Flo is tall, angular and stately, a fascinating mixture of formal hauteur and bohemian ditziness. |
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It proves beyond doubt Daly's assertion that bohemian, earthy things have an edge and can prove timeless. |
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Djuna Barnes was one of the bohemian set in 1920 and 30s Paris, and her creative circle of acquaintance included Gertrude Stein. |
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For me, it might be wanting to adapt a notion of bohemian life to a mode of working intellectually. |
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Then he argues that this means attracting bohemian types who like funky, socially free areas with cool downtowns and lots of density. |
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I would be single and successful with no children, while still hanging on to some sort of cool bohemian style. |
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It was dumplings, cabbage, pork, bohemian garlic soup, and of course, Pilsner beer. |
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The naif became the world's most famous exponent of bohemian life and, of course, a star in Parisian gay society. |
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There was a fancy party where Katherine got to use her corporate skills and Phil made a hit by playing the bohemian. |
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More sedate but nonetheless oozing French bohemian cool are overcoats with ruched hemlines in soft corduroy by Lilith. |
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This stunning slip-over jumper dress has a soft, bohemian quality that feels totally effortless. |
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In their puritanical disdain for cigarettes, drunkenness, and rich food, the Bobos show themselves to be far more bourgeois than bohemian. |
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The 300-year-old inn exudes bohemian bonhomie and is one of the best loved in Puerto Rico. |
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Or book a table at Byzantium, a stylishly bohemian room with wood vigas overhead. |
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He vagabonded his way to Paris and immediately settled into a bohemian life. |
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Drinking coffee at night still seems naughtily bohemian in this city, and there's an undercurrent of guilty complicity in the air. |
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The background is complex and unconventional enough to send even a modern bohemian rushing to cover the piano legs. |
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Artists and antique dealers have moved in, giving the neighbourhood a raffish bohemian energy. |
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Headstrong Elizabeth hangs around with the bohemian Bloomsbury crowd and fancies herself a socialist. |
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I mean, they're kind of bohemian, or they'd be working on a building site rather than a theatre, but they are blokey. |
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Why is Joe, a Fifties Edinburgh bohemian, so fascinated by forsaking his middle-class existence to become a coal shoveller? |
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The multi poncho wrap is a bohemian must have when teamed with chocolate brown cord jeans. |
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I would cling closely to my mother and beg to go home if we encountered a sixties-era bohemian in the grocery store. |
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The book contains fascinating chapters on young militants, flappers and bohemian aesthetes, and on street life. |
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His pale skin and delicate features are complemented by a grizzle of stubble in keeping with his bohemian, New Agey image. |
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Many people of a bohemian persuasion passed through her living room, from artists to drug addicts, not that those classifications were mutually exclusive. |
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Sip boutique liqueurs in Cygnet River or sample wine in a converted airport hangar for a bohemian feel. |
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Her Sheba is a kindly, rather naïve upper-middle-class bohemian, a careless demigoddess who takes the world's good will for granted. |
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Or maybe they're just so drunk, they're under the misguided belief that Oxford Street is a daggy bohemian end of Kings Cross they've never encountered before. |
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Not the hippies but the bureaucrats who absorbed bohemian language in service of govt. |
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A troubadour and bohemian with Texan and Quebecker roots, she has come to terms with her true nature on Greyhound buses between her two habitats. |
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The story tells the tale of young bohemian artists, poverty-stricken and afflicted by troubles but enjoying the pleasures of everyday life. |
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You'll photograph the sunrise over the dome of Sacré-Cœur Basilica and the early stirrings of the bohemian district of Montmartre. |
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To me, bohemian means a leftfield woman, with her own nonconformist agenda. |
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Begun in 2003, Petite Mendigote is a playful, trendy accessories line with a slightly bohemian elegance. |
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Anything goes in Fitzroy, the bohemian heart of a city that prides itself on its artistic flair. |
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The reverse is true for Edmonton and Regina, areas that rank higher on the cultural spending indicators than on the bohemian index. |
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Discover a beloved bohemian neighbourhood, a vaudeville theatre saved from neglect and even the birthplace of the city. |
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Where Kate is mild-mannered and middle-class, Cressy, 24, is a wild, blue-blooded aristocrat with bohemian heritage. |
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I even found the book in a bohemian bookstore called Malaprops in Asheville, N.C. where I stood agog for a solid forty five minutes before heading to the checkout counter. |
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Now it is coming up in the world and is a charming bohemian quarter. |
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She grew up in bohemian SoHo, the eldest of three children, and regularly cites her mother's little sayings as yardsticks by which she measures her unusual life. |
