The waiters were unflurried and good natured. From Wordnet, Princeton University.
He was neither excited nor depressed; was easy and acute and deliberate — unhurried unflurried unworried, only at most a little less amused than usual. From Wordnik.com. [The Ambassadors] Reference
Venus's relaxed, graceful body seems more composed than observed, a harmonious symphony of idealized curves, the skin tones blended with a calm, unflurried hand. From Wordnik.com. [An Alluring Enigma] Reference
She looked back at the fire, quiet, unflurried, then slowly raised her lids. From Wordnik.com. [The Emigrant Trail] Reference
A nice, unflurried man pointed at "what we call a small double" and said it was £120. From Wordnik.com. [Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph] Reference
"Then we'll say at three," she said calmly, and took an orderly and unflurried departure. From Wordnik.com. [K] Reference
He wanted to bury himself in an unknown fishing-town and associate with the simple, unflurried fisher-folk alone. From Wordnik.com. [The Odds And Other Stories] Reference
He was neither excited nor depressed; was easy and acute and deliberate -- unhurried unflurried unworried, only at most. From Wordnik.com. [The Ambassadors] Reference
"Down yonder lays my fence-line," she autocratically told the man who had continued standing where she had left him, and whose seeming was still unflurried. From Wordnik.com. [A Pagan of the Hills] Reference
She might have posed as a picture of graceful, imperturbed ease, so calm, so smiling, so absolutely unflurried and detached in both manner and bearing did she appear. From Wordnik.com. [The Lady of the Basement Flat] Reference
"If you could have been a little -- a little earlier," she murmured, with an unflurried face, laying a trembling hand in his; and thus shielded herself from a suspicion. From Wordnik.com. [Sandra Belloni — Complete] Reference
General Lee had rushed his infantry over, just at sunset, leading it in person, his face animated, and his eye brilliant with the soldier's spirit of fight, but his bearing unflurried as before. From Wordnik.com. [A Life of Gen Robert E Lee]
The bride was pale, but strikingly calm and self-possessed, and when she moved towards the door as Mrs. Lawrie, on her husband's arm, many matrons, recalling their own experience, marvelled at her unflurried dignity. From Wordnik.com. [Beauty and the Beast, and Tales of Home] Reference
With that same cool and unflurried bearing with which Van Horn was accustomed to hold his own in a consultation was he now awaiting the uncertain issue of his determination to end, in one way or the other, the disability under which he was suffering. From Wordnik.com. [Red Pepper's Patients With an Account of Anne Linton's Case in Particular] Reference
With but a single flap and no quiver of wing the osprey rights itself and sails away (a methodic, unflurried flight) with fleeter white-belly in pursuit, which when within striking distance swoops again, to be faced by the grim, outstretched talons of the osprey, who has turned in flight with machine-like precision. From Wordnik.com. [My Tropic Isle] Reference
"You see," Potterley said, in a clear, unflurried voice, "it was a matter of finding, if possible, anyone who had ever used chronoscopy in his work. From Wordnik.com. [The Complete Stories Vol 1]
Who with calm unflurried aim. From Wordnik.com. [Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 159, 1920-11-17] Reference
But Elsie was still unflurried. From Wordnik.com. [Little Folks (July 1884) A Magazine for the Young] Reference
"Up Ramp One, boss," came the unflurried reply. From Wordnik.com. [First Lensman]
All her memories of Lady Elliston were of this tact and sweetness, this penetrating, tentative tact and sweetness that sought to understand and help and that drew back, unflurried and unprotesting before rebuff, ready to emerge again at any hint of need, -- of these, and of her great beauty, the light of her large clear eyes, the whiteness of her throat, the glitter of diamonds about and above: for it was always in her most festal aspect, at night, under chandeliers and in ball-rooms, that she best remembered her. From Wordnik.com. [Amabel Channice] Reference
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