Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
She gave him the full blast of her aristocratically cold face.
She had an aristocratically small, narrow face and head (black hair?)
He was taller than she and very lean, his skin so aristocratically white as to be almost pallid.
He is also wealthy, speaks very aristocratically, and is always wearing a tie.
The boy was fine-featured, destined to be aristocratically handsome.
His hair was a sandy sprinkle, his cheekbones and forehead aristocratically high.
That's what she's like at school, misbehaving so languidly and aristocratically that by the time anyone notices, it's too late to do anything about it.
The eyes, coupled with the man's aristocratically beaked nose and distinguished gray hair, had a devastating effect.
"That is of no importance," he said grandly, lifting his aristocratically prominent nose another inch.
Her snout was long and aristocratically straight.
"Look forward to behaving aristocratically without any outward proofs of your aristocracy.
Tall, shy and aristocratically unkempt, Euston was very happy not to be considered "a people person" in business.
"Momentum" received a pallid interpretation in which everyone appeared finicky rather than aristocratically confident.
Wainwright in a chubby world was aristocratically lean.
They act as aristocratically as a board from a private school or a homeowners association in the Hamptons.
His features were sharp and aristocratically boned.
He seeks out the ineffably, aristocratically strange.
His wife, a Rymer, owned part of the dress shop and suffered aristocratically from migraine.
He was tall, aristocratically handsome, and seemed more like a banker than a cop in his broad pinstripe navy suit.
"He really is the outside of enough," said Glabrio now, in tones both forceful and aristocratically languid.
Being neither completely watery, therefore, nor aristocratically gaseous, they were reckoned a slum.
Aristocratically refined without seeming despotically overpowering, the designs complement the elegance of the choreography and the music.
He was impeccably, aristocratically Ivy League.
"What common looking people," said Mrs. Rhinelander, surveying the crowd aristocratically with her lorgnette.
In 2000, for example, another Nature paper revealed that even the Queen of England now pronounces her English less aristocratically than she used to.