But his emphatic wisdom, candid political indignance and nuanced wine-soaked laments make him one of the best songwriters of his generation. |
|
Never did get a reply from any of them and, she says, adding with mock indignance, Im still waiting. |
|
But all of his questionable policies were immediately coloured by the indignance with which he refused to abandon his foreign oath of allegiance. |
|
What condemnation and indignance Mr Blair and his cabinet would have shown if these had been perpetrated by other nations. |
|
The Conservatives can feign indignance about this all they like, but the public's confidence has been seriously undermined. |
|
The rest of the episode follows Carrie spreading the gospel of her indignance over the thoughtless goodbye. |
|
Although an impartial observer, Yates isn't a journalist, and some of his own indignance leaks through as Kinnie talks about the injustice of an unarmed teenager killed when he posed no direct threat to anyone. |
|
His view of the events, and of the ever-conflicting thoughts and deeds of all kinds of German citizens, is undeniably fine, evoking both occasional indignance and a sense of connection from the reader. |
|
When the notion of Warner wearing the baggy green was inducing not only ridicule but indignance, Virender Sehwag, avatar of modern batsmanship, said that he'd be a better Test player than he was a T20 hitter. |
|
No doubt those in the boadroom will snort with indignance at the notion of changing tack off the back of one result, however raw it might feel on Tyneside. |
|
Indignance doesn't give back, remaining as hollow as dime store chocolate rabbits. |
|
Miss Proudman might want to pop her impressive CV into the personnel department at the Chambers of Over-reaction and Trifling Indignance. |
|