Sentences with phrase «head scarf into»

Not exact matches

Ka is present as the coup is proclaimed in the city's theater, where soldiers fire into an audience that the coup plotters have intentionally provoked by reviving an anti-Islamist play called «My Fatherland or My Head Scarf
Finally, toss on a lightweight scarf or infinity scarf as we head into cooler weather.
Lloyd: If you're hot, you're stupid because you haven't jumped in the river or you haven't dunked a sarangue, these long scarves that a lot of us were advised to bring onto the trip into the river and then wrapped it over your head or around your shoulders and provided fantastic evaporative cooling.
I was heading out for a trip with my grandparents who made me (reluctantly) wear a scarf which did not go at all and thus, did not make it into these pictures.
Since its lightweight you can wear it as a head scarf or french braid it into your hair to create a dimensional look.
If you're heading into the office, add a scarf, since most offices are freezing.
People in Boston are actually smiling from ear to ear instead of having their heads buried into scarves to keep warm while they hustle down the sidewalk.
Rummaging in the front closet for some extra protection, he had pulled out, with a smile he couldn't have interpreted for himself, a long - forgotten item, the tricolor scarf that his ex-wife, Pascale, had learned to knit for him during the four months when she was recovering from aphasia, four months that had produced, among other shockers, an excessively long French flag of a wool scarf, which he wound seven and a half times around his neck before heading out into the dark to deal with the rush in his head.
But while these locations would certainly be memorable, extraordinary, and positively brag - worthy, if I had the choice a small part of me would rather head to that neighborhood diner with a group of old friends, where we would squeeze into vinyl booths, scarf greasy pizza, and drink cheap Chianti long into the night.
In «La Salle de Gym des Femmes Arabes,» Hajjaj responds to the gender - segregated gyms of his native Morocco by transforming the gallery into a fitness club for women — and filling it with bold, bright photographic portraits of its customers (one sporting a hijab and boxing gloves, another with a head scarf and surfboard).
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