8 adverbs to describe how to chin

He and I are going to chin awhile this morning.

The blue-chinned, thick-necked Mortlake arose also.

The type with matte complexion, soft eyes, finely chiselled nose, and delicately oval chin, look ideally sweet and feminine with the hair arranged à la Madonna.

Women, the best of them, grow tiresome and double-chinned in time.

Close at his heels came the minister himself, high-nosed and heavy-chinned.

But when he again awoke to the world, to the coach passing in its cloud of dust, or the gaping urchin, or the clang of the distant dinner-bell, he would find her considering him with an enigmatical smile, that lay in the region between amusement and pity; her shapely chin resting on her hand, and the lace falling from the whitest wrist in the world.

" "Your experience was unusual, or why do men come back year after year?" "Did you ever hear of a thing called Hope?" They moved uneasily on their stools, and some rubbed stubbly chins with perplexed, uncertain fingers, and they all glowered at the speaker.

The brace of hard-featured females whom Pelham had provided for the Queen's attendance might speak to her of nothing that occurred without the gates of Pevensey, and she saw no other persons save her confessor, a triple-chinned Dominican; had men already lain Jehane within the massive and gilded coffin of a queen the outer world would have made as great a turbulence in her ears.

8 adverbs to describe how to  chin  - Adverbs for  chin