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Showing results for causerie.
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

If you read Notes on a Cellar Book, as you should, you will agree that it is a charmingly light-hearted causerie for a gentleman to publish at the age of seventy-five.

From Modern Essays by Ayres, Harry Morgan

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

His hand may be traced week by week in many columns and especially, in alternate issues, on the page given up to the literary causerie.

From Old Junk by Ratcliffe, S. K. (Samuel Kerkham)

It hardly seemed a speech when he was at the tribune, more like a causerie, though he told very plain truths sometimes to the peuple souverain.

From My First Years as a Frenchwoman, 1876-1879 by Waddington, Mary Alsop King