Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The Sky, on the other hand, is trying to be less a sports car than a budget boulevardier.
Consider, for instance, a European boulevardier out for some air.
Since you have gone on record about what you think of this boulevardier , say no more.
"It's like a chef preparing a dish," the boulevardier said of his attire.
Her Manet is as well a fastidious dandy and boulevardier.
"And they were as dandied up as any 19th-century boulevardier.
Then there is the other Degas, the boulevardier, the cultural tourist, the documentarian.
Then suddenly, at the end, he slowed to an amble, shrugged and walked off the stage in the best boulevardier tradition.
It was an all-American boulevardier convertible designed for comfort and smooth, powerful straight line performance.
A noted boulevardier, Beebe had an impressive and baroque wardrobe.
He was a true boulevardier, with his Borsalino hat and silver-handled walking stick.
He obviously knew the establishment very well - an Upper West Side boulevardier, if that makes any sense.
Stanford White was everyone's favorite bon vivant and American boulevardier.
Goodafternoon dear my goodness aren't you the dapper boulevardier!
Another is his refusal to fulfill the American stereotype of the French artist as retro boulevardier.
Cohn is his fellow boulevardier, his fellow dynamo who gets the action going.
Frederick Brown sees the self-styled Emperor as a great dandy or boulevardier of power.
And as he walks toward his own death, it's with the jaunty panache of a boulevardier off to meet his new mistress.
The "Boulevardier" uses bourbon instead of gin.
The song is from the perspective of an aging Parisian "boulevardier"/"couquette", as s/he reviews their life.
Geographically Vancouver may be isolated, but it is nevertheless as cosmopolitan a city as any boulevardier could hope for.
He wanted it rewritten so it was the American image of him: the gai boulevardier, the flaneur.
Poulenc devoted much of his career to thoughtful insouciance, as the sybaritic yet somehow sad boulevardier.
Yet the tuxedo-clad boulevardier battling the forces of global evil is an ancient cinematic and literary conceit.