Sentences with phrase «vulgar phrasing»

What a weekend for «Paddington 2» to see its American release; who knows what vulgar phrasing the president of the United States might use to refer to Paddington's home of darkest Peru?
The 29 - year - old victim, who is African - American, told police on Wednesday morning she discovered a vulgar phrase had been scratched into the sides and roof of her car sometime after 10 p.m. Tuesday.
This work, with its glowing red lights, bathes viewers in sensuality, creating an environment where one is able to consider the implications of such a vulgar phrase.
The object and meaning of the rule is this: that as, by reason of the complexity and difficulty of our law, litigation can only be properly conducted by professional men, it is absolutely necessary that a man, in order to prosecute his rights or to defend himself from an improper claim, should have recourse to the assistance of professional lawyers,... to use a vulgar phrase, that he should be able to make a clean breast of it to the gentleman whom he consults with a view to the prosecution of his claim, or the substantiating of his defence... that he should be able to place unrestricted and unbounded confidence in the professional agent, and that the communications he so makes to him should be kept secret, unless with his consent (for it is his privilege, and not the privilege of the confidential agent), that he should be enabled properly to conduct his litigation.
When I first saw the film, I too was dazzled at all the little touches — the pendant chandelier, the odd, earth - tone colors, sparkling kitchen tiles and the «red oak» floors (actually a substitute for a vulgar phrase, in answer to the neighbor's inquiry, that they decided not to have Brad say, so they could put it elsewhere — watch the DVD commentary).

Not exact matches

«And hence, in the second place, I concluded as assuredly that, in the obscurer places of that Testament (which are very many), the best and most natural method of searching out the sense is, to inquire how, and in what sense, those phrases and manners of speech were understood, according to the vulgar and common dialect and opinion of that nation; and how they took them, by whom they were spoken, and by whom they were heard.
, scientists at the University of The English phrase common Era appears at least as early as 1708, and in a 1715 book on astronomy is used interchangeably with Christian Era and Vulgar Era.
The English phrase common Era appears at least as early as 1708, and in a 1715 book on astronomy is used interchangeably with Christian Era and Vulgar Era.
The phrase has been in use since at least the 18th century because it was included in «A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue» by Francis Grose in 1785.
By turns comically vulgar and hatefully sexist, all are presented in this raw and incendiary show, «Women Words, Phrases and Stories.»
Years of hard work and experimentation by April Street have coalesced in her most recent solo exhibition of four paintings and two sculptural installations titled A Vulgar Proof, after an Elizabethan phrase meaning «a common experience.»
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