sententiousness การใช้
- Daldry, whose work in the theater has been widely praised, overcomes the occasional sententiousness of Hall's script.
- John Clute found the novel successful, saying that " Pangborn's gracious literacy usually overcomes a tendency towards a cloying sententiousness.
- Parr, however, carefully avoided extremes and criticized the sententiousness of " vain gospellers ", although never directing any criticism on anyone in particular.
- Instead of his keen psychological insight, the adapters have opted for incoherent psychobabble, and instead of his complex morality, they have settled into sententiousness.
- In the titles of his work, and in its extreme desultoriness, La Bruy鑢e reminds the reader of Montaigne, but he aimed too much at sententiousness to attempt even the apparent continuity of the great essayist.
- :" Dick Snug is a man of sly remark and pithy sententiousness : he never immerges himself in the stream of conversation, but lies to catch his companions in the eddy : he is often very successful in breaking narratives and confounding eloquence.
- Han refrains from sententiousness despite the fact that his works explore the suffering of the socially and economically underprivileged : with his characteristic humility and sensitivity, Han discovers beauty and psychological subtleties inherent in every situation and allows his characters an amount of optimism and ultimate faith in the goodness of human nature with which they brave the difficulties of life.
- The picture of Antonelli in retirement reading Aristotle is hard to believe and somehow lends a sententiousness to his many pronouncements . ( " Like time itself, the law stops for no one . " ) And the big surprise of the outcome falls far short of the genuine shock of the final twist in " The Defense ."
- Like Teuffel, he has trouble finding a name for the first of the three periods ( the current Old Latin phase ), calling it mainly " from Livius to Sulla . " The language, he says, is " & marked by immaturity of art and language, by a vigorous but ill-disciplined imitation of Greek poetical models, and in prose by a dry sententiousness of style, gradually giving way to a clear and fluent strength & " These abstracts have little meaning to those not well-versed in Latin literature.