turbaned in English

adjective

['tur·baned || 'tɜrbənd /'tɜːb-]

with a turban, wearing a turba

Use "turbaned" in a sentence

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

1. Wander through awned streets . Turbaned faces going by.

2. Turbaned men talked agitatedly outside among parked pick - up trucks and military vehicles.

3. The promotional material depicted turbaned men, but the photos were not well received.

4. The blue hand also gives us one sharp point of focus in a sea of turbaned heads.

5. Where were the turbaned musicians, the dancers balancing bowls on their skulls, the smiling women dabbing vermilion dots on foreheads and draping garlands over shoulders?

6. 6 They were the Mien, whose blue-turbaned women were swathed in dark robes accented with red wool ruffs.

7. Slim turbaned Indians blew through long pipes of reed or brass and charmed-or feigned to charm-great hooded snakes and horrible horned adders.

8. The Blackamoor — usually a coal-black-skinned, turbaned figure of servitude in an opulent context — is the subject of several conference presentations and the accompanying ReSignifications exhibition.

9. The very phrases were worn so threadbare that they evoked no image except that of a turbaned "character. " leaking sawdust at every pore as he pursued a tiger through the Bois de Boulogne.

10. The white-turbaned Shiite cleric, who has held several senior government positions since the 1979 Islamic revolution, said in an interview Tuesday that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, along with the clerics and Revolutionary Guard commanders who support him, will be defeated by what he describes as a Burgeoning movement of ordinary people

11. I made a roar like an animal at the turbaned merchant, and he struck me hard on the ear so that I fell to the ground. I lay still looking up at him with all the contempt I could bring into my gaze.

12. John Cuthbert Lawson, writing in 1910, described the 'Swarms of Byzantine saints and angels [which] must have troubled the air for centuries above the turbaned heads in Aya Sofia and Famagusta' while, a keen eye should detect the flights of Afrits and djinns around the great Giralda minaret which is now the belfry of Seville cathedral'.

13. (In all three of Cigoli's paintings, the two Adorations and the Deposition, "Cigoli, like Galileo, attributed secondary light to the earth and to whatever clouds clustered about the lunar body"[168].) In further emphasis the diagonals of the painting focus the viewer's eye on the moon, as does the gesture toward the moon of the turbaned figure of Nicodemus and the position of Christ's left arm