Saucily

  • 21saucy — adjective (saucier; est) Date: 1508 1. served with or having the consistency of sauce 2. a. impertinently bold and impudent b. amusingly forward and flippant ; irrepressible 3. smart, trim < a saucy little hat > • …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 22Mary Wollstonecraft — by John Opie (c. 1797) Mary Wollstonecraft ( …

    Wikipedia

  • 23Tartuffe (Mechem) — Tartuffe is an opera in three acts by Kirke Mechem . Mechem also wrote the English libretto . Based on the play of the same name by Molière, this comic opera is through composed and set in Paris in the 17th century. Tartuffe premiered in 1980 at&#8230; …

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  • 24Fanny Imlay — Quote box2 |width=275px|margin=15px|align = right |halign = left |bgcolor = #c6dbf7 quote = On Fanny Godwin :Her voice did quiver as we parted,:Yet knew I not that heart was broken:From which it came, and I departed:Heeding not the words then&#8230; …

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  • 25By the Seashore — is a painting of Pierre Auguste Renoir executed in 1883 and now housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Late in the summer of 1883, Renoir spent about a month in St. Peter Port, the capital of Guernsey, and admired the rocks,&#8230; …

    Wikipedia

  • 26Mary Wollstonecraft — Portrait par John Opie (v. 1797). Activités Femme de lettres Naissan …

    Wikipédia en Français

  • 27sauciness — See saucily. * * * …

    Universalium

  • 28sauce — sauceless, adj. /saws/, n., v., sauced, saucing. n. 1. any preparation, usually liquid or semiliquid, eaten as a gravy or as a relish accompanying food. 2. stewed fruit, often puréed and served as an accompaniment to meat, dessert, or other food …

    Universalium

  • 29whoreson — noun a) an illegitimate child born of unwed parents. , 1605: Though this knave came something saucily to the world before he was sent for, yet was his mother fair, there was good sport at his making, and the whoreson must be acknowledged. William …

    Wiktionary

  • 30bealdlíce — adv boldly, instantly, earnestly, saucily; (1) boldly, confidently; (2) boldly, impudently; cmp bealdlíceor, spl bealdlíceost …

    Old to modern English dictionary