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Cross-legged   /krɔs-lˈɛgəd/   Listen
Cross-legged

adverb
1.
With the legs crossed.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Cross-legged" Quotes from Famous Books



... pitch our tents a few feet back from the shore; and stood watching him while he did so, one eye reverting occasionally to Evelyn Grey and Kemper. They both were seated cross-legged beside the branch, and they seemed to be talking a great deal and rather earnestly. I couldn't quite understand what they found to talk about so earnestly and volubly all of a sudden, inasmuch as they had heretofore exchanged very few observations ...
— Police!!! • Robert W. Chambers

... choir is a much-dilapidated monument of a cross-legged knight (a crusader, of course) in armor, very rudely executed; and, against the wall, lie two or three more bruised and battered warriors, with square helmets on their heads and visors down. Nothing can be uglier than these figures; the sculpture of those days seems to have ...
— Passages From the English Notebooks, Complete • Nathaniel Hawthorne

... catch him," said Beetle, cross-legged on the floor, dropping a stump from time to time across Sefton's instep. ...
— Stalky & Co. • Rudyard Kipling

... the present inmates, which two women were preparing, consisted of meat and vegetables, soup and sweet things; excellent meat, and well-dressed frijoles. A poor little boy, imbecile, deaf and dumb, was seated there cross-legged, in a sort of wooden box; a pretty child, with a fine colour, but who has been in this state from his infancy. The women seemed very kind to him, and he had a placid, contented expression of face; but took no notice of ...
— Life in Mexico • Frances Calderon de la Barca

... have to guard you up and down the city, hears the notice which is given him from the steeples, he will turn about, stand still, and beckon with his hand, to tell his charge he must have patience for awhile; when, taking out his handkerchief, he spreads it on the ground, sits cross-legged thereupon, and says his prayers, though in the open market, which, having ended he leaps briskly up, salutes the person whom he undertook to convey, and renews his journey with the mild expression of Ghell yelinnum ghell, or Come, ...
— The Complete Poems of Sir Thomas Moore • Thomas Moore et al


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