Left without having a single drink thanks to the appalling rudeness of a waitress. |
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Finally, on the biographical debit side there are the usual miscellaneous acts of thoughtlessness, rudeness and generally shabby behaviour. |
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All too often, what would have formerly passed for simple rudeness or vulgarity is now labelled something much more menacing. |
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However, there comes a point when rudeness passes from novelty into annoyingness. |
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Although the unpleasant encounter is over, I have been puzzling over the cause of this gentleman's behaviour, which borders on rudeness. |
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Yet it lacks the wit, lecherousness or base rudeness that marks out the best of that strain of hip-hop. |
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This rudeness came from both agnostic intellectuals and religious fundamentalists. |
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Even when her mother had come out and ranted about his rudeness and audacity, she stood stock-still. |
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Deron's expression showed nothing, though I knew he must be surprised by the abrupt rudeness of it. |
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Figures reveal that the most common complaint against the force is currently rudeness and disrespect. |
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Everyone at our table was taken aback at his rudeness toward a paying customer. |
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We were dumbfounded at this rudeness and I got up and knelt on the clay floor. |
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At some point, spying, vindictiveness, cruelty, manipulation, and rudeness turn against the one dishing those things out. |
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But narcissism isn't just a combination of monumental self-esteem and rudeness. |
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Also, I'm so stubborn and perverse that her rudeness just made me more determined to get to know her. |
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Sheer pig-headed ignorance, nastiness, mean-spiritedness and rudeness in my opinion. |
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Due to his unruly behaviour, which included rudeness and abusiveness, the management was forced to ban him from using these facilities. |
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I pretend to ignore his rudeness, but Meryl is not willing to let it slide. |
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It seemed unbelievable rudeness for the keyholder to have forgotten the appointment to let this young chap in. |
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I think what looks like rudeness may be natural impatience or shortness with people who don't appear to have done any homework. |
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Impatience manifesting in rudeness or shortness is symptomatic of a rhythm problem. |
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He swung from laying on the charm to cold-eyed boorishness and rudeness with alarming alacrity. |
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For two years I have kept my thoughts mostly to myself and kept my distance when I couldn't take the rudeness. |
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A true lady will always repulse familiarity or rudeness, either of speech or manner. |
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Since when do we have to put up with complacency, rudeness, laziness and neglect of duty? |
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Lateness is frowned on in Europe, where anything less than perfect punctuality for a social engagement is considered a rudeness. |
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I went through a somewhat similar situation with my sister, minus the rudeness on her part. |
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I was just thinking about the increasing levels of rudeness I am treated to at work. |
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Forget the irritations and the occasional rudeness, they bother us New Yorkers too. |
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Notice how some clever perpetrators of downright rudeness can make you feel as though you are the impolite one. |
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And above all, he has replaced his father's courtesy and good graces with an almost proud rudeness and scorn for others. |
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They trade on their rudeness, graspingness and lack of consideration and everybody knows about this before they book. |
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Mary sedately entered the parlour, admonishing her youngest sister's rudeness. |
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His plan to get the old lady back for her minor rudeness was coming to literal fruition. |
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The university has a standard of zero-tolerance for rudeness, unprofessional behavior and discourteousness on the part of employees toward those the university serves. |
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If this had been a high-powered business lunch and there was an important meeting to get to, then maybe snideness and rudeness would be called for. |
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I knew the rudeness I was committing, but still I rose and left the church. |
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Since any ill-bred person threatened to undermine everyone else's claims to gentility, such rudeness had to be banned from polite social intercourse. |
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But I would add that there is no room for rudeness, and no union contract should permit it. |
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French Say Au Revoir to Rudeness Paris's public transport authority has started a publicity campaign against rudeness. |
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To have unholy things while being on the holy grounds is the same as defiling the holy grounds and it is rudeness before God. |
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In both instances, the officers had responded with inexcusable rudeness. |
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We all hear about how the rudeness of email has affected our lives. |
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Last week, at a press conference, a noticeably feistier, more candid gillard rebuked a reporter for rudeness. |
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Due to her rudeness, poor attitude and duplicitous nature, the complainant was difficult to manage. |
