Perfume
in sentence
62 examples of Perfume in a sentence
I don't know how much
perfume
that commercial sold, but I guarantee you, it moved a lot of antidepressants and anti-anxiety meds.
I worked with a synthetic biologist, and I created a swallowable perfume, which is a cosmetic pill that you eat and the fragrance comes out through the skin's surface when you perspire.
It completely blows apart the way that
perfume
is, and provides a whole new format.
It's
perfume
coming from the inside out.
In the 17th century, a woman named Giulia Tofana had a very successful
perfume
business.
You see, it wasn't a very good
perfume.
Go up another five levels, and you're now at a pretty high level of this hierarchy, and stretch down into the different senses, and you may have a module that sees a certain fabric, hears a certain voice quality, smells a certain perfume, and will say, "My wife has entered the room."
Oh, and you better not wear any
perfume
or make any noise breathing, otherwise they'll know you're there.
The nose's contribution to romance is more than noticing
perfume
or cologne.
If you can smell a spritz of
perfume
in a small room, a dog would have no trouble smelling it in an enclosed stadium and distinguishing its ingredients, to boot.
And I pick him up, and I wipe sweat and cheap
perfume
off his forehead.
Josephine wore violet-scented perfume, carried violets on their wedding day, and Napoleon sent her a bouquet of violets every year on their anniversary.
Some of us will have smelt something rather pleasant, perhaps somebody's
perfume.
The dance of our glances, challenge, abdication, effacement, the
perfume
of our consternation.
Some of us would have smelled something rather pleasant, perhaps somebody's
perfume.
Now we had stuff inside Biosphere to keep ourselves clean, but nothing with
perfume.
Quite the similar idea, then, a
perfume
packaged in a book, in a die cut.
Fireworks displays, the rules of games, the smell of perfume: no.
From the first screen image of a woman holding her hands up to her face with white sheets blowing in the background one recalls a pretentious
perfume
commercial.
"I like cheap
perfume
better; it doesn't last as long..." - Ralph Meeker's convict character (Lawson) tells this to Barbara Stanwyck's Helen character, after he gets a whiff of the
perfume
that she picked out w/her husband in Tijuana...! This line cracked me up, and also seemed like a metaphor for this film - that cheap is better than expensive, because a cheap perfume-loving man who has a way with a 2 x 4 is a better man to have around in the long run!
I imaging myself in the French environment with all the sophistication and perfume, flowers, churches, problems, etc.
He stocks up on
perfume
and air fresheners in the meantime.
Every shot is perfectly composed like a
perfume
ad.
This is the story of a
perfume
counter saleswoman who puts a Christmas List in Santa's mailbox at the store she works in.
That means, in many cases, less luxury spending – something that is hard to reconcile with the image of France as the country of fashion, perfume, and champagne.
You can be “a granny” smelling of
perfume
and wearing a pearl necklace, but you can also be “a nanny” smelling of smoke and oil and with a cross on a string under your brown dress.
The first such billboard showed a young woman's face, but no bar of soap or bottle of
perfume.
For example, women without "hijab" and a chaperone may not leave their homes; shops shall not advertise the sale of sanitary pads or undergarments; hair-removing creams and lotions may not be sold; use of
perfume
and makeup will be banned; women will not be allowed to use male tailors; male doctors may not treat women patients; women guests at hotels will not be allowed in the swimming pool; coeducation has been identified as a cause of fornication and is to be phased out; family planning shall be declared un-Islamic, and the sale of contraceptives banned.
And, in a bizarre attack on supposed judicial activism by Israel’s Supreme Court, she recently released a mock advertisement for “Fascism” perfume, which she declares “smells like democracy to [her].”
The envelope was as thick as parchment; there was a large monogram on the narrow yellow sheet, and the letter had a delicious
perfume.
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