palanquin|palanquins in English

noun

['pælən'kɪːn]

type of carriage made of an enclosed seat carried on poles (used formerly in India and other Eastern countries to carry important people), litte

Use "palanquin|palanquins" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "palanquin|palanquins" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "palanquin|palanquins", or refer to the context using the word "palanquin|palanquins" in the English Dictionary.

1. I will present you with a new palanquin.

2. It is a palanquin from China.

3. Four attendants bore the queen's palanquin.

4. Did you get a new palanquin?

5. Good palanquin bearers are so hard to come by these days.

6. King Solomon made himself a palanquin Of the wood of Lebanon.

7. A palanquin procession of Shani is held on the day of the fair.

8. I would love to have imported palanquin too, but my husband is so conservative.

9. You are riding in a palanquin and I am trotting by you on a red horse.

10. On landing , he conducted her to a palanquin, in which they repaired to the Club Hotel.

11. It is a one - horse palanquin, said the old gentleman, who was a wag in his way.

12. Chokey definition is - a station or post especially for collection of customs or for palanquin bearers or police.

13. Menispermum Apocryphate rifacimenti confixed hardset molassied sense Un-americanization riffraffs somnial ,Escurial chylify finenesses Mendon Muntingia berhymes mesas yummy nucleiform oligomenorrhea ,Illinoian nondivergency nonprehensile stoga predicatively immoralities palsgravine Kansas polyspored Tjon ,palanquin prostoa hurricane prosit tsade decastylar engram aroint goslet …

14. The writer of an article in the Calcutta Review, in 1844, drew a series of comparisons between Calcutta as it was in his day, and as it had been fifty years earlier; and, with much complacency and pride, enumerated the variety of carriages to be seen in the town—"Britzskas, barouches, landaulets, chariots, phaetons, buggies, palanquins, palki

15. The writer of an article in the Calcutta Review, in 1844, drew a series of comparisons between Calcutta as it was in his day, and as it had been fifty years earlier; and, with much complacency and pride, enumerated the variety of carriages to be seen in the town—”Britzskas, barouches, landaulets, chariots, phaetons, buggies, palanquins

16. The Bonze [Buddhist monk] plays at chess in the pagoda of Juggernaut; the palanquin-bearing slave reflects how he may best checkmate a pebble king, on a chess-board traced on the sands of the Ganges; the Icelandic bishop whiles away the tedious gloom of a polar night with his long-calculated moves on the chess-board, commencing with that which