14 adjectives to describe troupes

Des troupes françaises.

Where was my little troupe?

And in the wake of these high-born women would follow laughing, bright-eyed troupes of dancing and chorus-girls from the theatres with an escort of the cleverest actors of Paris, to join the Regent's merry throng.

Quel était le faible du duc?Était-il habile comme général?Quelles troupes conduisait-il?Qu'est-ce que c'était que la Ligue?De quel malheur

[Footnote: La pucelle d'Orléans, après avoir combattu avec gloire les Anglais et le duc de Bourgogne ligués contre la France, avoit été faite prisonnière en 1430, par un officier de Jean de Luxembourg, général des troupes du duc, puis vendue par Jean aux Anglais, qui la firent brûler vive l'année suivante.

*** As a result of the excessive rain a nigger troupe at Margate were seen to pale visibly.

With this view, then, as soon as the noisy troupe had departed, the Signor Grimaldi raised his beaver with that discreet and imposing politeness which equally attracts and repels, and, addressing the solitary stranger, he invited him to descend, and stretch his legs on the part of the deck which had hitherto been considered exclusively devoted to the use of his own party.

An odd little troupe we were!

That Cibber knew something of the wrangles which inevitably follow in the wake of an operatic troupe may be seen from the next paragraph: "There is, too, in the very species of an Italian singer such an innate, fantastical pride and caprice, that the government of them (here at least) is almost impracticable.

To the eyes of the public was to be exhibited his select troupe, whose fame the newspapers had for days been proclaiming.

A certain theatrical troupe, after a dreary and unsuccessful tour, finally arrived in a small New Jersey town.

a barbarous troupe of clownish fone*

Rise & receive a noble minded wife Worth troupes of other weomen.

I am an orphan, and I am an enfant de troupe.

14 adjectives to describe  troupes