for whom she feels an aversion to which she will not confess.
10Coronado was a Spanish grandee, traveling at the time of De Vaca's arrival as a royal official visitor.
11He wore the dress of a Spanish grandee of the early seventeenth century-herecalled the Spaniards as famous explorers.
12The conduct and fate of the Italian nobleman and Spanish grandee, Melzi-Eril, has induced me to make these reflections.
13They were as strange to their surroundings as my lordly evangelist or the old Spanish grandee on the Fair Isle.
14The Spanish grandees eschewed their favorite amusement-thebull-fight-longenoughto give a hearty welcome to the "Wild West."
15He also possessed the gentle, solemn courtesy of a Spanish grandee, which the Pirate may or may not have been.
16Of these they were more proud than were ever English, French, or Spanish grandees of the decoration of stars or garters.
Esta colocação é formada por:
Spanish grandee ao longo do tempo
Spanish grandee nas variantes da língua