Instead of tail-wagging gratitude, I was greeted with a look of utter contempt and scorn. |
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Its decision to remain outside the law demonstrates high-handed contempt for the rule of European Union law and must not go unchallenged. |
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But his prickly sense of slighted dignity and obsessive contempt for other people's ethical squalor inevitably drags him down. |
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Aquinas believed good law must be enforceable, otherwise it would be disregarded and risk causing contempt for all laws. |
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How would he respond to the charge that his book expresses a certain contempt for the public? |
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His contempt for the audience is only slightly less pronounced than his loathing of himself for being a phony and a sell-out. |
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We have reached a point where people feel contempt for the government but do not yet trust the opposition. |
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Demands for respect while showing contempt for the religions and cultures of others has denied them any empathy for their perceived grievances. |
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If the Government refuses to introduce changes now, it will be demonstrating its contempt for democracy, public concern and animal welfare. |
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They have bad manners, contempt for authority and no respect for older people. |
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But never the less I was charged with contempt of court and drunken disorderly conduct and put in jail. |
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The cross-motion was by the applicant for contempt of court, relying on some of the grounds raised now before me. |
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A breach of an undertaking is contempt of court and punishable by committal to prison. |
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Earlier this year Dr Smith was found in contempt of court by the High Court. |
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I do not see how the Commonwealth could perform its part of the contract in that example without being in contempt of court. |
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Three years ago, the Supreme Court said that legislation was needed to clarify the offence of contempt of court. |
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As between further violence and contempt of court, she may rationally choose the jail cell. |
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The relevant sanction is either being held in contempt of court or being prosecuted under the criminal law. |
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Then the judge told Mr Beamish what was the maximum penalty for contempt of court. |
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At first instance the plaintiff did not seek to make out a case of an attempt to pervert the course of justice or of contempt of court. |
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In my view, this observation should be the starting point of any analysis focusing on the rationale of contempt of court. |
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Failure to do so would leave the health professional in contempt of court, an offence punishable by imprisonment. |
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Once there, if I refused to answer a question, I could be held in contempt and go to jail anyway, and there'd be nothing I could do about it. |
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And number two, if she violates the order, she could be held in contempt of court and theoretically go to jail. |
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Ignore a court summons and you will be held in contempt and possibly fined or even jailed. |
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However, on this occasion, not even fortune could give Macdonwald the victory, because Macbeth held her in contempt and won the battle anyway. |
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It's a matter of being willing to be aggressive against people who quite publicly hold you in contempt whether you agree with them or not. |
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Incidentally, someone asked me whether Judge Goodwin's reactions were unjudicial or showed undue contempt for coordinate branches of government. |
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Judicial contempt for the coordinate branches on this scale is simply staggering. |
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Without comment, he took the two cards he needed, hiding his contempt behind his poker face. |
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Most corrosively, however, is that the distrust of medical professionals is breeding contempt for all that is associated with medical science. |
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They show contempt for their vows and pose a danger of showing more serious contempt for our children which should not be countenanced. |
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Under Article 215 of the Constitution the high court is a court of record and has the power to punish for contempt of itself. |
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Here he pauses, drops his diplomatic shield and oozes contempt for those he crossed swords with during his lengthy TV career. |
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Their self-obsession is matched only by their cynical contempt and disregard for anyone who is not part of their world. |
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In spite of contempt for the gasconader, his lordship was half angered by his impudence. |
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When used as a prefix to someone's name, it implies an obvious loathing or contempt of that person. |
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The prosecutor would not be in contempt of court if the prosecutor did not proceed with the indictment. |
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The name itself connotes derision and contempt for the inhabitants of the compound. |
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Scandalising the court is a form of contempt that can lead to the imposition of punishment. |
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The men were prepared to purge their contempt of court simultaneously with Shell collapsing its injunction against them. |
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But their joy turned to anger after the judge reduced the sentence after agreeing to purge the contempt of court conviction. |
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Blinding hatred and contempt seem to be common reactions among the enlightened elites. |
