16 Verbs to Use for the Word lounge

On this piazza stands also the Ducal Palace; the principal cafés and the most splendid shops are in the same piazza, which forms the morning lounge of Milan.

I must have done more; I must have covered the whole lounge with pillows and cushions; for, presently my mind cleared again, and I recollected that it was something about the poison.

She flew rather than ran into the house, into the Elder's study, and dragged a lounge to the very threshold of the door.

" Marjorie laughed and drew the lounge afghan up about her shoulders.

Half an hour later Mr. Kemp entered the lounge of Verney's Hotel as though in quest of some one.

Two were Englishman in appearance, though the figure of languid elegance in evening dress that might have graced the lounge of a West End club had a voice soft with Celtic brogue.

Surely I know the nonchalant lounge of that walkthe lazy self-consciousness of that gait, though, when last I saw it, it was not on dewy English turf, but on the baking flags of a foreign town.

That night, after dinner, Bambi arranged the electric reading light in the screened porch, drew a big chair beside it, placed the Professor's favourite chaise-lounge near by, and got him into it.

It was as pleasant a lounge as any in London, not excepting Tattersall's, which has equal claims on my memory.

Paint, varnish and brass railings gave an air of opulence to the outer precincts, and the inner room, with its mahogany bookcases containing morocco-bound "sets" and its wide blue leather arm-chairs, lacked only a palm or two to resemble the lounge of a fashionable hotel.

The ghostly croud with gay surprize Began to rub their stony eyes: Such pleasant lounge, they all averr'd, None saw since he had been interr'd; And thus, like connoisseurs on Earth, Began to weigh the pictures' worth:

Then, to make bad worse, they selected the lounge to sit upon, and I had to lie closely wedged against the wall, with "pins and needles" pricking all over my cramped body, while some man I didn't know proposed and was accepted by some girl I shall probably never see.

I went out, having been on my way to the door when this conversation occurred, and took my usual lounge about, which was not a satisfactory sort of amusement.

Rapidly regaining the room in which my interest was now centred, I set the candlestick down on the dresser, and approached the lounge.

I was now, I thought, to be left to myself; nor was I displeased, for I wanted a lounge and a meditation; though of the latter I could not see that I could make much, if any, more than confirming myself against all preternaturals as agents on earth, however certain their existence may be beyond the mystic veil that divides the two worlds.

It was cheerful and sunny, with outlooks on the lake and the village, and contained a lounge as well as the bed.

16 Verbs to Use for the Word  lounge