Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The speaker was a burly, rubicund man with a balding head and an affable face.
He had a chubby, rubicund face with reddish brown eyes - previously I had seen him only against the light.
Reynolds' face, normally so rubicund, had gone gray, making an unpleasant clash with his corn-colored hair.
Passepartout, usually so rubicund, was fairly white with suspense.
"Boy, has she got big knockers," Gooch confided to the room at large, rubicund face spread in a grin.
His normally rubicund visage looked wan and strained and Denis thought he was breathing a little heavily.
Dr. Larraby's good-humoured, rubicund middle-aged face turned in astonishment on his questioner.
He was a very rubicund man, almost bald, and the number of his chins varied from two to four according to the angle of his neck.
Mr. Herndon, the rubicund old-timer who runs Gulf King, has another set of figures, which, he said, proves the opposite.
Boy, we used to have fun in that fraternity house,' he recalled peacefully, his corpulent cheeks aglow with the jovial, rubicund warmth of nostalgic recollection.
His face was pleasantly rubicund, his chin round and soft, his nose broad and his eyes light in color and wide-set.
The Rev. James Perry was a sleek, rubicund man, with a bristling white moustache, bushy white eyebrows, and a shining bald head.
Within we met a gray old gentleman, who introduced himself as the lawyer together with a bustling, rubicund inspector, who greeted Hoimes as an old friend.
Down-stairs she met Mrs. William splendid in rustling black silk, her broad, rubicund face smiling, overflowing with apologies and welcomes, which Joscelyn cut short coldly.
He was still quite a young man, not more than thirty-two or three years of age, though he lacked the ultra robust and rubicund appearance which is typical of so many Englishmen of his class at this period of life.
Valken was a short, stout, rubicund character, easy-going and a trencherman of some note, which may have accounted for the fact that although he was several years older than van Effen he was his junior in the service, a fact that worried Valken not at all.
His face, however, had expanded under the influence of good living, and a disposition remarkable for resignation; and its bold, fleshy curves had so far extended beyond the limits originally assigned them, that unless you took a full view of his countenance in front, it was difficult to distinguish more than the extreme tip of a very rubicund nose.