jokily การใช้
- The Times is less coy about such things, but it wouldn't approach the matter jokily.
- She pricks her quarry's pomposity with skittish Beatles parodies and unsettles him with jokily mimed kung-fu.
- The kind of palpable misery we've heard about in all those blues songs is jokily acknowledged but not very vivid.
- The line'For lo, an hugy heap of divers thoughts arise is quoted and Bryony then jokily uses the phrase'hugy heap '.
- As a leaving gift, the girls give Miss Gribble a chair from the staff room and her own mug to which Miss Gribble jokily responds, " My own mug as well.
- In Episode 7 ( directed by Jon Turteltaub ), Dave Foley of " News Radio " plays Alan Bean, jokily narrating his impressions of an astronaut's daily life in space.
- Willeford's police detective Hoke Mosely is usually clinically depressed and struggling with his dentures and drinking-- not jokily, but in a laboring, existential way that Willeford somehow contrives to keep entertaining.
- Sella is good in the schizoid role of narrator-son, meaning that he must stand outside the events, often jokily commenting on them, even as he's participating in them as one of the victims.
- In addition, " The Atlantic Wire " jokily suggests the problem might be the advent of Google's new social networking site Google +, which has rapidly built up a large number of young male users.
- The favorite of Susan Reigler, the knowledgeable restaurant critic of The Louisville Courier-Journal, and of others who have tried it, is the jokily named, 20-year-old Pappy Van Winkle's Family Reserve.
- If these jokily suggestive names are part of the story's hidden code, the solution escaped this reader, as did any hidden references in the titles of their books, among them Bill Tidy's working-class memoir, called " Our Skillets ."
- The program was advertised as " Bill Cosby and the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra With Wynton Marsalis . " So Thursday night's concert at Rose Theater could have been the thing Cosby has been doing at jazz festivals for years : jokily directing a jazz band through familiar standards, partly behind his own drum set.
- She can be a brilliant phrase-maker, and has a gift for summing up an idea with a single vivid image . " Allan Massie, reviewing for " The Scotsman ", could not find a coherent argument being presented and found her writing style " veering uncomfortably between the academic and the jokily colloquial, [ is ] tiresome, [ and ] some of her writing is pretentious, much obvious and platitudinous ".