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I was told that the husband has pleaded guilty to contempt proceedings in the Family Court. |
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His contempt for ineptitude as well as his disdain for those who held opinions contrary to his was legendary. |
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The simple words oozed with disdainful contempt that seemed to pass unnoticed. |
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The family guilty of such an omission would be held in disgrace and contempt pending the intervention of lineage or clan members. |
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Somers makes no secret of his dislike for bureaucracy and his contempt for people who pass the buck. |
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The description of the three acts of contempt as disobedience of the order dated 25th April 2003 cannot be right. |
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The problem is severest for women, who in Colombia are held in contempt or deemed disreputable for working at all. |
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That the moral capital of all three parties has been dissipated is not lost on the public, whose contempt for the political process has grown. |
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It also looks silly and evinces contempt from car-drivers, proper motorcyclists and even pedestrians, but I don't care. |
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His fury at his compatriots is only equalled by his contempt for the Americans. |
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His mood ranged from nervousness and exasperation to contempt and defiance even anger. |
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It is a disgrace in political terms, because it calls into contempt the very idea of political and executive accountability. |
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In view of above-mentioned I feel the recount was pure nonsense and downright contempt of our democracy. |
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He does not seem to be dripping with contempt when he looks at us, and I think that has something to do with the coverage. |
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But does misandry even exist? Is there a difference between individual hatred and a contempt that underlies centuries of discrimination? |
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And considering my contempt for the Ivy League, I hope, you know, they throw the book at them. |
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That kind of negligence shows clear contempt for our generation's wants and needs. |
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The contempt and indifference for her own child, which she continually voices, is absurdly unbelievable. |
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At one time it was believed that the mere publication of information about a ward of court was contempt of court. |
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Louts who dumped rubbish on a war memorial are beneath contempt, says an army veteran. |
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This single line from the 1967 film The Graduate came to signify a generation's contempt for insincerity, conformity, and wastefulness. |
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Routine acquittals of obviously guilty people would quickly breed contempt for the law. |
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And most importantly, both share utter contempt for the politicians who, according to them, are rabble-rousers, inept and corrupt. |
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Who wants to be exposed to public ridicule and contempt as part of their job description? |
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Like Taine, Cezanne had only contempt for the adepts of a dry, linear style, whom he associated with ascetic, religious spirituality. |
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Civil contempt at common law consists largely in disobeying a judgment or a court order. |
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With unprecedented frankness, they speak of the government's contempt for the judiciary. |
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His adoration, like a jealous lover's, is only rhetorically distinguishable from contempt. |
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My voice was flat and expressionless, edged with steel and contempt for my enemy. |
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They were accused of a whitewash, and the voters expressed their contempt at the ballot box. |
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It is the breach of that order which entitles the aggrieved party to bring a motion for a contempt order. |
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The political system, riddled with corruption, is held in increasing public contempt. |
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Sidney's contempt recalls Lodge's low opinion of Gosson's scholarship, especially of his ignorance of Platonic philosophy. |
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Unlike those who are rallying behind the president, Vidal retains his withering contempt for the man. |
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She gave me a withering look of utter contempt and proceeded to lecture me at length about the finer nuances of Mother's Day. |
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Since November 2, the withering contempt of liberals for ordinary Americans has been astonishing. |
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It begins in desire, and ends in bitterness and contempt and mutual recriminations. |
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Not only is Jimmy adulterous, alcoholic, womanizing, and guilty of incest, he has astonishing contempt for his wife. |
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The crowd howled with honest workingmen's indignation and contempt at the unfairness. |
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It's better to be able to figure out who the kooks are by their own words, so that one may treat them with the cold contempt they deserve. |
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Know that I have nothing but contempt for your concern, you pompous wretch. |
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He is wretched, weak, ugly, inspiring contempt and disgust in not only all the supposedly good-hearted characters but also the reader. |
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More people are now willing to listen to the man many once regarded with contempt or annoyance. |
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This contempt repels Marianne, who announces she will be going back to Stockholm. |
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Nevertheless, enforcing contempt orders against stubborn journalists has been self-defeating for law enforcers. |
