But what has become of your bravecompagnon de voyage, P.
As my people had returned, and were waiting for me, I bade my faircompagnon de voyage adieu, expressing a hope to have the pleasure of meeting her in Balaklava.
Our compagnon de voyage, who would fondly affect the ways and dress of a dapper young caballero, and whom, therefore, we shall call C.
Of all the king's knights 'tis the flower, Compagnon de la Majolaine!
Compagnon de la Majolaine; Who passes by this road so late?
The Compagnon du tour de France was the first attempt at this new literature of the people.
This was the plan announced by George Sand in her preface to the Compagnondu tour de France.
After long remaining on the same spot, as if his feet were rivetted to the ground, the compagnon tore himself away, and turned towards his home.
Yes, the poor Swiss compagnon has seen all these things, and has admired them, but never has he wished to live and die among them.
He was a compagnon carpenter returning to his country after years of absence, and impatient to see his home again.
A veritable attempt at a Socialist novel is the Compagnon du Tour de France written in the course of 1840, which must surely be ranked as one of the weakest of George Sand's productions.
The utmost fanaticism for the ideas ventilated in the Compagnon du Tour de France can reconcile no reader to the dullness and unreality of the story which make of it a failure.
Qui a compagnon a maƮtre = One is often obliged to give way to the wishes of those with whom one is associated.
I found a compagnon du voyage in Captain Borasdine, of General Korsackoff's staff.
I had a letter to Colonel Molostoff, the brother of a Siberian friend and compagnon du voyage.
I found an excellent compagnon du voyage, and our departure was fixed for the evening after the dinner with Mr. Pfaffius.
Somewhat depressed in spirits at the loss of my compagnon de voyage, I resolved to reach my family by the safest and most practicable route.
What I specially admire in Le Compagnon du Tour de France, a book which, as a novel, is inferior to Horace, is the impulsive strength of the feeling which inspired it.
In the introduction to Le Compagnon du Tour de France she says: "Since when has it been obligatory for the novel to be a transcription of what is, of the hard and cold reality of contemporary men and things?
In Horace she devotes her talent to the service of Saint-Simonism; she writes Le Compagnondu Tour de France in the interests of socialism; in 1848 she composes the bulletins for the Provisional Government.
While she was still here, young Moltke appeared, our compagnon de voyage from Helsingfors to Stockholm.
One of the gentlemen was Don Mariano himself, while the other was joyfully recognised by Costal as the brave officer who had asked him the way, and by the student as his compagnon du voyage of yesterday-- Don Rafael Tres-Villas.
We shall be only too happy to have you for our compagnon du voyage.
No matter if his heart pounded until he could not catch his breath, he must play the care-free chump of a compagnon de voyage.
The matelotage, or compagnon a bon lot, being thus formed, the two planters would go to the governor of the island and request a grant of land.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "compagnon" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.