Carriage
in sentence
652 examples of Carriage in a sentence
But she... you'll see how she has arranged her life, how quiet and dignified she is!...To the left, in the side street opposite the church!' shouted Oblonsky, leaning out of the
carriage
window.
But you'll see her.'The
carriage
drove into the courtyard, and Oblonsky rang loudly at the front door, before which a sledge was standing.
Well, another time, don't judge in advance,' said Oblonsky, opening the door of his
carriage.
If not, it means that all is over, and then I will decide what I am to do...!At night she heard his
carriage
stop, heard him ring, heard his steps, and his voice talking to the maid.
As she passed through the drawing-room she heard a vehicle stop at the front door, and, looking out of the window, she saw a young girl in a lilac hat leaning out of the
carriage
window and giving an order to the footman who was ringing at the front door.
There he was on the steps, without a hat, going down to the
carriage.
The
carriage
rolled away; he ran rapidly upstairs again.
Then she heard the
carriage
drive up and the door open, and he went out again.
Then, without turning to look up at the window, he sat down in the
carriage
in his usual posture, crossing one leg over the other, and, putting on a glove, disappeared round the comer.
'The Count told me to let you know that, in case you should wish to go out, the
carriage
will return very soon.''Very well.
Her messenger had returned in the
carriage.
These horses, this carriage, how horrid it is of me to be in this
carriage
– they are all his, but I shall not see them any more.'
She went to the table, smelt the bread and cheese and as the smell of everything eatable revolted her, she sent for the
carriage
and went out.
Annushka, who came out with Anna's things, and Peter, who put them into the carriage, and the coachman, who was evidently dissatisfied, were all objectionable to her and irritated her by their words and movements.
CHAPTER XXX'THERE, AGAIN IT IS THAT GIRL!Again I understand it all,' Anna said to herself as soon as the
carriage
started and, rocking slightly, rattled over the stones; and again different impressions succeeded one another in her brain.
But... 'She opened her mouth and changed her place in the
carriage
from agitation produced by a sudden thought.
'Yes,' she said, giving him her purse; and hanging her little red handbag on her arm, she descended from the
carriage.
She mounted the high step of the railway
carriage
and seated herself in an empty compartment on the dirty – though once white – cover of the spring seat.
A grimy, misshaped peasant in a cap from under which his tousled hair stuck out, passed that window, stooping over the
carriage
wheels.
With rhythmic jerks over the joints of the rails, the
carriage
in which Anna sat rattled past the platform and a brick wall, past the signals and some other carriages; the sound of wheels slightly ringing against the rails became more rhythmical and smooth; the bright evening sunshine shone through the window, and a breeze moved the blind.
Anna forgot her fellow-travellers; softly rocked by the motion of the
carriage
and inhaling the fresh air, she again began to think:'Where did I leave off?
Why are those young men in the next
carriage
shouting?
CHAPTER IIHARDLY HAD KOZNYSHEV AND KATAVASOV REACHED the station, got out of their carriage, and looked for the footman who had followed with their luggage, before some Volunteers drove up with four izvoshchiks.
CHAPTER IIIHAVING TAKEN LEAVE OF THE PRINCESS, Koznyshev with Katavasov, who had joined him, entered the very crowded carriage, and the train started.
Koznyshev advised him to go into the second-class
carriage
and have a talk with some of them.
Katavasov returning to his
carriage
involuntarily prevaricated; and in telling Koznyshev his observations of the Volunteers, let it appear that they were excellent fellows.
It is so stuffy in the
carriage.
Just then, a
carriage
had stopped before the door and a gentleman with decorations and a lady in a fur cloak alighted: visitors just arrived from Paris at the Marchiennes station, for Madame Hennebeau, who appeared in the shadow of the porch, was uttering exclamations of surprise and joy.
The visitors went along at the same slow pace, still talking, when a
carriage
stopped in the road, before the church.
When M. Hennebeau had seated the ladies in the carriage, which went off in the direction of Marchiennes, there was a final explosion of clattering voices, all the women gesticulating and talking in each other's faces in the midst of a tumult as of an ant-hill in revolution.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Their
After
There
Could
Would
Window
Horses
Through
While
Little
Before
Stopped
Other
House
Drove
About
Should
Without
Thought