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Discover LudwigThe phrase "charming facade" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe the outward appearance or front of a building or structure. Example: The small bakery on the corner had a charming facade, with colorful window displays and a quaint door.
Exact(2)
A handsome new sign and charming facade quickened expectations, but renovations halted midway, and for months the place was shuttered and dark.
This charming facade slips when Mr Darcy gives Elizabeth the letter in Rosings Park and she realises she has been fooled by Wickham: "[Mr Darcy's account of Wickham] must overthrow every cherished opinion of his worth, and which bore so alarming an affinity to his own history of himself".
Similar(52)
Construction of the villas, which often feature charming stone facades and stairwells, flourished from 1860 to World War I and embody the Neo-Renaissance style of German architecture, said Nadine Zimmerli, a Dresden historian now teaching at the College of William and Mary, in Virginia.
Charming, charming, charming" by NPR.
Frederick Ashton's charming 1931 ballet, "Facade," draws on the first concert suite that Walton fashioned out of his setting of Sitwell's poems.
Wivenhoe Bookshop 23 High Street, Wivenhoe, Essex CO7 9BE, 01206 824050 Behind the charming 17th-century clapboard facade of Wivenhoe Bookshop lie two small but perfectly formed rooms filled with books, and a large shed in the courtyard out back, loftily known as the event space.
Named the Barnett House for its original owners, the charming house has a fieldstone facade, a steep roof and dormer windows.
The work is a feat of impossible architecture -- a three-dimensional optical illusion comprised of mirrors and the facade of a charming grey home.
The embassy, exposed on a leafy corner, was colonial-charming, with a white-brick facade that could not stop a determined buffalo.
Now the facade is crisp and charming, apparently given a careful cleaning and restoration of a sort that would drive an old-school preservationist nuts.
A trendy spot is Rise No. 1 (5360 West Lovers Lane; 214-366-9900; www.risesouffle.com), a charming bistro with a grass-green facade that serves up wonderful soufflés — a slow-paced antidote to Dallas's manic drive-and-shop lifestyle.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com