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Showing results for causerie. Search instead for handyserie.
Definitions

causerie

[koh-zuh-ree, kohzuh-ree] / ˌkoʊ zəˈri, koʊzəˈri /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Whatever was the nature of His Majesty's causerie he arrived at Santander seemingly more spruce and sprightly than ever.

From Time Magazine Archive

Which laudable effort toward intellectual and artistic uplift Hamil never laughed at; and there ensued always the most astonishing causerie concerning art that two men in a wilderness ever engaged in.

From The Firing Line by Chambers, Robert W. (Robert William)

Which is the European town of six thousand inhabitants that would supply an audience of eleven hundred people to a literary causerie?

From A Frenchman in America Recollections of Men and Things by O'Rell, Max

Similarly, when he turned for a too brief space to literary criticism, he proved himself the master of all living men in the art of the literary causerie.

From The Book of This and That by Lynd, Robert

This work is a literary causerie inspired in part by the reading of Alexandrian criticism, but in larger part by experience.

From Horace and His Influence by Showerman, Grant