In the bazaars every evening our mousmes make endless purchases; like spoiled children they buy everything they fancy: toys, pins, ribbons, flowers.
One might suppose it was a whole school of mousmes out for an evening's frolic under our care.
Mousmes and elderly ladies pass, tucked up, muddy, laughing nevertheless under their paper umbrellas, exchanging greetings, clacking their wooden pattens on the stone pavement.
In front of the little archery-house our mousmes suddenly jump aside, terrified, declaring that there is a dead body on the ground.
Once his back is dried, all together, the threemousmes and himself, play at Japanese pigeon-vole.
Nevertheless, neither the mousmes nor the old ladies gain anything by appearing in this primeval costume.
Our mousmes order for themselves great bowls of candied beans mixed with hail--real hailstones, such as we might pick up after a hailstorm in March.
Thither we turn our steps, as soon as our mousmes have ended their orisons and bestowed their alms.
Returning on board next morning, in the clear morning sun, we walk through pathways full of dew, accompanied by a band of funny little mousmes of six or eight years of age, who are going to school.
Then by degrees, little by little, the music becomes more animated, and the mousmes begin to listen.
Besides our usual set, we shall have my mother-in-law, my relatives, and all the mousmes of the neighborhood.
Several mousmes execute, one after another, improvisations on the 'chamecen'.
The mousmes run off, with bird-like cries, and take refuge under doorways, in the shops, under the hoods of the djins.
On our return, when I am once more with Yves and the two mousmes climbing up the road to Diou-djen-dji, which I shall probably never see again, a vague feeling of melancholy pervades my last stroll.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "mousmes" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.