Sentences with phrase «little aristocrat»

This brave and jaunty little aristocrat is loved, respected, and adored for all his idiosyncrasies.
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Of course, these spirited little aristocrats aren't perfect.

Not exact matches

The film starts with a prologue sequence in which a rich aristocrat (a blink - and - you'll - miss - him cameo by Paul Reubens) discovers his wife has given birth to a vicious little monstrosity with flippers for hands.
It's set in Venice, Italy of the 16th Century, in a liberal city that still required Jews to barter no goods, wear red hats to distinguish them from the Christian aristocrats, and be locked in the lower class part of town at night, leaving them little to support themselves but for the practice of usury, or the loaning of money for sometimes exorbitant fees.
The Scorecard Review Movie Awards: Best of the Decade (Almost) CLICK HERE to vote Funniest 2002 — My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2002 — Super Troopers 2003 — Old School 2003 — Bad Santa 2004 — Dodgeball 2004 — The Incredibles 2005 — The Wedding Crashers 2005 — The Aristocrats 2006 — Little Miss Sunshine 2006 — Borat 2007 ---LSB-...]
This may be a difficult task for the literary professor who has just published his treatise on French Aristocrats in Turkish Cinema, but for the rest of us, it gets a little easier every day.
Dividend Aristocrats — This one is a little bit of a duplicate.
Chevron is one of only two energy companies that qualify as a Dividend Aristocrat (ExxonMobil (XOM) is the other); although these companies carry a little more risk than they have in the past.
Self - confident and even a little arrogant, the Pekingese has the stately bearing of an aristocrat, but isn't above a good long snuggle on your lap or a tour of the town while tucked in the crook of your elbow.
As with many ancient working breeds, there is little direct evidence in word or picture to prove how the Corgi came to be; unlike the pets of aristocrats, working dogs were largely undocumented and tended to be lumped together as «curs» — not a derogatory term in those times, but simply used to distinguish ordinary canines from dogs of high breeding.
The enchanting little village of Cadenabbia, which sits on the shores of Lake Como in Italy, has long been a summer refuge for writers, poets and aristocrats.
However, we were shown little more than a teaser image of the umbrella toting aristocrat.
While the aristocracy has always provided the lion's share of the patronage and the audience for art — as, indeed, the aristocracy of wealth does even in our more democratic days — it has contributed little beyond amateurish efforts to the creation of art itself, despite the fact that aristocrats (like many women) have had more than their share of educational advantages, plenty of leisure and, indeed, like women, were often encouraged to dabble in the arts and even develop into respectable amateurs, like Napoleon III's cousin, the Princess Mathilde, who exhibited at the official Salons, or Queen Victoria, who, with Prince Albert, studied art with no less a figure than Landseer himself.
Wile the aristocracy has always provided the lion's share of the patronage and the audience for art — as, indeed, the aristocracy of wealth does even in our more democratic days — it has contributed little beyond amateurish efforts to the creation of art itself, despite the fact that aristocrats (like many women) have had more than their share of educational advantages, plenty of leisure and, indeed, like women, were often encouraged to dabble in the arts and even develop into respectable amateurs, like Napoleon III's cousin, the Princess Mathilde, who exhibited at the official Salons, or Queen Victoria, who, with Prince Albert, studied art with no less a figure than Landseer himself.
But then his ancestors were French aristocrats, the Ducs de Coutard, his parents leading Tory Politicians who sent their little boy to Stowe Public school and Brasenose College, Oxford, before George got a job at the BBC, trolled around the anti-roads protests for a while, sponsored by career diplomat Sir Crispin Tickell, then landing his current job as Guardian columnist.
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