gallipot การใช้
- The gallant Laxton flirts with Mistress Gallipot in the tobacco-shop.
- Mrs Gallipot quickly apprises him of the situation and Gallipot offers him the money.
- Mrs Gallipot quickly apprises him of the situation and Gallipot offers him the money.
- Gallipot is horrified, as he loves his wife and has had children by her.
- Mistress Gallipot is continuing her covert affair with Laxton, which her husband does not suspect.
- Gallipot believes them; Laxton is not punished, but ends up being their guest for dinner.
- She tells Gallipot that Laxton is an old suitor, to whom she was betrothed before they married.
- Later that month he finished last of the four runners behind Gallipot in the Stewards'Cup at Liverpool.
- Elspeth Huxley, in her book " Gallipot Eyes ", recounts a story told to her by her husband, Gervas Huxley.
- The image of Bhaicajyaguru is usually expressed with a canonical Buddha-like form holding a gallipot and, in some versions, possessing blue skin.
- Elspeth Huxley used " Gallipot Eyes ", from the latter quotation, for the title of a diary about her life in Wilts.
- John Aubrey uses gallipot to mean ( I think ) a kind of mottled blue-for example, " I do well remember that the common English cat was white with some bluish piedness, that is a gallipot blue . . . " and also " there persons are generally plump and feggy; gallipot eyes, and some black; but they are generally handsome enough " ( of North Wiltshiremen ).
- John Aubrey uses gallipot to mean ( I think ) a kind of mottled blue-for example, " I do well remember that the common English cat was white with some bluish piedness, that is a gallipot blue . . . " and also " there persons are generally plump and feggy; gallipot eyes, and some black; but they are generally handsome enough " ( of North Wiltshiremen ).
- John Aubrey uses gallipot to mean ( I think ) a kind of mottled blue-for example, " I do well remember that the common English cat was white with some bluish piedness, that is a gallipot blue . . . " and also " there persons are generally plump and feggy; gallipot eyes, and some black; but they are generally handsome enough " ( of North Wiltshiremen ).