Like Nabokov, whose family was similarly fallen, he displayed a complex mix of elite liberalism and disdainful conservatism. |
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Rene replied with a look that was much more disdainful and stuck-up than she had intended, and walked quickly out the door. |
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The punky couple gave me a disdainful look, and I could only slink out abashed. |
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Thankfully there were no other people in the room to be snottily disdainful, but Naomi looked a little taken aback. |
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Were he human, each victory would be accompanied by a Gallic shrug of the shoulders and a disdainful pout of the lips. |
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The woman strode past him with a disdainful sneer and entering the temple, glanced about. |
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Most of the time he fell back on cold disdainful looks and mocking sneers, which were working out pretty well. |
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Its practitioners are in fact inclined to be rather disdainful of any such systemising or self-consistency seeking enterprise. |
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Danny stepped away, and cast one last disdainful look at Scott before going backstage, and presumably leaving the theater. |
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Some faculty members seem to express a condescending, at times almost disdainful, attitude. |
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Several well-dressed older women shot them disdainful looks before looking away, noses upturned. |
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It would be arrogant and disdainful of you to assume that glorious mantle by yourself. |
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Her disdainful tone dismissed the idea of anyone desirable sending love letters. |
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Though her words were perfectly respectful, there was a disdainful tone to her voice. |
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The simple words oozed with disdainful contempt that seemed to pass unnoticed. |
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Several of the priests in the procession looked over the crowd with disdainful, superior expressions. |
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No one was openly hostile, but a few exhibited a rather disdainful sneer as they walked by. |
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His face was cold and disdainful, and his back was straight with haughty pride. |
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Very few movies seem as disdainful of their audience to quite the degree of this one. |
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I'm not arguing that employers should be disdainful of their workers' happiness. |
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He held his head stiffly with his nose angled upward and his lips pursed with a superior, disdainful expression. |
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It was always difficult, despite the president's disdainful silence on the subject, to imagine that all this was going on without his knowledge. |
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There prevails at present, an attitude that is all at once, mutually suspicious, disdainful and hostile. |
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Many qualitative researchers are disdainful of approaches to research that entail the imposition of predetermined formats on the social world. |
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A disdainful pull shot over mid-on and mid-wicket is just such a shot and yesterday, en route to his 14th Test century, he played it twice. |
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As Kant remarked, this is said in a lofty, disdainful tone, full of the presumption of wanting to reform reason by experience. |
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She looked haughty and stuck-up, her face disdainful as she looked down at me. |
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And when some of the finer diners cast a disdainful eye upon their shabby, old-fashioned dresses, the two women merely giggled and stared right back at them. |
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Despite a dithering Congress and a disdainful American public, the diplomatic doors opened. |
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With the government firmly in its grasp, the PT has been disdainful of Congress. |
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To my mind, this attitude is not only disdainful, but also anti-democratic. |
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His eyes darkened, his disdainful expression frozen in place. |
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Is he trustworthy enough so that you don't have to feel fearful about exulting over it in front of your conservative friends who seem mightily disdainful? |
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A serious, sharp-tempered widow of twenty-nine, Lis is disdainful of most things where the Irish are concerned. |
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The air of petulant self-preoccupation, the arrogantly sensitive beauty, the mannered, disdainful lyricism. |
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She corrects and encourages and does not let negligence and or disdainful attitudes slip by. |
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It makes you sceptical toward statements for which no evidence is presented, and disdainful of insincere promises. |
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Barristers were a product of the upper and upper middle class, and it showed in the disdainful approach that many had to their criminal clients. |
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Mao tried to ban superstitions, disdainful of their hold on the popular imagination if not of the Mao cult that arose in their place. |
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It should explain its disdainful and indifferent attitude, which undermines democracy. |
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Consequently, before the Council waves them away with a flick of its somewhat disdainful hand, I invite it to take a closer look at them. |
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There is often confusion and one speaks of refugees in a disdainful way, as if they were not worthy of respect. |
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He had a rather disdainful view of some other technological supports available. |
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However, the attitude of France had been at best inattentive, at worst somewhat disdainful. |
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It's all in that gaze, simultaneously serene and disdainful. |
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And viciously contemning the Church more often than not entails a disdainful sidelong glance at the benighted faithful who persist in allegiance to her. |