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Women may have frequented bohemian bars, but on the whole it was friendships and private networks. |
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I had buck teeth, frizzy crazy hair, and a style that was bohemian at best, thrift store at worst. |
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Turn right out of Gare du Nord and it's only a short walk through the backstreets to Montmartre, a bohemian hill with spectacular views across the city. |
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Today, groups of students travel around the world in the bohemian fashion of their ancestors singing serenades accompanied by mandolins, bandores, tambourines, and guitars. |
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The hair melds with his bohemian attitude, and loose-fitting, rarely tailored clothing. |
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Regulars are a combination of young trendies, moneyed bankers and bohemian artists and musicians, the kind of eclectic mix that makes for great bar side banter. |
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Punning on the political spoilsman, he produced three volumes of war correspondence from the viewpoint of a tipsy literary bohemian among the common soldiers. |
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Her darkly mascaraed eyes speak of New York City and bohemian lofts. |
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Valere is a fabulous creation, and Rylance — in bohemian tatterdemalion and pheasant-plumed cap, and sporting a set of false choppers that give him a scary smile — inhabits him to the limits of wonderful. |
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Named after the French zoot-suiters of the 1940s, given Borrell's new bohemian style it will be interesting to hear his new music. |
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From an early age he adopted a foppish, bohemian style, and in due course, having thrown over his studies in engineering and the possibility of a legal career, he became a man of letters. |
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She was a celebrated bohemian, considered a scandalous woman. |
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The hotel, on the site now occupied by the Brevoort apartment house, was a watering hole, gathering spot and trysting place where bohemian personages lived, ate and caroused. |
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We first see them on the couch of their modest, bohemian apartment, each with a laptop, looking more like twins or a shaggy, bony, two-headed creature than like romantic cohabitants. |
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Here's an insufferable teen drama whose female lead displays almost radioactive levels of manic pixie dream-girl quirkiness: a Chernobyl of adorkable bohemian unattainability. |
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The lambers sometimes brought their friends and acquaintances to see the view and relax in what must have seemed a bohemian atmosphere. |
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Leather fringes, tie-dyed prints and bohemian bags are leading a hippie revival that has been echoed on runways around the world. |
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He let everyone call him Wilkie, and shunned formal dress, favoring broad stripes and loud colors, not with the calculated foppishness of the young Dickens but with genuine bohemian disregard for appearances. |
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Once the idea of the artist as bohemian had solidified in the mid 19th century, a large number of artists emerged who truly were tosspots. |
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It might sound a prim precaution in the bohemian world of entertainment, but in an industry where the casting couch is still a tacitly recognised route to the top, it may have its place. |
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While at Coney Island with Robert Mapplethorpe, looking bohemian, she heard a woman urging her husband to take a snap of them, as possible celebrities. |
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Then, it is the stories surrounding the prostitutes in the bohemian quarter and Eloa's bordello in Pôrto Alegre, where the girls were beautiful and voluptuous. |
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They gave her a sibylline, vaguely Eastern air, and although they hid more of the body than a corseted gown with conventional crinolines, they were considered bohemian. |
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The Haight is now home to some expensive boutiques and a few controversial chain stores, although it still retains some bohemian character. |
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Also located in the center is the traditional neighbourhood called Lapa, an important bohemian area frequented by both townspeople and tourists. |
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They were an affluent, unstuffy, slightly bohemian family, keen on holidays and socialising, with their own Mitfordian private language. |
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There are such totems of postmodern urbanism as a Chinatown, a gay village and a bohemian Northern Quarter, fed by two leading universities and two successful football teams. |
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It is true that you often see people brazing absinthe in films, or in certain pubs, but what is known as the bohemian ritual, is nothing more than a marketing ploy. |
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It's underpinned by a bohemian and psychedelic feel and aims to play host to the spirit of legendary singer-songwriter Nick Drake. |
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Rehearsing to take over the role of the bohemian dancer who entrances Ph½bus, Quasimodo and Frollo, Tina is confident of following in the French Esmerelda's footsteps. |
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It is a question with no answer except that in the course of one's many years on this planet, I am sure I have known various kinds of bohemian people. |
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For a more bohemian approach, mix up patterns, take some risks and you'll create a funky, uncontrived look that's a world away from play-it-safe traditional chintz. |
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The Old Arbat Street, a tourist street that was once the heart of a bohemian area, preserves most of its buildings from prior to the 20th century. |
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Giorgio DeLuca, a friend of Judd's, opened a cheese shop down the street in 1973, catering to the bohemian and gastronomically adventurous local clientele. |
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Saint Anthony, also known as Saint Anthony of Padua, was a wealthy Portuguese bohemian who was canonised and made Doctor of the Church after a life preaching to the poor. |
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