111 examples of entrée in sentences

Take the fleshy part of veal, scrape it with a knife, till all the meat is separated from the sinews, and allow about 1/2 lb. for an entrée.

Sufficient, 1/2 lb. of veal or other meat, with other ingredients in proportion, for 1 entrée.

If this sauce is intended for an entrée, it is necessary to make it of a sufficient thickness, so that it may adhere to what it is meant to cover.

Dress was her passion; and our heroine's entrée into life could not take place till after three or four days had been spent in providing her chaperon with a dress of the newest fashion.

"You forget," she said, "that I have no longer the entrée to my father's house.

" "But she hasn't even the entrée to the house now," Weiss objected.

He was a fine-looking boy, ruddy and healthy, with no bad habits, disposed to improve his mind, which was naturally inquisitive, and having the entrée into the good society of the college town.

If Ninon ever felt a pang on account of the ungenerous conduct of Chapelle, his disciple, the illustrious Abbé de Chaulieu, the Anacreon of the age, who was called, when he made his entrée into the world of letters "the poet of good fellowship," more than compensated her for the injury done by his pastor.

Not being the wives or daughters of Members of Council or anything burra, we hadn't the private entrée, and had to wait our turn in pens, like dumb driven cattle.

The engineer had no fish, but on the other hand he had an entrée which was denied us.

He came again and again, and at last contrived to tame this wild dove, and even to get the entrée of the cottage.

Colenso, Bishop of Natal, Edward Maitland, E. Vansittart Neale, Charles Bray, Sara Hennell, W.J. Birch, R. Suffield, and hundreds more, clerics and laymen, scholars and thinkers, all gathered in this one home, to which the right of entrée was gained only by love of Truth and desire to spread Freedom among men.

But at length the resounding plaudits announced the entrée of the perfect Taglioni.

ACCÈS, m., abord; entrée; attaque d'un mal.

ENTRÉE, f., action d'entrer; endroit par on entre; premiers mets servis dans un repas.

OCTROI, m., droit que payent certaines denrées à leur entrée en ville.

OUVERTURE, f., trou, entrée, sortie.

TRIOMPHANT, E, qui triomphe; qui a vaincu. TRIOMPHE, m., entrée pompeuse et solennelle; victoire; grand succès.

She seemed to have the entrée everywhere in the county.

I am sure to obtain entrée to people and functions, and I can describe what I see and hear in attractive form.

The Germans had made but a brief stay here, merely an entrée and sortie, and had been received by Bishop Marbeau, in such a fashion as is likely to be recorded in history and place his name beside that of his famous predecessor, Bossuet.

But my other friends seemed to me to be only interested in the people who had the entrée, so to speakthe priests of the shrine.

Then ARTHUR made an entrée; he constructed it with care, And he vowed that e'en APICIUS would have owned it rich and rare.

"I am here to see anyone and everyone," said His Highness; "but I look to you, Gentlemen of the Ring, I should say Household, to see that I am disturbed by only those who have the right of entrée.

Should this not be within your power, you have probably the entrée to some private collections, clubhouses, theatres, or reading-rooms, and could devote a few hours to showing him these places.

111 examples of  entrée  in sentences