apparelled การใช้
- When she did, the public gallery was crowded with " a wonderful collection of young women " said to be " gaily apparelled ".
- In the lower they apparelled them selves, and in the higher rowme they played, beinge all open on the tope, that all behoulders mighte heare and see them . ""
- The words in the rubric requiring the woman to come " decently apparelled ", refer to the times when it was thought unbecoming for a woman to come to the service with the elaborate head-dress then the fashion.
- Here was a trust between the parties, for the donor possessed all, and used them as his proper goods, and fraud is always apparelled and clad with a trust, and a trust is the cover of fraud.
- The nation's poets, like William Wordsworth, who lived and wrote in this part of the English Lake District 200 years ago, had reveled in nature's bounty as " apparelled in celestial light ."
- In 1544, he led a company of foot apparelled in black at his own expense, with his brother George Carew who was in command of the " Mary Rose " when she sank and served as commander of the horse.
- In his personal life Wemmick, for the first time, also reveals a " sexuality which Dickens comically depicts in his relationship with the brightly apparelled but wooden Miss Skiffins . " Pip approves of Wemmick's behaviour around Miss Skiffins, insofar as it humanizes him.
- The next notable was another Bristol merchant, John Whitson, who, on his death, bequeathed the parish of Burnett in trust to found a school for the orphaned daughters of Bristol's aldermen and merchants, where " the said children to go and be apparelled in red ".
- In the words of the chronicler Edward Hall, " Her hair hanging down, which was fair, yellow and long . . . she was apparelled after the English fashion, with a French hood, which so set forth her beauty and good visage, that every creature rejoiced to behold her ".
- :" " There were two hundred young gentlemen, clad all in white velvet, and three hundred of the graver sorte, apparelled in black velvet coates, and fair chaynes, all ready at one instant and place, with fifteen hundred serving men more, on horseback, well and bravely mounted, in good order, ready to receive the queens highness into Suffolk, which was surely a comely troop, and a noble sight to behold . ""
- In Huon de M閞y's 13th-century poem " The Tournament of the Antichrist ", Pluto rules over a congregation of " classical gods and demigods, biblical devils, and evil Christians . " In the 15th-century dream allegory " The Assembly of Gods ", the deities and personifications are " apparelled as medieval nobility " basking in the " magnyfycence " of their " lord Pluto, " who is clad in a " smoky net " and reeking of sulphur.
- Sir Philip Sidney, in his discourse of Poetry, speaks of it in the following words : " I never heard the old song of Percy and Douglas that I found not my heart more moved than with a trumpet; and yet it is sung by some blind crowder with no rougher voice than rude style, which being so evil apparelled in the dust and cobweb of that uncivil age, what would it work trimmed in the gorgeous eloquence of Pindar ? " For my own part, I am so professed an admirer of this antiquated song, that I shall give my reader a critique upon it without any further apology for so doing.