Tom Pocatello remained in the general area of Malade City, Idaho, and Washakie, Utah, and wintered on the Bear River.
Winter camps ranged along the Portneuf between Pocatello and McCammon, and other places as far south as Malade City, Idaho, were sometimes occupied.
As the Malade Imaginaire was the last character in which Molière appeared, it is here necessary to say a few words upon his capacity as an actor.
Molière has added much to the humor of the piece by assigning to the Malade Imaginaire a strain of frugality along with his love of medicine, which leads him to take every mode that may diminish the expense of his supposed indisposition.
It belongs to the school of French comedy, like Moliere's Malade Imaginaire, not to the romantic comedy of Shakspere and Fletcher.
It belongs to the school of French comedy, like Molière's Malade Imaginaire, not to the romantic comedy of Shakspere and Fletcher.
The arm-chair, in which sat the Malade Imaginaire on the last night of his professional life, is treasured among the relics of the Theatre Francais.
Its exact copy as to shape, size, and color is used on the boards of the Theatre Francais in the performances of "Le Malade Imaginaire.
This done he set out for Malade River, with a band of twenty-eight men composed of hired and free trappers and Indian hunters, together with eight squaws.
Day after day passed by without any possibility of getting to the Malade country.
He had pitched uponMalade River for his main trapping ground for the season.
And, indeed, it did not cure the evil: for next term another malade affidavitaire was set up.
She liked to laugh, and the "Malade Imaginaire" diverted her to such a degree that one might think in reading her letters that she was trying to imitate all that is most physical and unfit for women in its style of pleasantry.
Then they arrive into the room of the malade and take the sacramento and up and down and put the holy oil in the foot and pray and went away, and the malade who is not dead would very soonly die.
And sometimes the notary, the man of law, if the malade is having money; if no money, it is the notary not at all.
In connection with "Le Malade Imaginaire," it can never be forgotten that Molière was playing his own creation in it when he broke a blood-vessel.
Lauzun, a letter addressed by her to a third lover and found the morning of that ill-fated representation of the Malade imaginaire which Molière could scarcely finish!
This last remark, the reader should observe, comes from a countryman of Moliere, a man who must have read the Malade Imaginaire, and who was moreover a man of much more than ordinary talent.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "malade" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.