galoshes造句1) Please meet me tomorrow dressed in your galoshes, and we will celebrate our caramelized love together.
2) The only must-pack items on this trip are galoshes and a couple of cans of bathroom cleaner to scrub away the mildew.
3) Miss Rose pulled on galoshes and spent the noon hour directing traffic.
4) One of Ramona's galoshes was lying on the landing.
5) Why would I lie about taking his galoshes?
6) Guards of Lenin's mausoleum in felt boots with galoshes.
7) He was wearing galoshes and an absurd hat.
8) They wear galoshes in wet weather.
9) Wet shoes and leaking galoshes ,[http:///galoshes.html] and for the first time ...chilblains With Christmas in the arr?
10) I borrowed my friend's polka dot galoshes, but at this point in the tunnel the water was well above them.
11) Brewer's also seems to feel that in English galoshes have always been overshoes, saying that this comes from the time when silk or cloth shoes were worn indoors and in dry conditions.
12) In Hong Kong people seldom wear galoshes in wet weather.
13) Now, Kirkland is a man with about six pairs of galoshes.
14) On one estivate, 110 million dollars get spent every year, some of it not on herbal remedies or galoshes.
15) Twain recalls being invited to an official White House dinner and being warned by his wife, Olivia, who stayed at home, not to wear his winter galoshes.
16) Members of another group said they did not dare tend their rice paddies without wearing gloves and galoshes because irrigation water caused their skin to peel off.
17) Faith himself did not like the shoe - pacs and wore galoshes over his leather combat boots.
18) My head was uncovered, my mittenless hands were clenched in my pockets, and a few of the clasps on my galoshes had worked loose.
19) Then: Founded in Finland in 1865, Nokia was a rubber company that made galoshes and other products.
20) Righty dreams of wearing fancy footwear, but Lefty swears by galoshes.
21) Before you even take off your coat (and hat, gloves, scarf, galoshes, etc), you have already scored a victory over the weather and this early-morning success puts you in a winning frame of mind.
22) Strangely, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology seems to agree with Brewer's and not with the OED—it's fellow Oxford University Press publication, in blaming galoshes on the Gauls.
23) They were a kind of rubber outer boot that he zipped or clipped up over his dress shoes. They were also called galoshes.