Sentence examples for brooch for from inspiring English sources

"brooch for" is not a grammatically correct or complete phrase
It is missing a subject and verb, and it is not a common or standard phrase in English. It is possible that you are seeing it used in a specific context or sentence, but on its own, it is not correct. An example of how "brooch for" could be used in a sentence is: "She wore a beautiful brooch for her great-grandmother's 100th birthday celebration." In this sentence, "for" is not being used as part of a phrase, but as a preposition to indicate the purpose or reason for wearing the brooch. The complete sentence is "She wore [subject and verb] a beautiful brooch [object] for [preposition] her great-grandmother's 100th birthday celebration [prepositional phrase]."

Exact(12)

Gundega Michele, living in Germany at the end of the second world war, was given a five-lat coin mounted on a brooch for her fifth birthday.

In 1855 the Parisian jeweler François Kramer created a diamond bow brooch for the beauteous tastemaker Empress Eugénie, wife of Napoleon III.

"It's like a brooch for a dress," he told Bon Appétit, by way of explaining how a finishing sauce ties a dish together.

Kramer has incorporated a number of molars in pieces of custom-made jewelry, and the other day embodied a piece of meteorite in a brooch for a customer who claimed to have taken it from the Museum of Natural History.

Camilla, who wore a tennis racquet brooch for her visit and was accompanied by her sister Annabel Elliott, bumped into Murray as he was making his way back to his locker room and congratulated him on his win, a royal spokeswoman said.

I kept that brooch for years.

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Similar(46)

Strzelec had designed brooches for a collection, "Army Green Orchids," five of which were on display at MAD. "I had read an article — I think in Cosmopolitan — about a bride spending a million dollars on flowers for her wedding," she said.

As for the Parks, they eventually learned to give gifts that they felt were appropriate: "We like to give leather gloves at Christmas, and small brooches" for the end of the school year, Mr. Park said.

One minute, she'd be giving a bus driver brooches "for his vife"; the next, she'd be stomping down a stranger's front path to help herself to an enormous bough of blossom while my sister and I, technically her accomplices, hid behind parked cars, pretending not to know her.

She made hand-painted wooden brooches for cheap.

"English hairwork was popularized by royalty, especially Queen Victoria, who wore Prince Albert's hair in lockets and brooches for decades following his death," Reierson says.

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