harlequin|harlequins in English
noun
[har·le·quin || 'hɑrlɪkwɪn /'hɑːl-]
clown, fool, jeste
Use "harlequin|harlequins" in a sentence
1. Kerr's first stage appearance was at Weston-super-Mare in 1937, as "Harlequin" in the mime play Harlequin and Columbine.
2. Albert was triumphant in his harlequin costume.
3. A clownish mosaic of shifting hues attired the Harlequin.
4. Mr. Cruncher reposed under a patchwork counterpane, like a Harlequin at home.
5. The Harlequin man couldn't have provided a better distraction.
6. 24 The Harlequin man couldn't have provided a better distraction.
7. Reviews for Boinking Samui; Harlequin de Rustre chapter 1
8. 11 A clownish mosaic of shifting hues attired the Harlequin.
9. Colombine rejects Harlequin, and she and Pierrot live happily ever after.
10. HArlequinade (plural hArlequinades) A pantomime-like comedy featuring the harlequin or clown
11. The Bombay Company Set of 2 Harlequin Hand-Beaded Picture Frames
12. This is the same toxin found in pufferfish and harlequin frogs.
13. A comedy or pantomime in which Harlequin is the main attraction.
14. Pierrot, Harlequin, and Columbine will go to bed late this evening.
15. Are you allowing yourselves to be fooled by this mountebank, this harlequin?
16. 3.5 Stars I received this copy of Chased from HARLEQUIN - Carina Press
17. It was a bit sentimental, kind of a Harlequin romance, but charming.
18. 6 Are you allowing yourselves to be fooled by this mountebank, this harlequin?
19. With Harlequin, West investigated “art as process” and her expressive abstractions became more aggressive action paintings.
20. The harlequin on the easel looked as depressed as ever, and who could blame him?
21. Thus, while Meh'Lindi padded in pursuit with her mute chaperones, Jaq was also tracking the Harlequin man.
22. The love scenes between Fawcett and Boothe are straight out of a Harlequin novel, all romance and yearning and aching passion.
23. hArlequinade a performance involving Harlequin or other characters of the Commedia dell’Arte; hence, buffoonery or clownish behavior.
24. Seated from left to right are a woman, a central harlequin and a man wearing a Cronstadt hat.
25. It shows the artist as Harlequin, drinking in the Paris bar which gives its name to the picture.