inoffensiveness การใช้
- Censorship in the cause of extreme inoffensiveness is a strange thing.
- Its cheery inoffensiveness, though, is in some ways disappointing.
- Indeed, its inoffensiveness _ if not its wit _ seems broadly accepted.
- Applebee's purpose is inoffensiveness ."
- Yet it is atypical in its inoffensiveness; here Elkin does not take the dangerous chances expected of him.
- A contemporary once dismissed him as " an infantile lunatic whose personal inoffensiveness secures him from confinement ."
- But the court said it " took no view on the offensiveness or inoffensiveness of defendants'conduct " in Sanders'case.
- We are drawn to them in their rustic simplicity; in their elementary foibles, such as a fondness for food; in their inoffensiveness.
- Dr . Johnson commented on the " inoffensiveness " of his nature; Edmund Burke noted his " strong turn for humor ".
- In general the picture is so committed to inoffensiveness and to hammering home its uplifting, bootstrap message that it lacks the necessary element of malice.
- By the mid-1950s, only Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman retained a sliver of their prior popularity, although effort towards complete inoffensiveness led to stories that many consider silly, especially by modern standards.
- All of these roles were opposite Palin ( who Cleese often claims is his favourite Python to work with ) the comic contrast between the towering Cleese's crazed aggression and the shorter Palin's shuffling inoffensiveness is a common feature in the series.
- Even those convinced that a certain zealotry is in the air these days require a bit more evidence than Dooling provides that we are really choking, suffocating, turning blue in the face and being whisked to the emergency room because of such heavy doses of mandatory inoffensiveness.
- Bloomberg, whose mayoralty was formed early on with equal parts inclusiveness and inoffensiveness, has in recent weeks angered constituents as varied as the city's neighborhoods : advocates for the homeless, smokers, minority politicians and garden-variety New Yorkers who now feel guilty every time they look at an empty Pepsi bottle.
- Such is the case with the productions and admirers of William Blake, an unfortunate lunatic, whose personal inoffensiveness secures him from confinement, and, consequently, of whom no public notice would have been taken, if he was not forced on the notice and animadversion of " The Examiner ", in having been held up to public admiration by many esteemed amateurs and professors as a genius in some respect original and legitimate.