Vodka
in sentence
59 examples of Vodka in a sentence
A drink of vodka!'Levin turned round.
Never mind!' shouted a merry, bearded, red-faced peasant; showing a row of white teeth and holding aloft a greenish
vodka
bottle that glittered in the sunshine.
'They are calling us to drink
vodka.
I should go and have a drink,' said Levin, not quite disinterestedly, hoping that the
vodka
would tempt Veslovsky and lure him away.
Have a bite of pie!'Levin badly wanted a drink of
vodka
and a bit of bread.
And the vodka...
They were entertaining you, you see!Do they keep
vodka
for sale?' said the soldier who had at last succeeded in dragging off one wet boot together with a blackened stocking.
A propos of Vasenka's repeated expressions of delight at the charm of the arrangements for the night, of the scent of hay, and of a broken cart (which he thought was broken, because its fore wheels had been removed), of the good-nature of the peasants who had treated him to vodka, and of the dogs which lay each at its master's feet, Oblonsky told them about the delights of a shooting party with Malthus at which he had been last summer.
Veslovsky now sang, now recalled with relish his adventures with the peasants who entertained him with
vodka
and said 'No offence!'; and now his night exploits with hazel nuts, the maid-servant, and the peasant who asked him whether he was married, and learning that he was not said: 'Don't hanker after other men's wives, but above all things strive to get one of your own!'These words particularly amused Veslovsky.
Had any
vodka?
Well then, come!'Levin rose and went with him to a large table on which stood various kinds of
vodka
and a very varied assortment of hors d'oeuvres.
They drank a glass of
vodka
each and returned to their table.
Only for the first few moments, while they were leaving the courtyard of the club, did Levin retain that sense of club calm, pleasure, and undoubted decorum in his surroundings; but as soon as the carriage had passed out into the street and he felt it jolting on the uneven road, heard the angry shouts of an izvoshchik they met, saw in the ill-lit street the red signboards of a
vodka
dealer and of a small shop, that sense was dissipated, and he began to consider his actions and to ask himself whether he was doing right in going to see Anna.
Bowing right and left to his acquaintances who, here as elsewhere, greeted him joyfully, he passed on to the buffet, drank a glass of
vodka
and ate a bit of fish as hors-d'oeuvre, and said something to the painted Frenchwoman, bedecked with ribbons and lace, who sat at a little counter – something that made even this Frenchwoman burst into frank laughter.
Levin did not take any vodka, simply because that Frenchwoman – made up, as it seemed to him, of false hair, powder, and toilet vinegar – was offensive to him.
I don't understand.''Well, Masha, order supper for three, with
vodka
and wine...No, wait.
'Really – what does he drink?''He drinks vodka, and it is bad for him.'
'Much vodka?' whispered Levin.
'Here, here, put it down here,' he said crossly, and at once poured out a wineglass full of
vodka
and drank it greedily.
But Nicholas understood that he meant just that, and frowning, again took hold of the
vodka
bottle.
The orderly stood before him with
vodka
and pickled cucumbers on a tray.
'Yashvin here has ordered
vodka
to freshen me up.''Well, you did give it us last night,' said one of the new-comers.
And he fell asleep up there on the roof to the sound of the Funeral March.''Drink, you must drink some
vodka
and then some seltzer water with plenty of lemon,' said Yashvin, standing over Petritsky, like a mother urging her child to take its medicine.
Perhaps – if the lads could have a little vodka!'
At half-time, when they sat down again and those who smoked were lighting their pipes, the old man informed the young fellows that if they mowed the Mashkin Heights there would be
vodka.
In the grounds, what first met Vronsky's eyes were the soldier-singers in their white linen uniforms, standing beside a cask of vodka, then the jolly, healthy figure of the C.O. surrounded by his officers.
The men went to the side-table in the dining-room, on which stood bottles with six kinds of
vodka
and plates with as many sorts of cheese with and without silver cheese-knives, caviar, herrings, different kinds of tinned delicacies, and slices of French rolls.
They stood round the scented
vodka
and the delicacies, and the conversation about the Russification of Poland between Koznyshev, Karenin, and Pestsov gradually slackened in the expectation of dinner.
'Yes, that is the very best way,' he said, chewing some cheese and filling the glass with a special kind of
vodka.
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