agreeability การใช้
- Cruise's agreeability has its limits, however.
- His agreeability and versatility have often worked against him.
- Caxaro aptly creates a harmony of nuances amongst the symbols he uses, taking advantage of their mutual agreeability.
- Researchers then measured the participants sexist attitudes towards women using a questionnaire asking the agreeability of statements to women gaining more control over men.
- Collaboration is about moving forward and this is only possible if there is an agreeability, therefore involved editors in conflict should depend on one another.
- The council's agreeability has allowed the city to avoid the kind of bitter stalemates that have for years made Albany's budget process utterly dysfunctional.
- Even " American Pie " and " The Blair Witch Project, " despite any lapses they may have been guilty of in taste or stylistic agreeability, achieved all of the deceptively difficult goals that their makers had aimed for.
- You might include a thanks for the stuff I contributed that you did decide to use and probably will decide to keep, at at least a rate of agreeability as the disagreeability the majority of your responders have presented in defending the indefensible here today.
- After a series of loud clanks, this visitor's $ 2 reading produced mixed results : very superior in friendship, combativeness, veneration and amativeness; average on agreeability, sympathy and suavity, but, alas, deficient in faith, ideality, time and tune.
- She criticized Southern women who have not three ideas, who spoil a little French, who play a little music, and have not a grain of agreeability, and proclaimed that it was a wise dispensation of Providence which places no loftier aspirations within them . These trips were taken sans Sue s young daughter, Adele, and the prolonged absences may have provoked the later discord between mother and daughter.
- King herself took several extended trips North ( including her education in Philadelphia as a young girl ), and expressed her dislike for the South and its " stupid, self-sufficient, wearisome styles of [ its ] young ladies . . . who have not three ideas, who spoil a little French, who play a little music, and have not a grain of agreeability . " Contrary to common beliefs of Southern pride created by 19th-century political conflicts, King, never a politic, saw the North as feminist safe haven, where she could escape from her disintegrating marriage and her domestic and child-rearing responsibilities, and pursue more openly her attractions to other men.