Sentence examples for phrase of which from inspiring English sources

Exact(7)

Of course there are pleasures to be had from the frequently scabrous turns of phrase, of which the ripe rogues' gallery make the most, but the laughter rings rather hollow.

It's easy to grasp why, especially in many disenfranchised neighborhoods, the sudden appearance of two cheerful behavioral scientists doling out help "for the good of the American people" (a phrase of which Shankar is fond) might be met with suspicion.

These days, distracted writers tend to blame the Internet, whose constant temptations shred our attention spans, fragment every minute and reduce us to a permanent state of anxiety, checking e-mail every 30 seconds — "like masturbating monkeys," a writer friend once put it, a phrase of which Sade himself might have approved.

And what I mean by that is an opportunity to do things you think you could not do before". Emanuel using a phrase of which Tom Friedman (no relation) is also fond (he heard it from economist Paul Romer)–was talking about how governments must take advantage of our current economic crisis.

Parks is not only a very good novelist indeed, but he has been translating works from Italian for 20-odd years now, so no one is going to doubt his competence as either an Italianist or writer of stylish English ("a delirium of pure power" is a phrase of which to be proud).

While Proust's invention of Vinteuil's sonata, "the little phrase" of which so transfixes Swann in Remembrance of Things Past, may be effective as a literary trope, its persistent recurrence only ever summoned up in this reader a petulant desire actually to hear what the bloody thing sounded like.

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Similar(53)

The title and flavortext are meant to point to Alan Moore's seminal 12-chapter graphic novel, Watchmen, one catch-phrase of which was "Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?", or "Who watches the watchmen?" The words given can be used to construct the long quotes which are used to close each chapter, minus a fragment of each quote, which is used as the chapter title itself.

"More than its fair share" is one of those phrases of which people say "Well, it's only a manner of speaking".

The subject of this accurately titled show, his second in New York, is art criticism, choice phrases of which are writ large on individual bands of vellum.

And as always from this inventive melodist, there are catchy tunes, including a wistful aria for Juanita, the first phrases of which Weill later recycled into "September Song".

At one of the early showings of Childs's seminal "Dance" (1979), the technically simple leaps and phrases of which create complicated floor patterns that evoke the line drawings of Sol LeWitt, one of Childs's collaborators on the piece, a disgruntled viewer threw eggs.

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