And while we're on the subject, can we please
strike phrases such as «bikini body» from our vocabulary?
Not exact matches
Similarly to the Rands, the president is stirred by Chauncey's turn of
phrase, finding his mutterings about groundskeeping to be a deeply penetrative insight on the human condition encoded in a lush metaphor («Spring is the time for planting,» and other
such banalities somehow
strike the intelligentsia
as freely profound).
A
phrase such «alternative images» does not
strike me
as being in anyway scientific.
Thus, it may be now that courts will be less interventionist in
striking down high pay - offs (especially
as Sedley LJ said that the judge had erred «by letting himself be drawn into acting more nearly
as an auditor than
as a judge» — a neat
phrase for counsel to throw at any judge tempted to do likewise) and if the new government want to stop
such payments this puts the ball very much back into their (legislative) court.
Even more exciting is the possibility of seeing a pattern in the words or
phrases and coming up with words that
strike right to the heart of customer desires,
such as «cost - of - living comparison.»