chaussé'd
English
Alternative forms
- chaussé-d
Adjective
chaussé'd (comparative more chaussé'd, superlative most chaussé'd)
- (obsolete) Shoed; wearing shoes.
- 1847, Croly, George, Marston: or, the Soldier and Statesman, volume II, 2nd edition, London: Henry Colburn, page 301:
- she turned to me and implored that I should ‘move heaven and earth,’ as she termed it—with her blue eyes thrown up to the chandelier, and her remarkably pretty and well-chaussé’d feet still beating time to the dance
- 1851, Stuart Wortley, Lady Emmeline, Travels in the United States, etc., During 1849 and 1850, New York: Harper & Brothers, page 371:
- At one of the intermediate ports, I forget which, several Peruvian ladies came on board, their diminutive feet chaussé’d with the prettiest little white satin boots imaginable, almost large enough for an English doll!
- 1858, Levinge, Sir Richard, A Day with the Brookside Harriers at Brighton, London: G. Routledge & co., page 40:
- and how smartly dressed are the ladies, and how well chaussé-d!
- 1860, Grey, Elizabeth Caroline, The Autobiography of Frank; the Happiest Little Dog That Ever Lived, London: Darton and co., page 252:
- So great was my rapture when the tempting, exquisitely chaussé-d feet and legs gradually glissé-ed towards me, that my silver bells rang forth a peal of applause
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Synonyms
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