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Examples

  • (I'm sure it could also be adapted to use the lavendered apples in pies or tarts.)

    tresser - French Word-A-Day 2008

  • I'm sure it could also be adapted to use the lavendered apples in pies or tarts.

    tresser - French Word-A-Day 2008

  • The apprehensive old lady, indeed, hovered round her grandchildren all day like some guardian angel, resolutely determined that no conceivable means should be spared to save them from the dreaded epidemic; and it was not until she had seen them safely tucked in their snowy, lavendered beds that her anxieties of the day really ceased.

    The Life of Sir Richard Burton 2003

  • Dusk lavendered the sky, cerise clouds lying low on the horizon.

    The Pride of Hannah Wade Janet Dailey 1985

  • Dusk lavendered the sky, cerise clouds lying low on the horizon.

    The Pride of Hannah Wade Janet Dailey 1985

  • England, -- and rejoiced herself that she would find that little brown skin cuddled up in her best down beds and among her lavendered sheets no more.

    The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 27, January, 1860 Various

  • There was a great pincushion on the sprigged and portly toilet table, and I laboured till the constellations had changed beyond my window, in printing from a box of tiny pins upon that lavendered mound, "Ave, Ave, atque Vale!"

    Henry Brocken His Travels and Adventures in the Rich, Strange, Scarce-Imaginable Regions of Romance Walter De la Mare 1914

  • It was not Arizona, emphatically not, but rather the sweet and garnished and lavendered respectability of a Connecticut village.

    The Killer Stewart Edward White 1909

  • I should hear it still rippling on with its gentle harpsichord tinkle, as I stretched myself down among the cool lavendered sheets, and little by little let slip the multifarious world.

    Quest of the Golden Girl, a Romance Richard Le Gallienne 1906

  • The apprehensive old lady, indeed, hovered round her grandchildren all day like some guardian angel, resolutely determined that no conceivable means should be spared to save them from the dreaded epidemic; and it was not until she had seen them safely tucked in their snowy, lavendered beds that her anxieties of the day really ceased.

    The Life of Sir Richard Burton Wright, Thomas, 1859-1936 1906

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