Which preposition to use with boulevard
The boulevards of Paris in times of peace are hardly so gay.
"No boulevard in mountain anywhere," remarked Wampus; "but road he good enough to ride on.
Many of the 6,000 cafes which are strewn over Paris, grace these boulevards with their glass fronts.
On the Thursday afternoon he was on the boulevards at a few paces from a regiment of cavalry drawn up in order.
but some spy may be on the boulevard outside noting who has entered here?" "Mille diavoli!"
He crossed Ala Moana Boulevard to the yacht harbor where rows of large sailboats were moored behind a stone breakwater.
On reaching that part of the Boulevard opposite the Foreign Office, at the moment they were about to separate, Pagnerre said: "Well, really, I did not expect for our proposals so speedy and complete success.
Together the gentlemen entered Mr. Jefferson's carriage, which was waiting, and were driven along the boulevards toward the Bastille.
Many of the women passing I had met upon the boulevards under circumstances the most peculiar; concerning many of the men I knew more than they would wish the world to know.
Or if you prefer, you may climb up from Sloat Boulevard via Portola Drive through one of the city's restricted residence sections.
" Near the Porte St. Martin we left our carriage, and Charamaule and myself proceeded along the boulevard on foot, in order to observe the groups more closely, and more easily to judge the aspect of the crowd.
At a Regent Street moving-picture show a few evenings ago two young Frenchwomen sat behind us, girls driven off the Paris boulevards by the same impartial force which has driven grubbing peasant women from the Belgian beet-fields.
It was a very pretty, animated sight, many booths like those one sees on the Boulevard during the Christmas holidays were installed on the ice close to the banks, and the river was black with people.
No longer could the philosophic Parisian sip his petit verre and watch the drama of the boulevards from the shady side of a marble-topped table.
The massacre radiateda word horribly truefrom the boulevard into all the streets.
But neither Washington nor London nor Paris nor any other European or American city possesses such a broad, shaded boulevard as Bombay, with the Indian Ocean upon one side and on the other, stretching for a mile or more, a succession of stately edifices.