The classics, it is generally agreed, are a repository of class vanity, racial prejudice and pedantic obscurantism. |
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There are moments in Bach when I would accuse him of nimiety, a pedantic thoroughness, more artifice than art. |
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Writing was his favourite pastime, pedantic, unpoetic stuff dealing with politics, history, education. |
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Call me a pedantic, stubborn, value for money freak, but don't call me unhearing. |
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For years, pedantic scholars have crowed about the debt rock owes the blues. |
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The way I practice witchcraft has changed a lot, I'm a lot less pedantic now, I'm a lot more intuitive. |
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But the wedding with its pedantic, rural nuptial dance winding along the landscape in middle distance with no visible musicians looks very twee. |
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I'm not saying that ethics committees that question research proposals are always being pedantic. |
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If you're being pedantic, I suppose this makes it more of an open sandwich, but in my book the mozzarella and pepperoni qualify it as pizza. |
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In order not to sound too didactic or pedantic, the lecturer added anecdotes and personal comments. |
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Without being stilted or pedantic about it, Sontag sums up the history of stagecraft back to the Elizabethans. |
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It's always nice to know that there are people out there who are even more pedantic than myself. |
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This can seem a lot of work, pedantic and fussy but is truly worth it if you can manage. |
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Perhaps this is the wrong forum on which to be so pedantic, but this is something that has bothered me for a while. |
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Long-winded sentences and pedantic phraseology have yielded place to brief reports. |
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Well you could say it's a deal of nitpicking by pedantic scientists over detail. |
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I had the same middle parted haircut for eight years, and I was quite pedantic about this being perfect. |
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My dictionary defines a pedagogue as a pedantic or dogmatic teacher and there is a lot of that about Waters. |
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Any fool can be pedantic and snipe at what they think are minor errors in grammar. |
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Most contemporary Baptists would find a sermon like this ponderous and pedantic. |
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It's heavy stuff, but the idea-rich tale unfolds its philosophy in a way that manages to neatly skirt pedantic style and didactic tone. |
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The past few articles I have written for this site have been pedantic responses to articles written by others. |
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Some companies don't like dealing with this inspector because they say he's draconian and pedantic. |
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I have language skills, I'm pedantic to stupendous heights, computer literate and I can fire and strip a pistol. |
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Mayhew, despite the most pedantic anatomization of the condition and variety of street-sweepers, rarely feels obliged to allude to what is actually being swept. |
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Community law must not go unapplied because it is too complex or too pedantic. |
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You feel you're listening to ethical argumentativeness that reminds you of the Talmud — pedantic disputatiousness. |
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She was very pedantic about the grammar – what was a comma and what was a full stop. |
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I think we must be careful, in making our demands, that we are not too pedantic and do not require too much detail. |
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Too often, in fact, philosophy is taught in a pompous, even pedantic way, by summoning up the great names of the history of philosophy. |
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Key references are not pedantic or mere research, but an important part of good management analysis. |
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Do we avoid using the relative pronoun dont when we actually need to because we think it too pedantic? |
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Apparently, a good spiritual content, but in a container which is sometimes pedantic and obscure. |
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For example, the values of religious devotees, environmental activists, or pedantic bureaucrats are rarely formed overnight. |
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The pedantic type might note that Hippolytus makes no prophetic mention of the cinema or the Internet. |
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Her perfection can sometimes verge on pedantic, like with her conversion to veganism. |
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It would be pedantic to claim instead that inequality has disvalue. |
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You know, he can be awfully pedantic, and awfully insufferable. |
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Insightful without being pedantic, learned but not overbearing, the book is full of humorous anecdotes while never shirking the factual responsibility of the historian. |
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Yes I am a pedantic conspiracy theorist, or jaded old cynic for short. |
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Sorry to be pedantic but it really irked me for some reason. |
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They would become even more bureaucratic and even more pedantic. |
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No wonder some find his music insufferably boring and pedantic. |
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At this point, the auteur's films felt fairly strained and pedantic. |
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Being a pedantic word-lover, and yes, a feminist, this drives me berserk. |
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You can be too pedantic about grammar and pronunciation and you can probably tell from this that spelling is a problem for me, especially when typing. |
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Just as the Inuit have 50 words for snow, so the fashion world has its own pedantic and fanciful vocabulary to describe the shifts and changes of each season. |
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As a speaker in the Commons he often seemed to deploy a fiercely private logic, yet his carefully articulated, pedantic performances could make irrelevance sound prophetic. |
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Analytic philosophy can be pedantic and boring, even technocratic in its hair-splitting attention to logical minutiae. |
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I do not believe, honourable senators, that it is constructive to attempt to turn this debate on the pedantic argument that a mandatory retirement clause is the same as an eight-year tenure. |
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What is pathetic are some of these pedantic, professorial, preaching or pseudo-intellectual remarks and then slinking out of the chamber, but I digress. |
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No new discipline can exist without semantics, and the appearance of this term, which is totally new, well-invented, clear, which states what it wants and is not too pedantic, strikes me as fundamental. |
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Our charter, by the way, is much too long, much too pedantic. |
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In this musical preaching Bach contrasts the contrapuntal power of God with the pedantic and simple chordal imagination of the proud of this earth. |
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This means that the referees should avoid being pedantic and should not search for opportunities to interfere with, or penalize, a team trying to throw quickly. |
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A translation of a French text, which if not literal is at least faithful, tends not to be very accessible to English-speaking reader, who may regard it as pedantic. |
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The bill is pedantic and rather sluggish in its tone and content. |
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It is recognized that this might result in a more pedantic writing style and, perhaps, a possible perception of sarcasm when selections are quoted out of context. |
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Orderliness, without love, makes one petty and pedantic. |
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I also believe that a government needs at times to be pedantic, at times tedious: we try to be both as little as possible but it is part of the job. |
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The pedantic constitutional purist from any one Member State might cavil at some of the detail, but this report provides a template for action which cannot be carried out by any single parliament. |
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Some of the points raised were really pedantic, for example when it was claimed that opening hours at sports facilities were not in line with women's interests. |
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The pedantic scholars among us might wonder if the book does its job. |
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For hearing people who don't know much about Deaf culture or ASL it's a great history lesson, without feeling like a pedantic educational lecture. |
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The deeply romantic and the obsessively pedantic are both part of my image of a scientific hero. |
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The drinks here, like the Blackwatch, are far from pedantic. |
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Jonson followed this in 1599 with Every Man out of His Humour, a pedantic attempt to imitate Aristophanes. |
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This usage is less common than forms with s at the end, such as MPs, and may appear dated or pedantic. |
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On the accession of James I, to whom his somewhat pedantic style of preaching recommended him, Andrewes rose into great favour. |
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The only negative was a 90thminute red card for Shaun Geddes who, with the match dead as a dodo, was shown the most pedantic of second yellow cards by the referee. |
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They've turned it into a Patois or a Volapuk without intimacy or delicacy, without nuance, hardened by obscure, cold, pedantic, insufferable words. |
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Geared towards a predominately 'tween female-audience with an emphasis on math and science, this book comes across as smart rather than didactic or pedantic. |
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