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idolisation การใช้

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  • However, it did not stop at mere idolisation.
  • Sandip shows his love for Bimala through idolisation.
  • The object of idolisation is believed to bring salvation to those who sight it.
  • The idolisation of fans reminded me of the story of the worship of the golden calf ."
  • Sample quotes from a study's focus group exemplifying the intense idolisation of famous Bollywood actors:
  • Allied to this is the overriding commercialism, with the urge to pull off a smart deal and the idolisation of successful businessmen.
  • Kaczynski's idolisation of the character was due to the traits that they shared : disaffection, hostility toward the world, and being an aspiring anarchist.
  • She said that her approach to playing Frank was to " peel back the layers of idolisation and to think of the characters just as normal people ".
  • Lat paid attention to family life and children because of his idolisation of Raja Hamzah, a senior cartoonist who was also popular in the 1960s with his comics about swashbuckling heroes.
  • The success bolstered Nagoya's status in Japanese football, as well as Wenger's reputation; he was somewhat startled by the praise and idolisation that came his way.
  • Reg's sensitivity and surprisingly poetic tongue gave rise to the question of Gordon Grimley's parentage, as does Shane Titley's oafish behaviour and idolisation of armchair bound slob Baz Grimley.
  • This picture was actually titled " A Somnambulant Adventure " and Bob s intention was to add other elements to it which would create a jarring juxtaposition between idolisation of The Beatles'as gods of the pop world and their flesh and blood reality as ordinary human beings, but he was never able to realise this.
  • Her books of the 1930s in particular had a satiric exuberance, as in " Pomfret Towers ", which sends up village ways, aristocratic folly and middle-class aspirations . " Three Houses " ( 1931, Oxford University Press; repeatedly reprinted ) is a short childhood memoir which simultaneously displays Thirkell's precociously finished style, her lifelong melancholy, and her idolisation of her grandfather, Edward Burne-Jones . " Trooper to the Southern Cross " ( 1934; republished in 1939 as " What Happened on the Boat " ) " is concerned with the experiences of a number of English and Australian passengers aboard a troop-ship, the " Rudolstadt ", on their way back to Australia immediately after World War I . It is particularly interesting for its depiction of the Australian'digger'; his anti-authoritarianism, larrikinism, and, at the same time, his loyalty to those whom he respects ."