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This is not through rudeness but out of respect for your time, because I do not wish to waste it. |
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And because of that, they may show even greater rudeness and acts that are evil. |
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Had a member of the public been shown such rudeness, he or she would not have pursued the transaction. |
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While open discussions are encouraged, rudeness, threats, personal attacks, offensive or vulgar remarks will NOT be tolerated. |
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Her favourite metaphor for the transformation from rudeness to beauty was a snow-covered landscape. |
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I could list many more places where it is fair to expect smokers to consider others but you can not legislate for people's rudeness or lack of consideration. |
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Indeed, publicly correcting anybody is the ultimate in rudeness. |
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A cutting judge became a household word on account of his rudeness. |
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Lady Catherine was clearly annoyed at his apparent rudeness. |
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For some reason, she never sulks away or criticizes my rudeness. |
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Obviously she at least was mindful of the rudeness of gossip. |
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A genuine show of celebrity rudeness, followed by an insincere PR performance? |
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Geraghty's professors are by and large men timid in scholarship, locked into mindless routines and shy to the point of cold rudeness in personal dealings. |
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Mrs Weiler, I propose writing to Mr Nobilia saying that it really is a great rudeness to the House and to the committee that he represents, for him to not be here. |
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And then brush-off rudeness on top of that? |
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But his rudeness and raciness put him beyond the pale. |
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To avoid excessive rudeness, all Northern Irish parties may be excluded. |
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It's not just the rudeness of this reply that grates, it's the stupidity – as if a British cop would feel crushed by Howard's popinjay condescension. |
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This apparent rudeness, however, is less a part of the man himself than of his hair and beard, of his shaggy sheepskin, and the loud deep tone of his voice. |
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Carrefour has adopted measures for assessing and preventing the psychosocial risks which may be caused by the rudeness and aggressiveness of others. |
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Along with the rudeness of sagging skin, receding hairlines, droopy eyelids, and aching joints, many are experiencing something they didn't see coming: failing eyesight. |
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These results are the victory of democracy over rudeness, freedom over cruelty, modesty over brattiness, and peace over war. |
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There is no tolerance for rudeness or inhospitably to fans of opposing teams or players down on their luck...it really is just a set of expectations. |
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We prefer to think of a city where long lines and simmering vats of rudeness, inefficiency, crankiness, and distractedness have suddenly been zapped away. |
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He's also tetchy to the point of rudeness about going over his back story. |
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Judgemental, frank to the point of rudeness and with a distinct prediliection for paradox and given to firing off his opinions with the tact and delicacy of a bazooka. |
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In a professional context many forms of discourtesy, rudeness, impoliteness can occur simply from the absence of understanding the importance of etiquette. |
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Is Canada suffering from a contagious attack of rudeness from economists, or does this extreme language reflect an extremely incompetent Minister of Finance? |
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Withdrawal symptoms of email failure include broodiness, rudeness, and sheer neurosis. |
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But for rudeness of manners, idolatry, and multitheism, no people in the world ever went beyond them. |
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There is nothing to indicate any sign of impatience, impoliteness, rudeness, aggressiveness or even irony on the judge's part during this questioning. |
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One thing, however, is clear: inappropriate behaviour in the workplace, rudeness, abuse, condescension or sarcasm poison the work atmosphere and leave all employees feeling uncomfortable. |
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At Yitzhak Rabin's memorial service, Mr Grossman spoke of a country hypnotised by insanity, rudeness, violence and racism, of a state squandering its goodwill, squandering its own people, especially its young. |
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The insolent civility of a proud man is, if possible, more shocking than his rudeness could be. |
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Accused of rudeness and incompetence, he was also credited with ruining Soviet agriculture and bringing the world to the brink of nuclear war. |
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Sheer rudeness, too, has acquired a certain chic. |
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From analyses of complaints made to regions and headquarters, we also found that intimidation, rudeness and offensive behaviour by officers was the largest category of complaint. |
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Thank you for your appeal but, as I said, anyone having a few drinks with his meal is best advised to have a siesta afterwards and not to interrupt our debates by his rudeness and lack of Parliamentary manners. |
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Eke, gentle heart, and manhood that ye had, And that ye had, as me thought, in despite Every thing that souned into bad, As rudeness, and peoplish appetite. |
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