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to displays
noun
A show or spectacle.
Exact(58)
It says no to heavy machinery and computers, to displays of bravura skill.
From billboards to television commercials to displays in shopping malls, cellular phones loom large.
Roger had a low-key personality, and was not given to displays of emotions.
Mr. Obama's cool, cerebral style does not naturally lend itself to displays of emotion.
Mr. Cristofer, in the richest role, dominates the play without resorting to displays of obvious bravura.
ALEX SALMOND, Scotland's most famous secessionist, is prone to displays of grandeur.
In India, the public tends to react to displays of wealth with envy rather than resentment.
A delicate Calder mobile hangs over the stairs that lead down to displays of African masks and sculptures.
They were good people, she writes, but like many people of their era, not given to displays of emotion.
She smiled warmly, no doubt used to displays of denial, and told me: "Don't worry about pain at the end.
This information is transmitted to displays at the stops so that riders will know when the next bus is coming.
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