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The contempt that some analysts show towards other approaches to psychotherapy is inappropriate. |
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Lastly, the hatred and contempt of the past two millennia add a formidable barrier to authentic communication. |
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This party was strongly oriented toward syndicalism and viewed the international conflict over program and principles with contempt. |
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Ponting's animus toward Churchill never reaches Irving's level of contempt but he has his moments. |
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The prime minister's open display of contempt for democratic accountability has only deepened the revulsion felt towards him. |
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The bipartisan contempt for the needs of the working class also found expression in the reaction to the mayor's latest housing proposals. |
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Rather, all this, in my opinion, is an expression of contempt for our environment and against the people in Galgate and Ellel. |
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Rather, it invites ridicule, contempt and cynicism towards the whole devolution project. |
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Punishment is administered not by burning at the stake but by ridicule and contempt in the media. |
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The law of libel in England is based on whether the plaintiff has suffered hatred, ridicule or contempt. |
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In this day and age it is hard to believe that people can be held up to hatred, ridicule and contempt by a light-hearted gossip paragraph. |
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The relationship between Peters and his controller rarely rises above mutual contempt. |
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This vile display shows a contempt for all the rules of warfare, and all the bounds of civilized behavior. |
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The book is something of a tour de force in creating sympathy for a character who, properly speaking, ought to arouse feelings of contempt. |
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Since a man has been charged with that murder, the short film clip risked running foul of the law on contempt of court. |
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To relate its massive increases to only one service was a ludicrous gesture and can only be worthy of our contempt. |
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Watch out for scorn, sarcasm, ridicule and contempt and inappropriate humour. |
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Their fantasy of Englishness did not include the literary Bengali babu, for whom they felt contempt and distrust. |
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They are cheap, tawdry politicians not worthy of anything other than contempt. |
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It found him in contempt of court, and found that he had attempted to scandalise the Family Court. |
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Yet he struggled with contempt for his social background and deficient education. |
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In fact, the reason I remember this particular presentation at all is the scorn, contempt, and derision that followed. |
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The first five were friends from school teasing him in fun or scorning him with contempt. |
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But if people showed through the ballot box their contempt for bigotry, a major blow could be struck against extremist politics. |
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He described the article as a scurrilous attack on the personal character of a judge, which may constitute a contempt of court. |
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His pride in barbering and his lack of education make him, like the other barbers, an object of Jimmy's contempt. |
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The Truth About Drug Companies, by Dr Marcia Angell, is a searing indictment of an industry that has a cynical contempt for consumers. |
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No matter how good his material is, the audience wear him down with a mixture of catatonia and contempt. |
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O'Hagan did not always have such seething contempt for all things Caledonian. |
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The true secularist's distrust of the 'order of prophecy' can turn his indifference towards religion into actual disdain and contempt. |
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Never should the great courses be threatened with obsolescence because of greed and contempt for the treasures of the game. |
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The destruction of the Dutch fleet at Camperdown only confirmed the contempt felt in Paris for the ineffectiveness of the Batavians. |
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The American neocons only ever had contempt for this self-abasing style of diplomacy. |
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This arrogant contempt for our local town and parish councils by Bradford shows that you cannot serve two masters. |
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She had treated me with contempt, and the only way to cope with my feelings was to be hateful towards her. |
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They hold the foreigners in contempt, calling them aliens and capering about in a pathetic attempt to feel superior. |
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Both Democratic and Republican senators treated him with impatience bordering on contempt. |
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The primary methods of enforcement on the breach of injunctive orders are committal for contempt and sequestration of assets. |
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But all his kindness has earned him not the thanks of the toffee-nosed British Establishment but their supercilious contempt. |
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Nor was he much better behaved towards Penny, whom he bullied and whose husband he treated with contempt. |
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He also reminds readers that neutral status in wartime runs the risk of attracting contempt from belligerent states. |
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The real reason why he inspires such contempt among bien pensant types is that they cannot bear the thought that he is right. |
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They can hold people in contempt of court, and when litigants consent, magistrate judges can preside at civil jury trials. |
