inartistic उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The design of a memorial became contentious also, with New South Wales establishing a War Memorials Advisory Board attempting to influence the design process to stem the tide of " inartistic " memorials being erected.
- Multiple versions of the film were banned by the Committee, which cited them as " inartistic and politically bankrupt ", and claimed that Eisenstein " confused the class struggle with the struggle between good and evil ".
- Ranking pianists as if they were Olympic athletes is inherently inartistic . ( Should a finger-slip in a Chopin etude warrant a mandatory five-tenths deduction ? ) One's reaction to a pianist, Rodzinski conceded, is utterly subjective.
- In 511 Eugippius wrote to Paschasius and asked his venerated and dear friend, who had great literary skill, to write a biography of St . Severinus from the accounts of the saint which he ( Eugippius ) had put together in crude and inartistic form.
- The manner of the narrative is a laconic and conversational prose : " this completely inartistic text, " as Sarah Myers called it, offers the briefest summaries of lost metamorphoses by more ambitious writers, such as Nicander and grammatical particles which would convey humor or a narratorial persona.
- Deelah then admits that he never had any real interest in china, but that society had forced him " with the alternative of being thought vulgar, to pretend an affection for its inartistic, ugly beauties at which [ his ] true soul actually revolts ! " Deelah further explains,
- At the beginning of the 20th century the town was described as " the centre of a district of collieries, cotton mills and iron-works, which cover the surface of the country with their inartistic buildings and surroundings, and are linked together by the equally unlovely dwellings of the people ".
- He may be called the inventor of poetical satire, as he was the first to impress upon the rude inartistic medley, known to the Romans by the name of " satura ", that character of aggressive and censorious criticism of persons, morals, manners, politics, literature, etc . which the word satire has ever since denoted.
- The " Atlas " review called it a " strange, inartistic story, " but commented that every chapter seems to contain a " sort of rugged power . " " Atlas " summarised the novel by writing : " We know nothing in the whole range of our fictitious literature which presents such shocking pictures of the worst forms of humanity.
- Here is what the " New York Times Book Review " ( then the " SaturdayBook Review Supplement " ) had to say about Willa Cather's " O Pioneers ! " on Sept . 14, 1913 : " Possibly some might call it a feminist novel, for the two heroines are stronger, cleverer and better balanced than their husbands and brothers _ but we are sure Miss Cather had nothing so inartistic in mind ."