slavishness การใช้
- This " Sabrina " is intelligently faithful to the original without slavishness.
- Freed from the slavishness of most authorized biography, the film makers try bold strokes.
- Nor can the slavishness be attributed to Prime Minister Tony Blair's personal relationship with, and support for, President Bill Clinton.
- But there are portraits of the aging ascetic everywhere, and critics say the near-slavishness of some followers gives TM a cultish patina.
- "But I think the no's are going to win, for this country has an ingrained conservatism bordering on slavishness ."
- As for the news, Ristic said, " there is slavishness, and it's true that DOS gets most of the airtime ."
- Uncritical slavishness and willingness to kill are plainly antithetical to'being a good person'. talk ) 14 : 22, 24 April 2010 ( UTC)
- The film sort of recognizes the absurdity in slavishness to the packaging of appearances, but doesn't really know where to go with it, or how.
- In his slavishness to subtlety, Schepisi has created a film in which all the small moments and flashbacks don't add up to much more than trite observations on the human condition.
- For outsiders, the personality cults that North Korea has built around the late leader Kim Il Sung and his bouffant-haired son and apparent heir, Kim Jong Il, are almost unimaginable in their slavishness.
- With pulsing electro-punk music and strobing pink slogans, the film merrily sends up Patty Hearst's captors, the fuzzy logic of anarchists and the monkey-see, monkey-do slavishness of true believers.
- It is the embodiment of slavishness in music, i . e . the music is the slave of the beat when it should be its master, exactly the opposite of what C . P . E . Bach suggested when he wrote that one should " endeavor to avoid everything mechanical and slavish.
- If either Dole or Clinton were to come before the country inspired by what George Bush called " the vision thing, " it might, just might, start to dispel the indifference, contempt and cynicism with which we have been afflicted by tactical politics, confrontational journalism, mad-dog radio talk and slavishness to opinion polls.