meagerness การใช้
- American store buyers expressed disgust with the meagerness of the Milan collections.
- Moreover, they endured the common monotony and meagerness of life under the Soviet system.
- However generous you have been, it is only the meagerness of each portion that will be apparent.
- The other factor was meagerness in clutch hitting, as it has been for much of the season.
- That was the attendance Monday for the Yankees'game with Oakland, and it was stunning for its meagerness.
- It reflected the poverty of her budget, the meagerness of her acquisitions, the struggle simply to keep the library open.
- They also take cigarette breaks, which leaves them open to ambusi . $ Several times officers express gleeful astonishment at the meagerness of the Iraqi Army.
- The meagerness of the food extended to dinner, an elaborate low-fat affair in which the delectable grilled salmon was sprinkled with flowers and the peapods carefully counted.
- He takes an out-of-sight, out-of-mind approach, to judge by the infrequency and meagerness of the checks he mails to Marrakech.
- The very word, honor, is hard to stumble across nowadays . It has dropped out of fashion and use, to judge from the meagerness of its appearance in public discourse.
- The program touches on the importance of drug treatment, and its meagerness in the U . S . But it twists that important point by dealing with it almost entirely in connection with drug permissiveness.
- For as Tobias Owens of the University of Hawaii speculated, the relative scarcity of water on the planet, the meagerness of the helium and the complex chemistry of the atmosphere all indicate the need to reconsider theories about how the entire solar system was formed.
- Writing in the language of the street, Narrache adopted the persona of a man living in poverty who reflects on the ironies attending the meagerness of social assistance, the role of class, the pretensions of the commercial elite, and the counterfeit philanthropy of the rich.
- Cubists'paintings, imported direct from Paris, now are being shown in the store in Cleveland, Ohio, says the Cleveland Plain Dealer, but the hundreds of art enthusiasts who are thronging to the place have difficulty in understanding the pictures, owing to the meagerness of details in the catalogue.
- A brilliant critic with a sharp ear and a prodigious intellect, he could also be an old-fashioned name-caller, labeling Stravinsky " catatonic, " dismissing the " triumphant meagerness of Benjamin Britten " and considering the " fame of Sibelius an exceptional case of critical ignorance ."
- Though Loman is written as a small, miserable creature, Dennehy uses his impressive girth as a porous armor against Willie's world, to make Willie all the more empathetic; it's a wonder that a man struggling against the truth of his own meagerness can even drag that much heft . When he first strides into his kitchen, one is struck by the claustrophobia Willie is trying to keep at bay.
- Bosley Crowther of " The New York Times " observed, " Picture it all in Technicolor, with the courtiers in flashing uniforms, the ladies in elegant dresses and Bing in an old straw hat, and you have a fair comprehension of the prospect and atmosphere . . . Brackett and Wilder have made up with casualness and charm and with a great deal of clever sight-humor for the meagerness of the idea.
- And it slyly works in barbed references to contemporary xenophobia, colorblind casting, the perception of lawyers fostered by the O . J . Simpson trials and even the institution that is producing " Scapin . " ( There's a wicked allusion to the meagerness of Roundabout salaries, and when Scapin disguises himself, it's in a red Chanel-style suit, frosted wig and prim eyeglasses; he is, he explains, a Roundabout subscriber .)
- Outside, Fanny asks the reluctant Paul to speak with Willis about the meagerness of their resources, telling him, " we don't have a dime in the bank and he goes and buys a cross ", and when Paul responds, " well, that cross is important to him, maybe it's worth the sacrifice ", she adds, " I've had twenty-five years of sacrifice no children, no money, no nothing ".