33 adjectives to describe bourgeoises

And then some respectable bourgeois, and so on.

In the streets the comely little bourgeoises hid their plump shoulders under ugly black knitted capes, and concealed their neat hands in clumsy worsted gloves.

The man, a fat, comfortable bourgeois, was transfigured with frightful, murderous rage.

His grandfather was a conservative bourgeois of a superior type, who was the author of treatises designed to narcotize the forces of rebellion of his time.

" The answer she thus gave was the answer of a conservative bourgeoise, who held that it would be more just if the inheritance should go to an illegitimate scion of the house rather than to a stranger.

The man, a fat, comfortable bourgeois, was transfigured with frightful, murderous rage.

In contrast to all this the gay bourgeois district of Passy rises up across the Seine; while the rich aristocratic quarters of the Invalides and the Faubourg St. Germain spread out close by.

His attitude was that of the genuine bourgeois towards the artist: possessive, incurious, and contemptuous.

Here, sitting round a table under a tree, we came upon a family group, consisting of a little plump, bald-headed bourgeois with his wife and two childrenthe wife stout and rosy; the children noisy and authoritative.

Various degrees of progress could be read in the air and manner of the hearty young "bourgeoises" and their paler or even ruddier partners, as they crunched their bread or sipped their thin wine.

No honest bourgeois with a fat stomach walked slowly along the pathway meditating upon the mystery of life which made some men millionaires.

However much her heart might bleed over her losses, her vanity as an honest bourgeoise filled her with rebellious thoughts, for she could not admit that she had been in the wrong.

When that radical, having dined with his coat off, walked into his bedroom and I saw the braces on his back, it became clear to me that that radical is a bourgeois, a hopeless bourgeois.

But I more than suspect that when it came to temperament M. Héger took it out in faces; that he was nothing more than a benevolent, sentimental, passably intellectual bourgeois; but bourgeois to the core.

Putney posters were now merely disgusting, Putney trade gross and futile, the tobacconist a narrow-minded and stupid bourgeois; and so on.

An advanced conversation Andrey Andreyevitch, a good-natured bourgeois, suddenly declares: "Do you know gentlemen, I was once an anarchist!"

But I more than suspect that when it came to temperament M. Héger took it out in faces; that he was nothing more than a benevolent, sentimental, passably intellectual bourgeois; but bourgeois to the core.

Every petty bourgeois in a democratic community has a chance of rising and wishes to do so.

Here, sitting round a table under a tree, we came upon a family group, consisting of a little plump, bald-headed bourgeois with his wife and two childrenthe wife stout and rosy; the children noisy and authoritative.

"I disguised myself as a pompous old bourgeois, and I was behind him when he asked for his ticket and distinctly heard what he said.

One might have taken her for some worthy, well-to-do provincial bourgeoise in full dress.

"I am a puzzled bourgeoise, I confess," she said, shaking her head.

This, however, was going a little too far; she was, after all, a respectable bourgeoise, and the traditional horror of divorce re-awakened her profound fidelity and made her think the remedy worse than the disease; so they remained united on the surface, but intimacy between them was gone.

But I more than suspect that when it came to temperament M. Héger took it out in faces; that he was nothing more than a benevolent, sentimental, passably intellectual bourgeois; but bourgeois to the core.

Some of them read in his ideas a reflection of their own, while others saw in him just a sincere old bourgeois whose heart had been hitherto his only guidea rather insufficient, though generous one.

33 adjectives to describe  bourgeoises