Sentence examples for often blue from inspiring English sources

Exact(11)

The company specializes in Kelsch, the checked cloth, often blue and white, from Alsace; www.familylinens.com.

Now, more than two decades later, Mr. Royce, the former New York University drama student, wears the costume of the corporate world, suits, double-breasted, most often blue.

In Paris after the war, he and Suzanne went cold and hungry like the rest of the city, and his fingers were often blue with cold as he gripped his pen.

A burqa is the all-enveloping cloak, often blue, with a woven grill over the eyes, that many Afghan women wear, and it is almost never seen in France.

When the vogue for compound adjectives was just getting under way, the hyphenated terms were usually literal: a white-collar worker wore a white shirt to the office, and a blue-collar worker's collar at the factory was often blue.

Isn't this glitzy Grinch just the latest character in a confusing Christmas conga line that includes Currier & Ives carolers, "Nutcracker" soldiers, the retro Santa of Coca-Cola fame and the Frosty the Snowman of Jackie Vernon (a comedian remembered for material more often blue than snow white)?

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Similar(47)

Skin or mucous membrane lesions, often dark blue to violaceous plaques or nodules, were present in most of the patients on their initial physician visit.

But a new program developed by the Ford Motor Company may create a whole new kind of perk, dedicated to non-elite, often blue-collar, workers.

"Why did she so often blue-pencil them out?" Light theorizes that Woolf "was driven by the urgent need to handle and reshape what she found unaesthetic, even repulsive, especially when it concerned the life of the body".

He continues to paint on this theme, making pictures of an innocent but slightly deformed figure -- often blue-faced and dressed in a red-and white striped muumuu -- navigating a barren landscape.

Stromatolites, once thought to have been long extinct until a large living colony was discovered in Shark Bay in Western Australia in the mid-1950s, are made up of large colonies of bacteria, often blue-green algae, and sedimentary deposits, which grow naturally in a style that Dr. Sacks likened to a layer cake.

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