Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at emilie's.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Emilie's.
Examples
-
"You never feel alone," agreed Diana Willis , a painter with a neighboring studio who dropped by as Ms. Ellis and Ms. Lee were hanging their work—Ms. Ellis's sensitive portraits of yellow labs on the east wall, Emilie's landscape and figure studies on the west wall.
She's Gone to the Dogs Ralph Gardner Jr. 2011
-
The attractive Wesley handles the best role with aplomb and intelligence, though she can't make Emilie's confused monologue about ownership of a story turn into sense any more than the playwright did.
Michael Giltz: Theater: Zoe Kazan Pens Play; Glee's Groff Gets Ugly Michael Giltz 2011
-
The attractive Wesley handles the best role with aplomb and intelligence, though she can't make Emilie's confused monologue about ownership of a story turn into sense any more than the playwright did.
Michael Giltz: Theater: Zoe Kazan Pens Play; Glee's Groff Gets Ugly Michael Giltz 2011
-
Thanks for the other recos ... but I can't take Emilie's deep dish pizza experience to heart.
-
To still the gossip about whose child she was carrying, Emilie's husband came to Cirey for a few weeks, while Voltaire made a hasty exit.
Archive 2009-02-01 Elizabeth Kerri Mahon 2009
-
Emilie's father would bring them home to meet Emilie like Fontenelle, who was the perpetual secretary of the Academie de Sciences.
Archive 2009-02-01 Elizabeth Kerri Mahon 2009
-
He helped to prepare Emilie's book for publication.
Archive 2009-02-01 Elizabeth Kerri Mahon 2009
-
Neither won, but Voltaire soon realized that Emilie's mind was quicker than his.
Archive 2009-02-01 Elizabeth Kerri Mahon 2009
-
They were saved by the fact that Emilie's husband and Voltaire became good friends.
Archive 2009-02-01 Elizabeth Kerri Mahon 2009
-
He used Emilie's contacts at court to be sent as a sort of spy for the French government to the Prussian court.
Archive 2009-02-01 Elizabeth Kerri Mahon 2009
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.