Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The same heat also added curl to her hair and a dewiness to her skin that appealed.
Her skin had the dewiness of youth, and she bounced down the stairs with barely suppressed glee.
Her frigid eyes warmed to pools of imploring dewiness.
The dewiness of the cast members as they materialize in phalanxes does indeed give you a wistful rush.
I had expected to gloat over a certain dewiness of her eyes, a patient drooping of her lips.
But if you're like the small percentage of the population that suffers from excessive sweating, this occasional dewiness turns to a veritable deluge.
And no longer a beautiful, fresh-faced girl of that age and dewiness that makes older men become foolish over them," Iris added shrewdly.
Similarly Ms. Mulligan's Nina locates a core of hard ambition beneath the surface fragility and dewiness.
Did Miss Burridge grow roses because they had so many traits in common with her adolescent pupils--softness, dewiness, sweetness, occasional thorniness?
His batterymate, Buster Posey, is twenty-three, and their combined dewiness and brusque success brought references to kid heroes of the classical past.
Even the most golden-hued New Yorkers never quite achieve the honey-dipped dewiness that Mr. McConaughey and Ms. Hudson occasionally display.
"In summer your face already has a nice dewiness," says Gretchen Monahan, style expert on TV's Bravo Channel and Rachael Ray Show.
(Having oily skin, I was very apprehensive about using it as a moisturizer, but it's wonderfully light and gives that elusive kind of dewiness that starlets always seem to have.)
Keaton has by general consensus grown, if anything, more beautiful over the years, her broad-planed face having gained in elegant angles what it has lost in round-cheeked "Annie Hall" dewiness.
It was performed by Pedro Calveyra and Nora Robles, who blend wry, sly masculinity and an Ally McBeal-like smiling dewiness to irresistible effect.
Although she succumbs to the Streisandesque vocalizing that always befalls women in Wildhorn shows, Ms. York beguilingly mixes dewiness and feistiness in ways Barbara Cartland might admire.
Yet Ms. Hall combines an unworldly dewiness with a daunting authority that perfectly suits her character, one of Shaw's nascent New Women, and that tends to make those around her look two-dimensional.
In "Elizabeth Garden A-II (March)," a vista of yellow-green grass flanked by dark blue tarpaulins and focusing on a distant gazebo, Mr. Kempczynski aspires to the dewiness of a Constable pochade.