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Discover LudwigThe word "pale-faced" is correct and usable in written English
You can use the word when you want to describe a person who is very pale, usually due to fear or shock. Example sentence: The pale-faced child could barely move as the thunderstorm raged outside.
Exact(59)
We recall the pale-faced girl.
A young couple – pale-faced, smoky-eyed, loose-limbed.
Images of scruffy-looking, pale-faced young men are popular.
He lives as a "gambling banker" in Manhattan with his pale-faced American wife.
Standing alongside the seated (still throned) Catherine is a pale-faced girl, staggering – the Princess Mary.
A pale-faced Saddam, clearly exhausted, spoke defiantly from a prepared text.
Local hosts watch on patiently, wondering why no one ever taught this pale-faced wazzock how to pound leaves.
Album three sees New Jersey's pale-faced suburbanites mould their poppy emo into a bizarre range of guises.
In a game beset by images of bespectacled, pale-faced masterminds duelling in grey Eastern Bloc gymnasiums, Carlsen is seen as something of a saviour.
Like some pale-faced slot-machine addict, I kept exchanging money for steak, hoping to strike gold, but steak after steak said: "Better luck next time".
"Eli Zeira passed me, pale-faced," he wrote, referring to the military intelligence chief, "and he said: 'So it is starting after all.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com