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Discover Ludwig"frivolity from" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it to refer to a state, activity, or behavior that is less serious and has little real value or importance. For example, "We must focus our time on more meaningful activities, rather than frivolity from playing video games."
Exact(4)
It's not as though Australia doesn't already produce enough of that kind of work itself to be importing such pointless frivolity from Austria.
No such frivolity from McQueen, who treats the marketing of smelly water with the same gravitas as Patsy pleading for soap.
So a fixture that not so long ago would have involved two gnarled set of forwards hogging the ball had an air of frivolity from the start, as if the sun had removed inhibition.
Rexroth considered Weil's essay "The Need for Roots" to be "egregious nonsense" and thought she needed a dose of "vulgar but holy frivolity" from the sort of parish priest who would tell her to put some meat on her bones and find a husband.
Similar(56)
While the traditional Gallic drenching of garlic butter remains popular, gastropod gastronomy involves frivolities from Heston Blumenthal's famed snail porridge to other signature dishes including snail pizza and minced snail kofte.
The evening offers a few lightning flashes that illuminate the anguish in the forced frivolity, mostly from Sir Derek and Roger Rees.
Tatiana Leskova bubbled as she coached a young dancer in the giddy Frivolity solo from Massine's "Presages".
She'd suddenly sober up, make big eyes, and say in a deep voice, all trace of frivolity banished from her face, "Ed White.
There is no glamour here, no contemporary angst or frivolity; apart from the occasional cellphone, in fact, little of the modern world is apparent.
"Frivolity — starting from sport," said Miuccia Prada of her Miu Miu collection, which gave a similar definitive fashion statement as the pantsuits of a year ago.
The evening, which also features Laura Linney and Brian Murray, offers a few lightning flashes that illuminate the anguish in the forced frivolity, mostly from Sir Derek and Roger Rees.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com