It is a little village, and there are so many French bands ranging over the country that, a month ago, my father sent me in here to stay with my uncle; thinking that I should be safer in the city than in a little village.
In the morning they went boldly into a little village, and Terence went into a shop and bought a couple of loaves.
Epsom is a large and rather rambling town located in a depression in the hills, and two hundred years ago was a fashionable resort for its medicinal waters, so that it soon grew from a little village to a gay watering-place.
Leaving the railway-station in the valley of the Derwent, and mounting the hills to the westward, a little village is reached on the confines of the park.
At Uphusband, a little village in a deep dale, about five miles to the North of Andover, and about three miles to the South of the Hills at Highclere.
Albury is a little village consisting of a few houses, with a large house or two near it.
Just under the park on the road to Midhurst is Tillington, a little village with a rather ornamental church, which dates from 1807.
Yonder, to the right, smoke rose from the chimney of a little village, smoke from kitchen fires!
Right near here, in a little village in Brittany near Pont-l'Abbe, I once witnessed a strange and terrible tragedy caused by alcohol.
Suddenly the train stopped at a little village station, and a Prussian officer jumped up with a great clatter of his sabre on the double footboard of the railway carriage.
Naturally, thought Celia, in such a little village, Philip would fall in with the only strangers there, so that he was giving her no news in saying so.
Hidden away at the foot of a valley here was a little village, but at first we saw no signs that we were noticed.
A father, passing through a little village belonging to that residence and inquiring who were Christians, was told of an old man who lived out in the country, alone in his little hut, and remained there unable to walk.
On his road the same father visited a little village, called Baibai, and baptized there ninety persons, of whom eighty-seven were adults.
It was said that a little village on the banks of the Tiber had suddenly risen to great power and was making itself the acknowledged leader of all the Latin tribes who inhabited central Italy.
In a little village of distant Syria, Mary, the wife of Joseph the Carpenter, was tending her little boy, born in a stable of Bethlehem.
Passing through this valley and the little villageof Schönau, we commenced ascending one of the loftiest ranges of the Odenwald.
During the day several showers came by, but as none of them penetrated further than my blouse, I kept on, and reached about sunset a little village in the valley.
I happened to take the wrong road, however, and went through Rubeland, a little village in the valley of the Bode.
From these woods we emerged, after five or six miles of travelling, and arrived at Springfield, a little village we had passed through in the depth of winter--how different its appearance now!
The writer once spent a night in a little village of Nestorians in this immediate district, called Shwawutha; a village whose little rock-built church is shown in one of our illustrations.
As the little party approached Orizaba early in the morning, having passed a night in a little village on the way, Maximilian alighted to walk down the zig-zag way which leads from the plateau towards the tierra caliente.
The little body of eighty men, which soon increased to three hundred, bore for a banner a picture of the Holy Virgin of Guadalupe, belonging to a little village church.
Our next home was the dirty little village of Strazeele, which we reached by march route, and where we found Lieut.
Having "debussed," we marched to le Bizet, a little village a mile north of the town, and stayed there in billets for the night.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "little village" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.