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She sent him a look of contempt before shoving past them and going out the front door. |
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The boys looked at Will in mock horror and disgust, moving away from Will ever so slightly in supposed contempt. |
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More straightforwardly aggressive 12 months ago, yesterday he mixed contempt with pitying mockery. |
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How tragic is this modish contempt for the past and obsession with the sensation of the present. |
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I hope voters everywhere will treat this blackmail with the contempt it deserves. |
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To treat the people as such morons is little short of contempt, but appears not to be resented. |
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He smiled a sickly simper, eyeing the rabbit with more contempt by the minute. |
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Angel speaks of the cultist with contempt and his typical slangy eloquence. |
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His undisguised contempt for the press and his refusal to answer journalists' questions provoked grumbling within the White House press corps. |
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The Defence Secretary rattled through his performance with undisguised contempt for the military tradition he was liquidating. |
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It is a criminological commonplace that it is counter-productive to pass unenforceable laws because this breeds general contempt for the law. |
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Indeed, contempt for the acting profession pervades the film, embodied in the figure of Sutter, the studio bondsman on Howard's tail. |
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Try as he might, he could not hold back the contempt he felt as he mustered a reply. |
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Where hostility and mutual contempt have replaced love and respect, it is in no one's best interests to prolong the agony. |
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The entire show is predicated on Mandy's naked contempt for the relentlessly unlikeable Billy. |
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The father later used a racial slur against the child's stepfather, and was held in contempt for this. |
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The term ' slush pile ' gives a clear flavour of the contempt in which unsolicited submissions are held. |
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His criticism of religion was unsparing, as was his contempt for those who pinned progressive hopes on it. |
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Yet by the end of his stay contempt had been replaced by admiration for the ingenuity of the Neapolitans in coping with an impossible situation. |
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Some marched past him, giving him anything from a passing glance to a narrow eyed stare of contempt and a snide remark. |
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Sophie has a particular contempt for parental angst, for signs of unwarranted doubt or despair among the allegedly mature. |
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I began to be aware of a change in the temper of my thoughts, a greater boldness, a contempt of danger, a solution of the bonds of obligation. |
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Such behavior exemplifies the utter contempt in which he was held by U.S. officials. |
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Each and every further utterance of these feeble claims, simply illustrates the ignorance and contempt in which these people view the military. |
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They seem unable to resist the temptation to express contempt and hostility for those less sophisticated and cultured than themselves. |
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The newswoman oozed contempt from every strand of her short cropped bleached blond locks. |
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She never disguised her contempt for the left and in particular the Soviets. |
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What are the fatal flaws that bring him into such contempt among his own peer group? |
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He also received a further six weeks for contempt after spitting at a court official. |
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In April 2002, he was jailed for six weeks for contempt of court for spitting at a police liaison officer in court. |
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I have made my contempt and disgust for them so plain and apparent that they can't buy me off without the appearance of accepting my insult. |
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But to buy into his sinister conclusions means buying into his level of contempt for the present authority. |
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Despite his obvious contempt for anything celestial, I continued to peep discreetly into the astrology columns of newspapers and magazines. |
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He has long nourished a special contempt for the country he sees as a lone outpost of Western ideals in the Middle East. |
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I'm warning you Mr. Goonsburg, if I have one more intervention like that from you again I'll have you up for contempt of court. |
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And on the need for contempt powers, he recounted how officials at times refused to obey the orders. |
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He managed to stay out of the gutter, his contempt of the frailties of his colleagues barely camouflaged. |
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It is not uncommon for artists to voice contempt for capitalistic processes. |
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Even his intimate friends in the literary circuit dread the occasional outbursts which reflect his cynical humour and contempt for hypocrites. |
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I just pursed my lips and smiled superciliously ahead, hoping my contempt would irritate him further. |
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By the time he is chucked out of the funeral home, he has stirred the audience's pity and contempt in equal measure. |
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Indeed, he was told he would face a contempt of court citation if he disclosed either his complaint or the censure. |
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And to this day we are still seen and treated with contempt as a lesser people by these hypocrites who so boldly talk of democracy. |
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He resists with buffoonery on the set, peevish demands for attention, and displays of contempt for her direction. |
