mustiness उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- There's a museum mustiness in the treatment of native peoples in films, an approach that tends toward over-reverent, one-dimensional characterizations, predictable story lines and nostalgia for the good old days of an Eden before European contact.
- The film shuffles along as slowly as the grimy h / mes residents and the aggressively non-descript mustiness of the home's half-furnished rooms and depressing hallways are anyone's worst nightmares of being old, invalid and abandoned to nothingness.
- Wilder replied, " you know, just your standard monkey funeral shot . " For some interior shots, Seitz sprinkled dust in front of the camera before filming to suggest " mustiness, " a trick he had also used for " Double Indemnity " ( 1944 ).
- The mustiness is charmingly rendered by contrasting the low notes of the oboe with the harmonics of the violin ( a patent device of my own ) . " Debussy had believed he had been subject to neurasthenia but around this time his doctor diagnosed him as suffering from the rectal cancer which was to kill him.
- It is true that jazz _ and we're mainly talking post-World War II bebop and its avant-garde offshoots of the'50s and'60s _ has taken on a regrettable mustiness, a bit like watching an old Astaire-Rogers musical or reading " The Man with the Golden Arm ."
- They can trot out a schoolyard wheezer such as " I used to think you were crazy, but now I see you're nuts " and have an audience of addled teens double over at the freshly minted whimsy, even as those who've been around the block guffaw at the joke's very mustiness.
- Kokonin, as well as many others inside or close to the Bolshoi, paint the scene as a struggle between tyranny and freedom, mustiness and fresh air, the old order and the new-- in short, a microcosm of the clash a few years ago between Soviet communism and new Russian democracy, with, for the moment, a similarly inconclusive outcome.
- Under the name of risk falls here every disadvantage which overtakes a thing sold, such as death; running away and wounding in the case of [ . . . ] an animal sold; an opening of the ground in the case of a field [ . . . ]; conflagration and collapse in the case of a house; shipwreck in the case of a ship; mustiness, souring or leakage in the case of wine; and finally spoiling, going bad, perishing or purloining in the case of all things.