The words were indistinct, but Angélique knew them by heart.
To Sister Françoise-Angélique de la Croix de Fésigney, Mistress of Novices at Riom.
Then will it be your delight to find contentment in the instructions you will receive from the good Mother (Marie Angélique de Bigny), who has a singular love for you, and is besides both capable and full of charity.
To the Sister Louise-Angélique de la Fayette,[A] at the First Monastery of Paris.
Yet all this concourse of the great ones of the world did not tarnish the virtue nor dissipate the mind of that lover of solitude and of penance, Louise Angélique de la Fayette.
On the contrary, he attributed the tradition cherished by old Angélique to the ancient idea that the flesh of animals, prepared for the sustenance of man, is a thing so precious that the master alone may and should apportion and distribute it.
It’s a spring chicken,” said old Angélique as she placed the dish upon the table.
Angélique and her master exchanged similar remarks every time that game or poultry came to the table.
But I am not a hungry man: I am only a small eater, and Angélique Borniche, primitive woman that she is, makes that too a grievance against me.
The colonel put Angélique first into the waiting boat.
Angélique was playing for her great-grand-aunt Angélique, the despot of the Saucier family.
Monsieur the colonel," spoke Angélique again into the windy darkness, "we are not worth half the trouble you are taking for us.
Angélique ran and kissed the children before her father put them into the boat, and offered her cheeks to her mother.
He had bowed and turned away to the currant hedge, and Angélique was entering her father's lawn, when he came back impetuously.
The nurse would give place, and go out to talk with the other negroes, while Angélique sat down and held Maria's hand.
Mother says she's a discipline that keeps Angélique from growing vain.
But Angélique has been ruined by waiting so much on her tante-gra'mère.
Bergeret put his hand into the dog’s mouth, and allowed him to lick it, at which old Angélique gave a smile of relief.
Upon which Riquet went and thrust his nose against the door through which Angélique had passed out.
Angélique looked beautiful as Hebe the golden-haired, as she sat in the arbor this morning.
La Corriveau made frantic efforts during her imprisonment to engage Angélique to intercede in her behalf; but Angélique's appeals were fruitless before the stern administrators of English law.
Why did that mysterious woman go to Beaumanoir and place herself in the path of Angélique des Meloises?
Angélique recollected how she had tormented him on that occasion by capricious slights, while bounteous of her smiles to others.
There was no smile upon the cheek of Angélique now.
Angélique feared, however, that he was only acting a part.
Angélique shielded adroitly the stiletto of innuendo she had drawn.
Mademoiselle Angélique des Meloises,--one hears enough of her!
What do I care for your lover, Angélique des Meloises?
Pierre is worthy of you, should he ever say to you what I so vainly said last night to Angélique des Meloises!
Angélique had small taste for reading, yet had made some acquaintance with the literature of the day.
The eyes of Angélique looked dangerous and full of mischief, but Bigot was not afraid or offended.
Amélie deemed it a fortunate chance to meet Angélique so opportunely--just when her desire to do so was strongest.
Angélique informed him that a brave sailor on leave from his torpedo boat was in the habit of visiting the wine shop every evening.
Angélique is fresh to you, has no meaning, and I see you halting and asking me to tell you more of her.
I have, myself, pretended to be some judge of woman-folk, and Angélique pleases me in divers manners.
He would say in his cynical, loud way that the end justifies the means, and with him the end is Angélique des Meloises.
We have been introduced, Madame Angélique and I, for here all goes by the most correct form on the surface.
When we finished at last and I had conducted Madame Angélique to a chair and thanked her, a huzza rang to the roof, but the Intendant took no part in it.
Angélique was not the first flame with whom the old sinner has lit his fires in Canada, for there was Caroline, the Algonquin maid, not to mention others.
I took the praise of the women and Madame Angélique the praise of the men, a fair division, pleasing to us both.
But nobody except Pat and Angélique could tell them apart as they swung in the cradle, gently rising and falling, in unconscious illustration of the equivalence and balancing of male and female.
Do you suppose, by any chance, that Angélique would bake it for us?
Angélique was sleeping the sleep of the innocent and the just in the bedroom, with the twins in their trundle-bed beside her, and the door into the kitchen half-open.
Angélique said it was in the way, but I persuaded her to keep it.
