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swinishness การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Instead of tolerance, persuasiveness and learning, these gentlemen specialize in swinishness.
  • Stanley is less convinced with Bond, observing that his " essential swinishness is being replaced by some kind of dilute humanism ".
  • When the chorus are persuading Trygaeus not to sacrifice a fat swine because they would be associating with the'swinishness'of Theagenes.
  • The swinishness of the father was perfected by the sons, above all Ted Kennedy, whose womanizing has been crude, notorious _ and lethal.
  • He defines the relationship as one limited to  forced labor, intimidation, pressure, the police, taxation, theft, rape, compulsory crops, contempt, mistrust, arrogance, self-complacency, swinishness, brainless elites, degraded masses.
  • Associating gluttony and lust, sex and violence, even innocence and swinishness, " The Spurt of Blood " attacks the senses with bizarre sights and sounds as it reaches toward our subconscious impulses and fears . ( Cardullo and Knoff 2001, 377)
  • Reports that his wife Maria Luisa of Spain dismissed it as " " ( literally in Italian " German swinishness, " but most idiomatically translated " A German mess " ) do not pre-date 1871, in a collection of literary vignettes by Alfred Meissner about the history of Prague purportedly based on recollections of the author's grandfather, who was present for the coronation ceremonies.
  • He says he is a Juilliard-trained composer and pianist, and when he is invited to the home of the wealthy Bob ( Anthony Michael Hall, who can't help but show a little swinishness ), who wants to see if the reeking man in tatters can actually play, the scene plays on the standard fear conjured by such bull-in-a-china-shop premises.
  • In musical circles, Maria Luisa is famous for her putative denigration of Mozart's opera, which she supposedly dismissed as " " una porcheria tedesca " " ( Italian for " German swinishness " ), however no claim that she made this remark pre-dates the publication in 1871 of Alfred Meissner's " Rococo-Bilder : nach Aufzeichnungen meines Grossvaters ", a collection of stories about cultural and political life in Prague in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.