They even exhibited a marriage certificate, which, from what they said, must have been made out with our names, and Mrs. Chambray and the doctor signed their names as witnesses.
In spite of my protests, Mrs. Chambray insisted upon following me in, to see that I was perfectly comfortable.
Mrs. Chambray said laughingly that I was safely asleep.
If they could not get me to take it for the headache I had talked about, Mrs. Chambray was to manage to get it into my food or give it to me when asleep.
I found out that he was a physician, a specialist in mental diseases, so Mrs. Chambray told me, and she talked a great deal about his skill and insight into such maladies.
And for their help Mrs. Chambray and the doctor were to receive a handsome sum.
The instant Nancy Ellen held the chambray under her chin and in an oblique glance saw the face of the clerk, the material was hers no matter what the cost, which does not refer to the price, by any means.
Kate, fresh and rosy, wearing a blue chambray dress, was a picture well worth seeing.
You know Elsie had such a time with that chambray last summer!
Aunt Kate fixed up the girls' green chambray for me just before we came.
Elsie, at the moment, was engaged in taking off a somewhat unevenly faded green chambray frock.
Then she started down the road, a quaint, interesting little figure in her brown chambray dress with its full, gathered skirt and its short, plain waist.
Now," Aunt Maria said as she unbuttoned the despised brown dress, "you dare put on your blue chambray dress if you take care and not get it dirty right aways.
She wore her favorite blue chambray dress and delighted in the fact that Sunday always brought her the privilege of wearing her hat.
He wore brown corduroys, a blue chambray shirt slightly open at the throat, heavy shoes.
Chambray is a staple fabric of many years standing, being next in rank among cotton goods after the better grade of gingham.
Chambray is a light-weight single cloth fabric that is always woven with a plain weave, and always has a white selvedge.
Chambray is our authority for saying that, contrary to custom, the sick were not even commended to the generosity of the enemy—they were simply abandoned as so much useless rubbish.
Chambray relates, for instance—“One day when some soldiers were warming themselves round a fire, a general came up half dead with cold, and begged for a place.
He had a heap of it,--a bolt of checked gingham, enough blue chambray for half a dozen bonnets, and a great many remnants which he said he had bought from peddlers from time to time.
Then he answered, "I want a blue chambray bonnet and a bunch of aprons made for my mother.
Chambray has caused to be printed, have been added to it by one Errard, without my knowing any thing of it.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "chambray" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.