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He was as disdainful about the modern breed of leaders as he was about the Polish intellectuals back then. |
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Stewart was disdainful of the upstart network, and in the final meeting to sign the contract, would not even look at Ober. |
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It is advisable that he weigh more carefully his disdainful utterances if he wants to be taken seriously beyond the narrow circle of his lickspittles. |
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Australia's tall poppy syndrome refers to a tendency for Australians to downplay achievement to the extent of being disdainful of such people, and so to cut them down to size. |
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He was the classic dour, authoritarian socialist, a masterly desk and committee politician but disdainful of and untalented at electoral politics. |
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They often display snobbish, disdainful or patronizing attitudes. |
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It assumes an arrogant stance, disdainful of the workers, of the smallest members of society, under the pretext that it is protecting the safety of Canadians. |
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Nor is the fact that Eritrea's contemptuous and disdainful dismissal of the United Nations poses a major threat to the future of United Nations peacekeeping. |
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She is disdainful of her brother's easygoing, untidy ways and has hated Snitter since she first met him. |
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On occasions, it reflects pupil resentment towards teachers viewed as too disdainful or, conversely, opposition towards young teachers who have been unable to command respect. |
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All those efforts have been flatly rebuffed by the Eritrean authorities, whose attitude and conduct, moreover, have been disdainful, haughty and irresponsible. |
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Instead of worrying about what will happen in Kosovo tomorrow, it would be better, Mr President, for us to think about what will happen when the status of the UN is violated in this insulting, disdainful manner. |
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They say Rwandans are pretentious, have inflated views of their own intelligence, are haughty and disdainful, bitter, easily irritated, loud, argumentative, like to show off and are quick-tempered. |
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He was disdainful of those he thought of as the little people. He openly sneered at them. They mocked him behind his back. |
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People originating from the province of Bururi are accused of being selfish, disdainful and full of themselves while those from Mwaro are perceived as tight-fisted and miserly. |
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Related: VS Naipaul: the long arrival part one Naipaul, who is of Indian ancestry like Salim, is drawn to this visceral and dangerous scene while being at the same time disdainful of its crudeness and savagery. |
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Azaña was not a man of the people: he was one of an intellectual minority, a select and disdainful writer, an exacting, cold, precise, original dialectician. |
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Mr. Anderson refreshingly plays down the character's grim sorrowfulness and emphasizes the well-groomed fastidiousness that keeps Doc at a disdainful remove from all that Lola embodies. |
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But it does help to explain all those disdainful looks from French diners the moment an English-speaking family walks through the door of the brasserie with toddlers in tow. |
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Emerging in her dressing-gown, the disdainful and feline Hedda is welcomed noisily by her husband, who reminded her that when he got up himself that morning that she was sleeping like a log. |
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In his quirky way Bennett is the playwright, rather as JB Priestley once was, of the post-industrial England of which so many in the south are both ignorant and disdainful. |
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Cicero is also generally disdainful of myth, but, like Varro, he is emphatic in his support for the state religion and its institutions. |
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The commission should recommend that salmon farms, which are operated in an uncooperative, disdainful and probably illegal fashion, be removed from ocean waters. |
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Calling this beetle-browed disdainful young person, hair hanging in her face, jaws chewing pecan pie with mechanical precision, honey! |
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She glimpsed at the people whom she had left behind, and smirked in the most disdainful manner towards them. |
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Most of them have a slightly disdainful and arrogant attitude. |
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Milton was disdainful of the university curriculum, which consisted of stilted formal debates conducted in Latin on abstruse topics. |
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However, it is certainly disgraceful, perhaps even disdainful, that we do not look at this issue with more importance and take the opportunity to have a full fledged debate in the House of Commons. |
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Canadians are not happy that basic rights are being trampled and that the government is disdainful of the inherent right to self-government, and of the treaties signed by our forefathers. |
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Thus, in an interview with Radio-Canada, the Quebec minister of economic development, Raymond Bachand, took a clear stand against the minister's decision, describing it as ideological and disdainful. |
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What we have been treated to instead is a stubborn, arrogant, obtuse and disdainful government and Prime Minister wanting only to thumb their noses at the opposition. |
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Yes, indeed, the Conservatives' attitude is not only disdainful of the intelligence of the Quebec electorate, but also it challenges the legitimacy of the sovereignist parties' existence. |
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She gave a disdainful flick of her hair and marched out of the room. |
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A general rise in regional pride and appreciation for the Low Saxon identity made the earlier openly disdainful attitude towards Low Saxon seem to have subsided somewhat. |
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