fatuously उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The quotations by User Loomis, two of which in fact post-date my best'guesstimate'for the Holocaust order, are therefore " utterly and fatuously " beside the point.
- At points in this recounting, Boyer sits in an SUV in a rainstorm, looking fatuously reflective as his deliberate, monotonous voice-over narration, ponderously slow to the point of somnolence, metes out the facts.
- Mackin's bitterness has driven him to claim, fatuously : " I have really been able to see how the marchers in the civil rights movement must have felt, being American citizens and being denied ."
- In it, Mermaid Barbie grins fatuously near her swimming " pool, " a video screen on which Hallmark-style images fade into shots of the world the way it actually is : parched, crowded and ridden with filth.
- When the footage is punctuated by George Plimpton and Norman Mailer musing on the larger significance of it all, the results verge on self-parody as both seem to strain fatuously to get into some tough guys'club of the mind.
- In future episodes, David assails tasteless office gags ( only after he has become the victim of one ), becomes frighteningly petty during an office social function and fatuously injects his galloping ignorance into a management consultant's day of motivational speaking.
- As we're told in the amusingly ironic prologue _ it's one of those fatuously upbeat civic-booster films popular decades ago _ Sheffield was once " a city on the move, the jewel in Yorkshire's crown ."
- There is, for instance, Katherine's rich friend who boasts fatuously about a trip to Bali ( " $ 5, 000 just to get there . . . the most spiritual place I've ever been " ) but then becomes more honest.
- Allen's script roughly takes the form of a documentary, with the dramatic scenes introduced by a series of Ray experts, including Allen, his former writing partner Douglas McGrath, and a succession of fatuously tongue-in-cheek jazz authorities, including critic Nat Hentoff.
- At one point, the series fatuously observes, " Infidelities remained a source of marital strife "-- duly noted-- and also offers the earth-shattering suggestion, " the century closed much as it opened-- obsessed with sex ."