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English soccer hordes have brought disgrace to themselves, contempt on their nation and ignominy to those who try, fitfully, to govern them. |
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The 20th century, with its general contempt for the 'well-made' work, persistently misunderstood him. |
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It has rid us of a pestilential politics based on religious hatred and elitist contempt for the poor. |
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But familiarity breeds contempt among wrestling fans, who want to know what a wrestler has done for them lately. |
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They say familiarity breeds contempt and I can certainly vouch for that when it comes to door-to-door salesmen. |
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First, a decision to imprison the man for contempt of court should never be taken too quickly. |
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That is to say a man would be committed to prison until such time as he purged his contempt by complying with the order. |
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If he does not consent, he is at risk of committal to prison for contempt of court. |
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Yet, because the common mass of humanity was so far beneath him, he had nothing but contempt for it. |
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Johan detests his son's ineffectuality, spewing contempt when Henrik requests a loan. |
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If you wanted to insult a social inferior, you displayed your contempt by bludgeoning him with a cane. |
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Colin, despite his general enthusiasm for cons, harbors contempt towards what he considers the illiteracy of many fans. |
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Churchill was a remnant of a feudal system and his contempt for progress expressed itself in his attitude towards workers. |
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His contempt for foreigners includes the Englishman, but is carefully concealed. |
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The attitude betrays a contempt for the very system people in the party believed in and thought they fought an election for. |
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Where do they get the authority and encouragement to practise their childish, schoolyard insolence and contempt of our leaders? |
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For sheer insolence and contempt for the electorate, her statement is hard to beat. |
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The authors confuse their contempt of the opposition with an accurate apprehension of the opposition. |
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The attorney general can take proceedings for contempt of court against anyone who attempts to interfere with a witness. |
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Such clear contempt for the principles of the German constitution has seldom been so openly evinced by a leading politician. |
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They really were expressions of contempt and rebellion toward what his peers regarded as holy. |
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This showing of contempt had an obvious effect on Edwards, who was visibly shaken. |
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Any such failure should be construed as contempt of court and should therefore attract prosecution of the police officers involved. |
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Well, I think his father had a certain contempt for the public relations factor in the presidency. |
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If we can also apply this kind of contempt and scorn to people who, say, kill police officers, we'll really get somewhere. |
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Any company that treats its customers with such contempt deserves to go out of business, many said. |
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The result of releasing these photographs would be, most likely, initial shock followed by disgust, contempt and repugnance. |
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These twentieth century cannibals deserve the greatest scorn and contempt from all workers and humanitarians! |
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For all of the above reasons, the Applicants' motion for contempt is denied. |
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They look upon it as a thing of contempt and scorn people who swear by virtual relationships. |
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This power, exercised politically for far too long, has added to the public's contempt for the honours that are now made. |
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Really, how can the media deny that they have utter contempt for the public? |
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On the other hand the youth, like many others of his ilk these days, shows total disregard and contempt for authority of any kind. |
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In the bars he'd frequented as a cowboy hotshot, the elite stance involved a certain relaxed contempt for the flesh. |
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It observes that the disregard and contempt for human rights have resulted in barbarous acts that have outraged the conscience of mankind. |
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What standard of measuring respect or contempt for human life should we use in making these judgments? |
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Their contempt for human life and disregard for the principle of non-combatant immunity stem not from despair and anger, but from nihilism. |
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As for all the timid, mealy-mouthed incrementalists, Porter has only contempt for that kind of thinking. |
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Will the Councillors ignore these people by treating their concerns as only emotional and with contempt go ahead with the Emigrant Creek effluent disposal option? |
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Jim Harrison steps out of that tradition, but with contempt for its pretensions. |
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We are all shocked at what seems like the rising tide of almost casual violence in our city and the growing contempt for the inviolability of human life. |
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And even if he held her in contempt now, he had loved her once. |
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Her Mormon boyfriend, stricken with guilt, takes her to meet his bishop, where they jointly receive holy contempt. |
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In fact, he recoiled in disgust, his contempt clearly showing on his face. |
