If you cannot stomach a breach of decorum when justified outrage erupts then your support is nearly worthless anyway. |
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Although I deal with people at all levels, I maintain a level head and a certain level of decorum even when I am very friendly with colleagues. |
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You owe him civil behavior, consideration, and decorum, not a vow of chastity. |
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Cultural repression facilitated by decorum lies at the root of the humanistic classicism informing the Renaissance sketchbooks. |
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Although she is clothed modestly and moves with decorum, her song is about her happy anticipation of her wedding night. |
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Boswell proved, too, surprisingly sure of himself in matters of taste and artistic decorum. |
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I lost all decorum of table etiquette as I held the chop between my fingers and picked the bone clean. |
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Maybe she knows exactly where she is, but she doesn't give a fig about decorum. |
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Do I think I could contain myself and restrain myself with the proper amount of professional decorum? |
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Analects passages such as these made Confucius the model of courtliness and personal decorum for countless generations of Chinese officials. |
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People flowed to their seats with decorum eagerly anticipating the thrill of gourmet cuisine. |
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He showed no respect for party decorum, challenging a sitting Republican president who he felt was too moderate. |
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At fourteen, Patrick had an expansive personality, one built to collide with rectory decorum. |
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There was a certain lack of decorum and taste at the Daily Record last week. |
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Of course, if you conduct yourself with impeccable taste and decorum, you will soon bore the reporters, and they will stop covering you. |
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I must say that the chairman handled the job with decorum and taste, and with the dignity required of him. |
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All Hindu women, respecting customs of decorum and demureness, refrain from drinking alcohol in public. |
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I just request that we try to treat this proceeding with some dignity and some decorum. |
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Joanna did herself proud, showing that Polish youth can carry themselves with dignity and decorum all over the world. |
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On the ship he played bingo, went to the shows, dressed for dinner, and maintained his silent decorum. |
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All the guests were models of decorum, grace and manners and I didn't know if I would get used to such good behaviour. |
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The idea of decorum had its strongest hold on the traditions of portraiture of nobles and worthies. |
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Also, please do ignore these boorish Yanks who go about their business with flagrant disregard for military decorum and totally without charm. |
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Leonardo's famous passage on the godlike power of the artist is cited at this point, but this passage has nothing to do with style and decorum. |
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Finally decorum and restraint are swept aside, and the voice explodes, white with anger. |
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The entire island was designated a naval base, and villagers were expected to conform to naval standards of hygiene and decorum. |
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Principles associated with classicism include order, proportion, balance, harmony, decorum, and avoidance of excess. |
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The concert hall is a gerontocracy, its decorum enforced more rigidly than in places of worship, its exclusiveness innate. |
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Today's social decorum might dictate a dismissal of overtly sexist, cheap popular imagery. |
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And as your husband, I will expect respect, decorum, and properness a woman is supposed to display. |
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Although we might expect him to respond to such success with decorum, he took the opposite tack, highlighting his improprieties and provocations. |
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We want all persons in Bahamian public life to act with probity, decorum, honesty and forthrightness. |
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Other positive characteristics of the Saturnian type are what may be termed the good old-fashioned values of courtesy, decorum, and propriety. |
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They committed themselves to elaborate codes of behavior that included respect for women and a certain mannerly decorum. |
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Such moments set the tenor for the place, where a sense of old-fashioned decorum co-exists with informality. |
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No matter how vigorous the steps, the old-style ballerinas radiated a glittering authority, decorum, and elegance. |
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While ghosting may be more and more socially permissible, she believes a long-term relationship requires certain standards of decorum. |
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The scene was a triumph of decorum, until Harmon, an enormous cat, entered the room, carrying a dead goldfish. |
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The hypocrite is a good example for other people, a model of probity and decorum, at least until the truth comes out. |
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But faith in the classical virtues of decorum and modesty remained with him until his death. |
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On the trek across the Sahara it was vital that decorum, etiquette and social graces were left at the airport! |
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He's obviously the boofhead and the clown of the family, as his siblings are models of sensitivity and decorum. |
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In Delhi, retaining a customer's forgotten belongings is against business decorum. |
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You don't have to follow the rules of social decorum or the niceties of society because you are privileged. |
