1 Dressing-gown would mean house; dress, outside.
2 Dressing-gown and dress were both in their places.
3 I shall stay with you myself; but I shall first dress myself.
4 Strangely enough, Lucy did not wake; but she got up twice and dressed herself.
5 He had evidently expected some such call, for I found him dressed in his room.
6 Mina is dressing, and I shall call at the hotel in a few minutes and bring him over.
7 In the moonlight opposite me were three young women, ladies by their dress and manner.
8 I do not, as you know, take sufficient interest in dress to be able to describe the new fashions.
9 Lucy is to be married in the autumn, and she is already planning out her dresses and how her house is to be arranged.
10 Her husband flung himself on his knees beside her, and putting his arms round her, hid his face in the folds of her dress.
11 I am only taking one change of dress; Lucy will bring my trunk to London and keep it till I send for it, for it may be that.
12 Let us take bath, and dress, and have breakfast which we all need, and which we can eat comfortably since he be not in the same land with us.
13 When I had dressed myself I went into the room where we had supped, and found a cold breakfast laid out, with coffee kept hot by the pot being placed on the hearth.
14 The figure stopped, and at the moment a ray of moonlight fell upon the masses of driving clouds and showed in startling prominence a dark-haired woman, dressed in the cerements of the grave.
15 They had all full white sleeves of some kind or other, and most of them had big belts with a lot of strips of something fluttering from them like the dresses in a ballet, but of course there were petticoats under them.
16 I feared she might catch cold sitting there, and asked her to come in and sleep with me, so she came into bed, and lay down beside me; she did not take off her dressing gown, for she said she would only stay a while and then go back to her own bed.