Marmot meat is an acquired taste though, being reputedly strong, stringy and tough. |
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The queen of Newfoundland and Labrador berries, the bakeapple has an acquired taste that we like to think is addictive. |
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Much like the film it alludes to, this is an acquired taste, but worth taking a chance on, nonetheless. |
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Decadence remains an acquired taste, whereas decency is as fundamental as common sense. |
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It is an acquired taste, but Aberdonians love them and eat them by the tens of thousand. |
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Certainly, if last night's showing was anything to go by, his work was somewhat abstract and obscure, and obviously an acquired taste. |
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Although his singing is definitely an acquired taste, the songs are deep in the American vein and generally good. |
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Strauss's music may be an acquired taste, according to some, but I don't remember a time when I knew it and didn't like it. |
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Granted, this kind of musical satire is an acquired taste, but his adaptation is little more than an excuse for clever rhymes and in-jokes. |
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The flavor combination is something of an acquired taste, which I, unfortunately, had yet to acquire. |
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His music is an acquired taste and I don't think I am going to acquire it any time soon. |
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The fen part of the county, with its vast horizons and lonely windswept fields, has always been an acquired taste. |
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More of an acquired taste are her occasional forays on the Wurlitzer organ, which may induce flashbacks of Rolf Harris. |
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Though he remains an acquired taste in Britain, Williams's position in American poetry, at least, seems assured. |
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Certainly, the former, part caterwaul and part coy coo, will be an acquired taste. |
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Perception, whether through vision or any other sense, is an acquired taste. |
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Now my friend protests that the lyrics are deep and that the sound is an acquired taste, but with so much else out there to listen to, why bother? |
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Goats' milk is an acquired taste and we never did quite take to it. |
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Monkfish liver was definitely an acquired taste and has retreated back whence it came, Japanese restaurants. |
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Some think dark chocolate is an acquired taste, but those who like it have a true passion for it. |
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Thomas Mann, the great German novelist, is an acquired taste. |
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It is very mannered, very strange and very much an acquired taste. |
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The acquired taste resembles a cross between Jagermeister and cough mixture. |
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Somewhat of an acquired taste, his screaming vocals transmit a message of fury, desperation and anger, though perhaps the actual content is hard to pick up. |
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Werner stated that the radish is an acquired taste and was much more popular in Europe than North America. |
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He's an acquired taste, and if you haven't got a predilection for this Down Under delicacy by now, the movie will probably have you dry-heaving into your popcorn. |
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Like advertisements, they cover a wealth of material on numerous subjects, some enthralling to the enquiring mind and others an acquired taste. |
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Created in the Icelandic tradition of making the poisonous palatable by putrification, hakarl is an acquired taste. |
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When the wine's colour resembles a precious stone's transparency, when the wine's white flower bouquet amazes my very own nose, when, after my worries and doubts the acquired taste is close to what I dreamed of? |
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From Estonia we have Mr Kallas, who for 20 years was a Soviet Party apparatchik until his newly acquired taste for capitalism got him into trouble. |
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So far, baijiu seems to be an acquired taste for Westerners. |
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An acquired taste, certainly, but once acquired never regretted. |
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Horse is an acquired taste that, as yet, I haven't acquired. |
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His smarm is an acquired taste, but, give him his due, he can at least interview people properly. |
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Since most adults do not share this director's unquenchable optimism, even his best movies tend to be an acquired taste. |
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Like blue cheese or durian, it has a very distinct, potent and strong smell, and is an acquired taste. |
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Musically, it is an unlikely marriage of jaunty ragtime and tinkling alt-pop, and is sung in the familiar Newsom style – a sometimes spooky, sometimes shrieky soprano that is, to put it mildly, an acquired taste. |
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El Shaddai is certainly an artistic tour de force, but its muddled narrative and wonky action are very much an acquired taste. |
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And, even jazzed up with fancy graphics, punchy one-liners and a splash of humour, courtesy of Steve Martin, tales of fiscal folly are an acquired taste. |
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Houttuynia Houttuynia is an acquired taste, with common reactions ranging from dislike to disgust. |
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I quickly discover that the spicy Masala Chai tea is the most popular choice among Indians but, for an English palate like mine, it's an acquired taste. |
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