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I prefer my men with a sense of good taste and decorum that you have yet to demonstrate. |
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In the past few weeks, Emily Dickinson has been asked to don her Sunday bests, the vestments of public decorum. |
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Levis hid behind the conventions and decorum of poetry to disarm his readers and plunder their hearts. |
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Indeed, the decorum and etiquette long associated with the game at all levels seem to be losing ground all too quickly. |
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He codified a layered system of mosque types, reflecting hierarchies of social status and territorial rank, shaped by notions of identity, memory and decorum. |
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And literary decorum, to elaborate, is almost the opposite of what decorum means in real life, which means etiquette basically. |
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They thanked him profusely for his public service, apologized for Republican hectoring, and complained about decorum. |
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At a certain point is past the line of decorum, but, you know, this is New York. |
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Not to mention violating whatever sense of decorum is left in the halls of Congress. |
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But with this pope still up and about, and a lame duck at that, the old sense of decorum may not apply. |
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By comparison, Cody's day job is a bastion of reserve and decorum. |
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These nonchalant brutalities seem at first at odds with the genteel decorum that mostly cloaks late-19th century culture. |
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Erial stuck to pure manners and decorum, knowing that any sign of affection to any member of the regiment might drive Dan mad with jealousy or grief. |
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Traveler decorum dictates that travelers are guests in the hospital. |
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To be clear, I'm not opposed to modesty in film if decorum calls for it. |
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Pure invective, unmitigated by any sophistication, subtlety or decorum. |
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Referees spited him for his nonstop lip-flapping and lack of decorum. |
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Unlike most news anchors, who are known for button-down decorum and a calming presence, he has been a persistently outspoken, dramatic and frequently polarizing figure. |
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Charles's household ordinances were intended to re-introduce order and decorum into court life by re-establishing the etiquette of Henry VIII's time. |
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Their purpose may be better read as a contrast to the guests, both physically in terms of dress and appearance, and socially, in terms of education and decorum. |
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Parents gave their children privacy to court alone, often removing themselves from the parlor, trusting that decorum would prevent improper behavior. |
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By performing the personal in public, talk-show guests transgress the boundaries of behavior and decorum deemed appropriate by middle-class society. |
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Of these, the most striking is Matthew G. Lewis, whose novel The Monk cast aside Radcliffe's decorum in its sensational depictions of diabolism and incestuous rape. |
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As a result, modern elegies more often than not break with the decorum of earlier modes of mourning and become melancholic, self-centered, or mocking. |
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As the authorities dealt with the worst excesses, public decorum was gradually restored. |
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It was sort of a finishing school. You know, to teach proper social decorum and so on and so forth. |
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All entrants regardless of religious affiliation are expected to respect the rules and decorum for mosques. |
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And I would ask counsel to check his sense of humor at the door. My courtroom is a temple of decorum, and I do not tolerate jibber-jabber. |
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Other than Jane and Elizabeth, several members of the Bennet family show a distinct lack of decorum. |
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As with the outside, elegance and bankerly decorum is provided by very careful control of proportions and good materials. |
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Over time, her quiet decorum, loyalty and genuine affection for Charles changed the public's perception of her. |
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In this new world, ruled by charlatans and dominated by demireps, Talleyrand may have found much to shock his sense of decorum, but little to outrage his moral standards. |
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About everything he wrote there was a certain natural grace and decorum. |
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In her day, Ms Loren was a knockout but age requires decorum. |
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Originally a grammatical term for syntactical ordering from language it was translated into the arts together with its prominent decorum values of Hellenismos and Latinitas. |
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The Ashcan artists, who challenged American Impressionist decorum after 1900, were committed to recording the modern world frankly and grappling with gritty urban realities. |
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Another's diving bow he did adore, Which, with a shog, casts all the hair before, Till he with full decorum brings it back, And rises with a water-spaniel shake. |
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In criticism, poets struggled with a doctrine of decorum, of matching proper words with proper sense and of achieving a diction that matched the gravity of a subject. |
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It was a collection of essays that he had contributed to the solid magazines of the day and he issued it, as became his sense of decorum, anonymously. |
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Edmond Malone, a Shakespearean scholar and critic of the late 18th century, found another supposed flaw in this particular play, its lack of a proper decorum. |
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It includes the Patimokkha, a set of 227 offences including 75 rules of decorum for monks, along with penalties for transgression, in the Theravadin tradition. |
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