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Example sentences for "down town"

  • Two man a road, down town picny, Two man a road, fight for you lady!

  • Down town gal no have no water to wash them head to keep them clean.

  • When she was ready they climbed into the waiting coach and drove down town; once, only, did she find an opportunity to express her feeling, and that was when the manager preceded Drouet in the coach and sat beside her.

  • He scratched his head and prepared to go down town.

  • I tried not to worry, and repeated to myself something that master often murmurs when he is putting on his shoes to go down town.

  • Likely he’ll leave me down town, and run home.

  • Suppose you go down town with me, dog,” he said.

  • Mister goes up town or down town to some saloon--say Jones’.

  • And from these high-up windows there began at once a characteristic "Down Town" expression of friendliness.

  • There were several gentlemen in waiting to converse with Bourne (we all call him so, familiarly, down town), and I waited until they went out.

  • Prue smiles, and tells me we shall have two months of winter yet, and I had better stop and order some more coal as I go down town.

  • In truth, I have observed, down town, that the fact of your ancestors doing nothing, is not considered good proof that you can do anything.

  • It was a cloudy afternoon, not one to go out for pleasure, and then everybody had wanted to go down town.

  • They had a bell double quartette and made lovely music by striking some sweet-toned bells with small wands, and they were allowed to go down town.

  • No, I'll get some other girl and go down town.

  • Auntie is out just now," said the girl; "she had to go down town, but I am expecting her back every minute.

  • Late in the afternoon Kate and her aunt, down town on a shopping tour, looked in upon him.

  • On the day of the reception both Mr. Underwood and Darrell lunched and dined down town, returning together to The Pines in the interim between the afternoon and evening entertainments.

  • First, she wanted to stay home to celebrate and have a party and all that; and, second, she wanted to go down town and go to a big grown-up theater where there was music and lights and pretty things just like grown folks see up town.

  • We can't stay home for a party while we're down town at the theater!

  • Be sure to tell her it's an all-afternoon party, so she can stay long enough to go down town with us.

  • But we can stay home for a party before we go down town for a show.

  • Now you wait one minute more and I'll put this safely away and then we'll go down town.

  • So it wasn't quite ten o'clock yet when they made ready to go down town.

  • But it is in "down town," on the tip of the tongue that is put out to the Atlantic, that New York reveals itself most startlingly to the stranger.

  • Down town" stands like a strong man on the shore of the ocean, asking you to come in to the wonderland that lies behind these terrific battlements.

  • Why," he added, with a dry laugh, "what is it to go down town at half past nine?

  • I rarely ever go down town at night," said the banker; "that is the reason of their uneasiness.

  • You can do me a service, Mr. Menifee; you can quiet the fears of my wife and daughter while I go down town.

  • Lucy, Lucy, I think I'll have to go down town again.

  • Susan felt such to be the case and concluded not to try and go down town.

  • As the giving of leave "down town" was the prerogative of the head of the house, and of no other, there was a suggestiveness about this mode of procedure which appealed to the junior dayroom.

  • When he has you up tonight, swear that you got leave from Fenn to go down town.

  • You know perfectly well that only the head of the house can give leave to go down town.

  • We were to go down town in the afternoon and stay till nine o clock at night, when we had to be in camp.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "down town" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    complete circuit; considering that; constitutional rights; down again; down before; down here; down river; down south; down stream; down there; down town; down upon; few drops; general notion; good stuff; greater depth; invitation from; junior officer; light infantry; little fish; paper cover; send the; sensible qualities; several colours; turning point; writing from