Under that plan, the Victorian state government would also tip in money.
2
Mr Morrison's office than called the Victorian Government to control the damage.
3
They converted the fine detached Victorian house back to a family home.
4
All Victorian students across all year levels will return to at-home learning.
5
But Professor Howden noted the Victorian Health Department does have that information.
1
He saw Mzu, her small figure unmistakable in its prim business suit.
2
The papers extended across the hall and into a prim, fleckless parlor.
3
The house does not look so prim as it used to do.
4
The small, prim, stylish mother looked quite regal in her aristocratic rage.
5
There was a noticeable stiffening of the prim figure of Mrs. Gaston.
1
I heard paper rustle, then Dew continued in his prissy, high voice.
2
So thanks for your prissy little reminder but I already paid, right?
3
When he spoke, he sounded truly prissy, enunciating vowels for utmost effect.
4
The approach is latter-day Jane Austen, but prissy and without the style.
5
A prissy looking listing agent was waiting, tapping his watch in admonition.
1
Difficult, of course, for one of my naturally puritanical bent, but possible.
2
Many young people are attracted to Salafism, a puritanical branch of Islam.
3
I am sometimes inclined to be quite puritanical when defining the western.
4
Too much tolerance too fast can produce a puritanical or fascist backlash.
5
The character of the kirk was that of a democratic, puritanical theocracy.
1
Some of it must go; the public are fools and prudish fools.
2
And he was right as well, to think her prudish and overcautious.
3
This can be surprising to the relatively prudish mainstream of previous generations.
4
He did not look at her, but he did not seem prudish.
5
We become more and more prudish as what we call civilization advances.
1
They are violent, and at the same time quite raw and priggish.
2
The logical understanding must not be allowed to put on priggish airs.
3
It can mean someone who seems annoyingly earnest, or priggish, or judgmental.
4
There was really nothing priggish about this statement, however it may sound.
5
As for sexual politics, Adam in Paradise Lost is a priggish patriarch.
1
He said, She's so uptight and straitlaced-howcould she possibly understand you?
2
You know-myideas are rather straitlaced,- Isupposeyou would say, Puritanical.
3
She is an old-fashioned, old-world lady, with peculiar straitlaced notions of her own.
4
I think critics today are a pretty straitlaced, sober lot.
5
He was not straitlaced, or mealy-mouthed, or overburthened with scruples.
1
Disney's fairytale has become the biggest grossing animation of all time, despite its straightlaced plot.
2
I might not look like it, but when it comes to sex I'm pretty straightlaced.
3
You have become marvelously straightlaced all at once.
4
Those straightlaced sensibilities have been thrilled by beauty, and bathed in the grace and glory of the life around them.
5
The times were not of the straightlaced order and no one expected from an actress wonders of chastity or conventionality.
1
No one, I tell you, not even the most strait-laced or censorious.
2
Old Mr. Cayley, though not the least strait-laced, was a religious man.
3
Is a strait-laced negative from the Commission to echo back his neigh?
4
Was he a strait-laced prig who disapproved of dancing, do you mean?
5
Except maybe a strait-laced, touched-by-sadness investigator and a beautiful and recently fired broker.
1
Grandfather Jonathan Forrest, the straight-laced Puritan, had died of a hunting accident.
2
They were the straight-laced brethren who walked so erect that they leaned backward.
3
I picked the most straight-laced, stereotypically boring thing that I could think of.
4
Chappelle hilariously portrayed both artists against Murphy's straight-laced you-had-to-see-it-to-believe-it recollection.
5
For such an apparently straight-laced man, Federed does seem to have some colourful supporters.
1
They were low-heeled, square-toed boots, embellished with scrolls done in red thread.
2
He wore the blood-red uniform and square-toed boots of a Parachute Ski Marine.
3
There lay the sole difference, and the square-toed Leipzig burghers did not perceive it.
4
Emily saw Maya's square-toed Mary Janes under her stall door.
5
Not a square-toed Englisher's shoe but a rounded soft-heeled slipper.
1
Her dress was white damask, exceeding neat; but her stays seemed not tight-laced.
2
Yet the tight-laced bodice of her gown and rounded breasts proved her a woman.
3
A tight-laced chest and a good disposition cannot go together.
4
In this, too, you will perceive the tight-laced lady taking a flight beyond the sublime philosopher.
5
She herself was wearing the tight-laced, dark blue dress Aunt Bieja had given her so many years ago.
6
Mostly heavy, tight-laced gowns suitable for mountain weather, with a few looser high-waisted designs hung to one side.
7
It was a room where one might fancy the ghost of a tight-laced lady revisiting the scene of her embroidery.
8
On days such as these Laure, sleek and tight-laced as ever would kiss everyone with an air of expanded maternity.
9
She took to her rooms for her confinement; after a time, she emerged tight-laced, with a flat belly, and no baby.
10
And again, the girl not being able always to have her body cased in the tight-laced stays, some relaxation must take place.
11
The orange was nearly the same shade as her uniform, but the low-cut and tight-laced bodice drew a different sort of attention.
12
The question naturally arises why so debauched and dissolute a king should prefer such tight-laced Christians to be the peculiar objects of his mercy.
13
Respectable Edict-of-Nantes French ladies, with high head-gear, wide hoops; a clear, correct, but somewhat barren and meagre species, tight-laced and high-frizzled in mind and body.
14
"You know the type, some tight-laced spinster with a mouth like a cat's ass."