Exact(2)
In his semiautobiographical novel Desculţ (1948; "Barefoot"), Zaharia Stancu, the eminent exponent of "peasant realism," portrays both the bygone village world and its contemporary influx of modernity.
John Nash, its most eminent exponent, had died the year before in disgrace, having been unable to account for the huge overspend on Buckingham Palace; a public enquiry had failed to establish the exact cost of George IV's lavish refurbishment of Windsor Castle.
Similar(58)
By now a pre-eminent exponent of the cadential art, Isepp increasingly inhabited a more international landscape.
Andrew Clements, the Guardian's music critic, described him as "the pre-eminent exponent of the central European tradition; the greatest pianist from that tradition of our time".
The Ensemble Modern, under conductor Brad Lubman, confirmed their status as the pre-eminent exponents of Lachenmann's music in a programme that paired his classic Mouvement from 1982-4 withethe newly minted Concertini.
Val Plumwood, an eminent Australian exponent of this particular movement, defines the interactions that originate from this reduction as monological, "because they are responsive to and pay attention to the needs of just one [namely the human] party to the relationship" (Plumwood [2002], 40).
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh "India has lost an eminent son, the world of sitar has lost one of its ablest exponents ever and a shining light in the firmament of music has been extinguished," he said in a statement issued by his office.
See also eminent domain.
makes eminent sense.
Eminent physician and healer.
Its kitschiest exponent was Bernhard Hoetger.
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