She still preserved the pose on which the dance had ceased, and had hardly yet returned to the world of reality from that magic world into which her art had transported her.
Something in the girl's pose and in the long, lithe lines of her recumbent figure was responsible for her next remark.
The artist snatched up his palette; the pose she had assumed without a hint from him was inimitable--the slender limbs relaxed and drooping exactly as though from sheer fatigue.
Ruxton nodded soberly, though his eyes were feasting upon the woman's superlative beauty as she reclined against the window casing in an all unconscious pose of considerable grace.
He saw the authority of the military governor in the whole swaggering pose of the man, and, for a moment, his firm lips tightened.
Katrine was accustomed to the sight, but this morning something in the pose of the figure attracted an uneasy attention.
When you are small and curly-headed you can pose as `Kitty Clover' with beguiling effect.
His face was set, but his pose was the acme of careless ease.
His own political views being as yet unknown, dark with the excessive brightness of his encircling glory, he could pose as the conciliator of contending factions.
Metternich, therefore, continued to pose as the well-wisher of both parties and the champion of a reasonable and therefore durable compromise.
That he endeavoured to pose as a Moslem is beyond doubt.
Viennese suavity induced Bonaparte to take off his coat and show himself as he really was: while the conscientious bluster of Grenville and Pitt made the First Consul button up his coat, and pose as the buffeted peacemaker.
The originality of her pose at the moment of striking surpasses anything I have ever witnessed.
In duels to the death the pose of attack is assumed in all its beauty.
Once more the spectral pose was seen, the hissing of the wings, and the terrible gesture of the talons outstretched and raised above the head.
When the insect to be captured may present some serious resistance, the Mantis is thus equipped with a pose which terrifies or perplexes, fascinates or absorbs the prey, while it enables her talons to strike with greater certainty.
In attacking the Truxalis and the Ephippigera, less dangerous game than the grey cricket and the Decticus, the spectral pose is less imposing and of shorter duration.
The pose is superb, but less terrific than that assumed when the fight is to be to the death.
It is said that Mrs. Wilde was rather cruelly made to pose for Lady Henry Wotton in Dorian Gray, that "curious woman, whose dresses always looked as if they had been designed in a rage and put on in a tempest.
He had to earn a livelihood, and poverty and his own extravagance compelled him to do that which he most disliked, to take up again a pose whose fascination he had exhausted.
Her old friends said she had taken up this new poseas an outlet for her nervous energies, and as an effort to forget the man who alone had made life serious to her.
The philosophy of Hegel is accordingly subjective and all its realism is but a pose and a tone wilfully assumed.
But if ever heathenism needed to pose as constructive reform, it is now quite willing and able to throw off the mask.
He isn't very pretty, but I s'pose he made up in being clever.
The long and very high pier stretches far out into the Basin, and upon it picturesque groups unconsciously posefor us, adding to the effect of the picture.
Her beauty, it is true, was more inpose and demeanor than in the features of her face, but she produced the full impression of great beauty.
I s'pose it'll skin his fetlocks if you get him by the feet.
All right, s'pose you look after him this afternoon.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "pose" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.