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They shares certain characteristics, notably an indiscriminate worship of business and moneymaking, a belief in the power of the media, and a contempt for the left. |
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She slept with them even though they treated her with contempt. |
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I cannot recall a time when journos were held in such contempt. |
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My lip curled in contempt as I noticed the thing clinging to his arm. |
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Alora almost spat, the contempt for her foster mother painfully obvious. |
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But amidst society's contempt and mockery, young people built a movement strong enough to make Congress realize the practicality of lowering the voting age. |
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The credulous nature of Americans drew only contempt from him. |
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These people are beneath contempt and must be brought to justice. |
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The raid, which failed, was followed by a lengthy and inconclusive inquiry by a select committee of the Commons, at which Rhodes acted with unconcealed contempt and arrogance. |
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A Kansas that enshrines discrimination against gays is, implicitly, a Kansas that has declared its contempt for their lives. |
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The first sign that one may be ready to join such alternative modes of security may be a contempt, or, at the minimum, a dissatisfaction with the society of the spectacle. |
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His contempt for judges and politicians was so absorbing that I read the book in two sittings. |
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It is not surprising that public contempt for parliament increases and that broadcasting House of Commons' debates has resulted in MPs falling even lower in public esteem. |
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The wildly anarchic chaos created by the Marx Brothers at their best was a breath of fresh air, and their contempt for authority figures struck a chord with Milligan. |
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Still, there's no contempt or cynicism in Ryan's attitude here. |
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Tarantino is too unfocused to be a parodist, rather, Kill Bill conveys contempt for its characters, certainly for humanity and even the action genres that supposedly enamor the director. |
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These proposals seem to express an element of contempt for pet owners. |
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Alastair Sim had jowls like melting candle wax, a snarl like a cornered cat and eyes cold with contempt. |
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Most Britons greeted this fraud with the scorn and contempt it deserves. |
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Much of the religiosity of Gladstone's liberal vision derived from Burke, but without his anger, hyperbole, fervent public emotionality and contempt and fear of Nonconformists. |
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Of course, if the matter goes to trial, the witness can be compelled to attend to give evidence, and may be in contempt of court for failing to do so. |
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This arrogance and contempt for public opinion must be curbed. |
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I just do not want it alleged that I am in contempt of court, my Lord. |
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He had everything, the mod sense of dress, an upwardly mobile lifestyle, a healthy contempt for authority and an irrepressible belief in his own creativity. |
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I will not attempt to hide my utter contempt for such casuistry, nor my shame that I work in and organisation where colleagues would resort to it to justify torture. |
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In all three cases the conclusion reached was that a deliberate intention to breach the order was not a necessary element for a finding of contempt of court. |
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It is behaviour of such abject venality as to be almost beneath contempt. |
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Second, if familiarity breeds contempt, anonymous familiarity seems to fuel it even more. |
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Unfortunately the Globe's photo hadn't been entered into evidence at the trial, meaning the legal beagles at the Minion were in contempt of court. |
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Indeed Taubira, in particular, has been a lightning rod for opposition contempt. |
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To compound it, Rice then treats her limp form with what appears to be cold contempt. |
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Arguably it was this contempt for the top brass, more than anything, which was to save the world from a rain of death. |
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The charges stem from the attempted arrest for contempt of court. |
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If familiarity breeds contempt, then overindulgence breeds snobbish connoisseurship. |
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He said under parliamentary law, it was a breach of privilege and contempt of either House to obstruct, insult or molest a member while in the execution of his duties. |
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He had ascended the throne with the blessing of Russian Emperor Alexander II, but his successor Alexander III felt personal contempt for the Bulgarian prince. |
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I need to tread very carefully since there are certain matters that are before the courts, and I know only too well about being chucked in jail for contempt of court. |
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With regard to prior restraint in the area of contempt of court law, the courts seem to lack any awareness of the restrictive effect prior restraint has on freedom of expression. |
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Both Judith Gautier and Gumilev inherited the Parnassian cult of the artificial, as well as its contempt for the slavish imitation of nature in art. |
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Outlaw, really, your attempting to moralize instinct, and so far the only thing I can see your achieving is contempt for the many that helps no one. |
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Secondly, the party disobeying the contempt order must do so in a deliberate and willful fashion in order to satisfy the criminal nature of the contempt proceedings. |
