It is this condonance on the part of his wife which George Usk so entirely denounces, although he would be very much astonished and very much annoyed if she made any kind of objections to inviting Dulcia Waverley.
Dulcia Waverley, in a whisper, to Usk, as she sees them.
Usk andDulcia Waverley are at church, with the children and Lady Usk and Nina Curzon.
But Dulcia Waverley is here, and her languid and touching ways, her delicate health, and her soft sympathies have an indescribable sorcery for him at all times, so that he thinks but very little since her arrival of anything else.
When Dulcia Waverley agrees with him it leaves him with a soothing sense of being sympathized with and appreciated.
Dulcia Waverley always tells him that he might have been a great statesman if he had chosen: as he always thinks so himself, the echo of his thoughts is agreeable.
His wife has asked her own set; but he hates her set; he does not much like his own; there is onlyDulcia Waverley whom he does like, and Lady Waverley will not come till the twentieth.
Failing Dulcia Waverley, nobody could have been so agreeable to him as Brandolin.
Nos patriƦ fines et dulcia linquimus arva=--We leave the confines of our native country and our delightful plains.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "dulcia" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.