Let us have another pot of coffee and some of those little cakes with melted white sugar on them, like Angélique used to make.
Angélique will be frightened if she hears of this.
At all events, Angélique came wide awake in the night with a sense of fear in her heart, as if she had just heard something terrible about her husband which she could not remember.
The cradle was an awkward bit of furniture in such a little house, and Angélique was for giving it away or breaking it up for kindling-wood.
Lady Newhaven impatiently shook her head, and Angélique wrung her hands.
Angélique hung about the room, and was finally dismissed.
Soeur Angélique put aside her work and came to sit by the sofa and stroke her boy's head.
I am persuaded an angel's voice got into Soeur Angélique by mistake.
Soeur Angélique stood in the window as a moment later he passed by.
When, after the death in 1661 of Mother Angélique Arnauld, that institution became the object of persecution and its tenants were either imprisoned or compelled to seek refuge in the various families of Paris, Mme.
For four centuries this convent had been developing liberal tendencies and gradually falling away from its primitive austerity, when, in 1605, Sister Angélique Arnauld became abbess and undertook a thorough reform.
Mère Angélique was especially conspicuous for her obstinacy, and when the nuns were forced to accept the formulary of Pope Alexander VI.
Her mother hardly left her bedside, and for some time Angélique was at rest, feeling nothing except that she was at home, and that the old dismal life of the convent must be a dream.
When Angélique first went there as abbess, monsieur Arnauld, who managed all the money matters, paid all that seemed necessary for the comfort of his daughter and the nuns.
But after the day when she closed the gates on him Angélique would no longer accept his help, as she felt she could not honestly do so while behaving in a manner of which he disapproved.
Angélique was not prepared for kindness, and after all she had undergone it proved too much for her.
At this point monsieur Arnauld, seeing that Angélique would not give way, bethought him of a trick by which he could gain a footing inside the walls.
Angélique happened to pass the open door on her way to the chapel, and, smiling to herself, quietly stripped the table.
In many ways, though she did not know it and certainly would have been shocked to hear it, Angélique resembled the Puritans, whose influence in England was daily increasing.
Hughes Péan was the town major of Quebec, but his chief hold on Bigot lay in the beauty of his wife, the charming Angélique des Meloises.
Moreover, the fascinating Angélique des Meloises was something more in the history of New France than the prototype of the heroine in Le Chien d'Or.
It is remarkable that the Mère Angélique was somewhat slow of belief as to the “miracle,” and that she marvelled the world should make so much of it.
At the age of eleven, in the year 1602, Angélique was installed Abbess of Port Royal.
Accordingly, before the final disposition of the property was made, La Mère Angélique took care that Pascal should understand the matter anew from the Port-Royalist point of view.
The trial proves Angélique superior to money considerations, and love triumphs.
In her artlessness Angélique concludes from his description that he means himself.
When Angélique approached a small table, at the instant that her apron touched it, it was repulsed.
Towards the beginning of February, Angélique was obliged, for several days, to eat standing; she could not sit down on a chair.
As late as the tenth of March, the day after the committee made their report, Angélique being then at Dr.
Goujon seated himself first on half the chair, and at the moment when Angélique was taking her seat beside him the chair was thrown down.
Sister Angélique had heard you call 'Le Bon Pasteur' a house of correction it would have been worth three days of bread and water!
And when Sister Angélique asked her for the name of the girl who committed an offence in the dormitory, Fouchette hesitated and wanted to consult Sister Agnes.
Between the two, and considering all the circumstances, Sister Angélique came to the proper conclusion, and so reported the case to the Supérieure.
Angela was too English, and sounded too much like the name of a nun; but Angélique suggested one of the most enchanting personalities in that brilliant circle on which Lady Fareham so often rhapsodised.
Angélique Arnaud had been translated and published in this country.
Three days running, Angélique received a wonderful sheaf of flowers, with Arsène Lupin's card peeping from it.
For four whole days Angélique wept and entreated her father, but in vain.
Angélique was tall and thin like her father, skinny and angular like him.
His plan was so humorous and his delight so artless that Angélique could not help smiling; and she said: "I am your wife in the eyes of God.
Angélique is the wedded wife of Arsène Lupin; and that in accordance with your orders.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "lique" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.