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Their contempt for those they lorded it over never diminished. |
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Even better, he is prepared to stand up for his beliefs and treat the smug superiority of the trimmers, appeasers and Euro-elites with the contempt that they deserve. |
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Fortunately, they are drawn from a pathetic preterite far beneath the contempt of our cultural elite. |
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Until the middle of the 19th century, Congress would enforce contempt citations itself, with the sergeants-at-arms taking guilty parties into custody. |
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They were exploited by the white ruling class and treated with contempt by British governors, whose fiscal policies were designed only to benefit whites. |
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They will not be released until they purge their contempt of court. |
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It arose from the puritans' custom of wearing their hair cut close round their heads, like apprentices, who shortened their hair to demonstrate their contempt for lovelocks. |
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It reflects not merely indecorousness but also a contempt for the law. |
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Now, because he was her client, she tried to look at his unskillful behavior, and the ways he shut himself off, with compassion instead of contempt and fear. |
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He gestured to Straeger, who was looking so disdainfully at her that Voelker could feel the withering contempt radiating from him as though he were telepathic himself. |
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Hove's incandescent anger and contempt for the lies and platitudes of the time-serving politicians, opposition as well as government, burns off the page. |
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Hortense has long been shrouded in mystery and critical contempt, in part because so little is known about her. |
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Kelly was hardly alone in his contempt for the snooty officials. |
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I never knew that the judge could sentence me to prison for contempt of Court, unless I answered all the blackguardly questions about the Masters. |
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As usual the hunters show complete disregard, even contempt for people who live in this village many of whom, like me, are totally opposed to this wicked and barbaric pastime. |
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The President and his party are making their contempt all too clear to white working-class voters. |
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His eyes blaze with contempt and disdain for you and your people. |
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I am satisfied to the criminal standard of proof that the wife wilfully breached the orders in question and I find her to be in contempt of those orders. |
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The extremely unedifying combination of the episcopal gutlessness on display in DC and the bureaucratic contempt for the flock on display here has a number of people livid. |
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This contempt and indifference simply underscores the fact that the ruling class has no solution to any of the immense social problems confronting working people. |
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As the power struggle between the Paris-born merchant prince and the Brooklyn-born whiz has played out, rivals have watched with fascination and contempt. |
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Your contempt for anyone who disagrees with you is plain as day. |
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That, however, does not mean that there are no cases of negligent contempt where a penalty in the form of committal or sequestration would be appropriate. |
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Mr. K had nothing but contempt for it all, sticking to his formula of discipline, repetition, and hollering. |
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In all the annals of arrogance for which this Government and that Secretary of State have become notorious this utter display of contempt for Parliament bulks large. |
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Yet in a global war, Churchill's coalition government faced not just open rebellion but open contempt from senior parliamentarians on both benches. |
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Always reading her I feel a faint contempt and yet an equally faint jokiness prevails. |
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The government rejects with contempt the ugly doublespeak and double-standards of Congress and its friends in Parliament. |
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If they release the movie while the matter is sub judice they would be inviting proceedings under contempt of court, too. |
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Age looks with anger on the temerity of youth, and youth with contempt on the scrupulosity of age. |
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He feels that wealthy people view him with contempt because he is poor. |
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To punish me for my contempt of authority, Fate has made me an authority myself. |
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From the first bewrayments of infancy to the last accidents of senility, we furnish contempt to one another by our discomfitures. |
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The Attorney General applied for an order for contempt of court against the New Statesman. |
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While some Yanks treated contrabands with a degree of equity or benevolence, the more typical response was indifference, contempt, or cruelty. |
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Thinking himself contemned, knowing no countermine against contempt but terror. |
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He had rather a contempt for demonstrative people, arising from his medical insight into the consequences to health of uncontrolled feeling. |
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They must be taken with an air of contempt, a floccinaucinihilipilification of all that can gratify the outward man. |
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Forester soon took an aversion to the game of goff, and recollected Scotch reels with less contempt. |
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That virtue is called bravery which contains greatheartedness and a lofty contempt of pain and death. |
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