How on earth could we have put this scheming, mendacious little man and his miserable claque back in office for another three years? |
|
Bring on your mendacious public relations men, your scheming politicians, your grasping fumblers in greasy tills! |
|
Overall, Wittenberg portrays him as a petty, hypocritical, mendacious man whose primary focus was self-promotion. |
|
And despite the fact that I've been almost exclusively mendacious since my late teens, it's not rained on me once. |
|
The common treatment of the monopoly question is thoroughly mendacious and dishonest. |
|
He cannot go on being a mendacious sybarite inside and outside Parliament, and get away with it. |
|
The fate of the farm animals was so grim, the pigs so mean and mendacious and treacherous, the sheep so stupid. |
|
It is an outright lie, a fabrication by a mendacious and unscrupulous writer. |
|
It's another reason I so prefer the culture of science to that of our sneeringly mendacious government administration. |
|
But it's no more mendacious than a bunch of other tendentious uses of statistics that are the common coin of political debate today. |
|
Another strand recounts the author's debilitating experiences with the music industry in all its mendacious vainglory. |
|
All along, he was an audacious mountebank and a mendacious bully, who knew almost nothing about actual existing communism and who never identified a single Soviet agent. |
|
It made use of procedural loopholes and contained a number of mendacious and unsubstantiated claims. |
|
Instead, the justifications offered for the restrictions contained in the amendment to the act have been either disingenuous or simply mendacious. |
|
What a mean, tight-wad, mendacious, xenophobic and bad-mannered government we have. |
|
It's often hard to tell whether their discretion is valorous, mendacious, guilt-ridden, grandiose, or merely vain. |
|
The new government in 2010 made mendacious comparisons between Britain and Greece. |
|
High-flying public talk, when carried out in a climate of censorship, cannot help but be mendacious. |
|
And it is being perpetrated under the mendacious cover of alleged over-production. |
|
That is why I do not think that we should be taken in by these mendacious arguments. |
|
|
What else could CFS then be but any number of various psychiatric, social, hysterical or mendacious phenomena? |
|
Even the most intense, mendacious propaganda could not conceal that Germany's forces were being beaten back. |
|
The film is more than unusual in its attempt to connect society's dysfunction and popular misery with the actions of a hypocritical, mendacious ruling elite. |
|
It is quite possible that his only truly shameful act was his abandonment of his daughter and her mother, not to mention his mendacious behaviour toward my mother. |
|
He wanted me to know the sort of country I was living in and what was going on around me, in defiance of the chronically mendacious official propaganda. |
|
Though one imagines that successful players must be mean, damaged and mendacious, he turned out to be a thoroughly charming and friendly bear of a man. |
|
He's mendacious and obnoxious, so what accounts for his appeal? |
|
It has been the task of Canadian Alliance MPs, and they have shouldered this task in an admirable way, to slog their way through that red book of promises and find out just how mendacious they are. |
|
They are deceived... by those highly mendacious documents which profess to give the history of many thousand years, though reckoning by the sacred writings, we find that not 6,000 years have yet passed. |
|
Undertaken from 1979 to 1983, the much-litigated and not always conclusively documented story of its construction has much to divert both those who would see Trump as a visionary deal-maker or as a mendacious double-dealer. |
|
Manipulative and mendacious, it is attacking not just the Government but, more seriously, the institutions of the rule of law, as well as the courts and the state security agencies and forces. |
|
Crude and mendacious it may be, but the Sun senses the popular mood. |
|
Last April, the centre-right Fidesz party gained more than two-thirds of seats, ousting a socialist government widely perceived as corrupt and mendacious. |
|
With the cool cat away, the mendacious mouse would play. |
|
Even in societies satiated with information, there is a desperate need to distinguish sense from nonsense, the important from the trivial and the truth from the mendacious. |
|
That was from the beginning a mendacious pretext. |
|
When they see their credibility collapsing and disintegrating, the European Union institutions resort ever more frequently to mendacious propaganda and to funding and imposing a single, true' vision of European unity. |
|
The major parties offer me a mendacious stumblebum or a rapacious liar. |
|
Mendacious City Council members shafted us poor, hapless, ignorant sheeple again. |
|