For Suzanne will have tocoiffe Françoise and Françoise coiffe Suzanne," she said.
If mycoiffe does not cover my hair, neither does the small Paris hat of the Countess de Vassart cover her hair.
It represents a golden brown grandmother, with a coiffe and a ruffle and a grand chain round her neck, and a ring on her forefinger, and a double-winged house in the background.
There was a shaded green lamp in a closet opening out of the room, in the corner of which a figure was sitting at work with a coiffe like that one she had seen pass the window as she waited in the room down below.
The door was opened by a smiling-looking girl in a blue dress with some stiff white coiffe and a big apron.
About nine o'clock the next morning I walked into the Groix Inn and sat down at the long discoloured oaken table, nodding good-day to Marianne Bruyere, who in turn bobbed her white coiffe at me.
Although she dressed in the velvet-laced bodice and blue petticoat of Finistere, and wore the bewitching white coiffe of St. Gildas, it seemed like a pretty masquerade.
She began to unpin the coiffe which she always wore ceremoniously at meals when he was present.
This queer face, half dissolved in blue and yellow, was not dead and the white coiffe came closely down about it.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "coiffe" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.