19 adjectives to describe champagne

Lawrence is a good fellow, but that wife of his always put me in mind of iced champagne, sparkling and cold."

The other showed fine houses, and opera-boxes, and fast-trotting horses, and dry champagne, and ladies who dance in ballets, and paintings by the great masters.

To be greeted at one house with claret of a rare vintage, and at the next with sweet champagne, especially when it is plain that your host will be deeply pained if a drop is left, is rather trying to a tea-drinking Briton.

His talk is like the driest of all imaginable dry champagnes.

But I drank very little champagne, lest I should be too happy.

and they pledged Mike in Esther's favourite champagne.

Others had to be prevented from indulging too much in the generous champagne; but, on the whole, the entertainment passed off in a becoming and good-humoured manner.

"Perry," said the bad man softly when the roadster drew up beside him at the curb, "I've got six quarts of the dog-gonedest champagne you ever tasted.

"But hear further," and he proceeded to the end of that marvelous ebullition of foam and fervor, such as celebrated the birth of Aphrodite herself perchance in the old Greek time; and which, despite my perverse intentions, stirred me as if I had quaffed a draught of pink champagne.

The thirst that scorned champagne was now enraptured with spring water.

The air was thin, exhilarating, brilliantlike dry champagne.

The sight of the King with that flame-face of his Was something exceedingly horrid; The rain, as it fell on his flight, gave a fizz Like unbottled champagne, and went off with a whizz As it sprinkled his rubicund forehead.

Her words had been verbal champagne to him.

In the quarters of the Commandant, a farm-house at the back end of the village, champagne was served, admirable champagne.

You see, Friend Employer was displaying a cultivated taste in vintage champagnes, but he'd been culpably negligent in not laying down a large stock for private consumption before the Great Drought set in.

The air was thin, exhilarating, brilliantlike dry champagne.

MacClaudius (pouring out a glass of cheap champagne).

Whether it is a degraded South Sea Islander making a crude intoxicant from a sugary plant, a Japanese preparing his favorite alcoholic beverage from the fermentation of rice by means of a fungus plant grown for the purpose, a farmer of this country making cider from fermenting apple juice, or a French expert manufacturing costly champagne by a complicated process, the outcome and the intent are one and the same.

The air was thin, exhilarating, brilliantlike dry champagne.

19 adjectives to describe  champagne