Barry told Welty nothing of the collegian and he told the collegian nothing more of Welty.
He made the collegian and Welty known to each other by name only.
The collegian expressed a mild desire to see something of police-station life.
The collegian opened his mouth wide, and Barry began to nervously tap his hand upon the table.
The collegian looked restless, as if the conversation had gotten beyond his depth.
Fable of the Willing Collegian Who Wanted to Get a Foothold.
The pecuniary resources of the collegian it becomes no part of the duty of the university to control, beyond the demands necessary for the main object of instruction.
There are, I verily believe, or I should rather say there were, imbibed at the university so many attachments at one time to words in place of things, that the collegian in after life became liable to reproach upon this head.
It cuts friendship, they say," and the collegian laughed.
I should think you, a collegian and an educated man, would be only too eager to help in such a movement as this," Janice cried.
And after supper Marty hastened down town again to learn how the examination of the young collegian "came out.
In the high-jump, however, Hicks had given considerable promise, which to date the grasshopper collegian had failed to keep.
It seemed that the lovable Hicks was destined to save, every year of his campus career, some entering collegian who incurred the wrath, deserved or otherwise, of the students.
One was in possession of a man about forty, with a waxed moustache, having the air of an officer in mufti, the other was taken by a young collegian with a waxen complexion.
Well, get him the togs of a collegian for the job at the docks.
It's that little collegianwho bit my finger the night of the Marseilles Express!
The collegian had leaped up and cruelly bitten his finger.
Yet, on the other hand he must at once shoulder responsibilities which would make the average collegian think twice before he bound himself to assume them.
The injured collegian opened his eyes again and stared at the youth before him.
Why, the gasoline money of a young collegian to-day would have paid my board bills then!
Miss Hicks voted at all the elections along with the rest of the herd, and as far as I know no rude collegian came around and broke into her studies by taking her anywhere.
The father's gaze dwelt fondly upon her, and the collegian was but conscious of one thought: that she was wondrously beautiful.
The success of the young collegian did not get into the colored supplements of the daily press, but it was heralded by mechanical engineers as marking an epoch in the industrial advance of humanity.
The young collegian then set about to standardize the necessary movements and the most economical speed for each movement required in the work of his group.
When the collegian first put in his appearance on the campus with the hat, he was guyed for his oddity.
When negligee hats first made their appearance, a shrewd hatter sent for a well-dressed and popular collegian and offered him his choice of the best hats in the store, if he would wear a negligee hat for three days.
So spring came, and then high summer, and the time when the collegian was expected home.
Papa, the collegian was very kind to the little girl,' Esther said, with a smile that was very bright, and also merry with a certain sense of humour.
I have heard, indeed, an ignorant collegian adduce, in favour of Christianity, its hostility to every worldly feeling!
Perhaps, furthermore, the cause makes its most impressive appeal to the collegian in its internationalism, or interpatriotism.
But the collegian possesses the international sense, and possesses it more and more deeply with each passing decade.
They also, in subject as well as in origin, bear a special message of cheer and hopefulness to all who have a good will toward the collegian and toward the great cause for which we all are laboring.
He sent Luke back to the car to pacify the girls as best he could, but without taking time to explain to the collegian his intention in full.
The latter's rooted objection to women seemed to the young collegian the height of folly.
The collegian lived in a plain room, and upon very plain fare; he had no "extras," and the decorative expense of Sardanapalus was unknown.
The collegian danced and drove and flirted and dined and sang the night away.
Every collegianknows that there is no secrecy whatever in what is called a secret society.
Long, long afterwards Canon Hoare revisited the place, found the farmhouse, entered the very room, and was overjoyed to meet some who had never forgotten the addresses of the earnest young collegian more than fifty years before.
The collegian was dispatching his with the nonchalant appetite and ease of manner of an habitue, whereas poor Shaya looked like one affecting to relish his first plate of raw oysters.
The pair marched up to Rouvke, she with her eyes fixed at the floor, as she clung to her companion, and the collegian with his head raised in timid defiance.
I'll pay you every copeck, you can rest assured," the collegian interposed, turning as white as a sheet.
Herbert pressed the hand of the young collegian warmly, for he knew that the offer of service was no empty compliment, but made in earnest sincerity.
If the young collegian had not been the son of a wealthy man, whose social position was higher than his own, James would not so readily have accepted the apology.
The next day Cameron was honored by a special call from Squire Leech, who left an invitation for the young collegian to take tea with him the following afternoon.
They started out again but Herbert profited better by the instructions he had received and the young collegian said so when they returned.
The table was already spread in honor of the guest, and both Herbert and Mrs. Carter were gratified to find that the young collegian did ample justice to the meal.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "collegian" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.