Such a claim is bereft of imagination, competence and, dare I say, common sense. |
|
Have you ever considered that your coverage of women's contribution to sport is anything other than tokenistic and dare I say it sexist? |
|
It was that this is a thoroughly unimaginative, mean-spirited and even, dare I say, anti-human idea. |
|
Much more enjoyable, dare I say, and for that matter considerably more informative. |
|
The new kids on the block have moxie and magical powers and, dare I say it, soul. |
|
So why did it seem so understandable and even, dare I say it, innocent, in his telling? |
|
The fanatics, dare I say it, were quite pacific next to those who guarded money and property. |
|
After the last two controversial inclusions, the pressure was on to deliver something a little more, dare I say, mature. |
|
Pursuing a feminist theme, though – put-upon womankind versus the thrusting, overbearing male – now seems, dare I say it, passé. |
|
Unfortunately, the Commissioner's medicine seems as if, dare I say so, it had been bought in a bazaar. |
|
This is called compassion fatigue and, dare I say it, boredom. |
|
Despite the 21 years I did in prison for a drug conviction, I am assimilating back into mainstream or, dare I say, white America. |
|
That's why, dare I say, the anchorperson has always got to stand back, even at the risk of seeming a little cold-blooded at times, so as not to impose our emotions on others. |
|
Some of the prose seems, dare I say it, listless, almost bored. |
|
Dare I say, Prime Minister, that the social courage of these tasks does not exactly leap out at us. |
|
Our first date, to a documentary movie and coffee, was calm, thoughtful and, dare I say, fun. |
|
At times the show seems like a few actor buddies goofing off — dare I say, clowning around? |
|
With a certain amount of, dare I say it, good management, we could surely make more of the resources go where they need to be. |
|
We, as governments across the EU, must put in place the appropriate resources to do the job: manpower, money and, dare I say it, sniffer dogs. |
|
Servicing, deliveries, storage, stocktaking and databases are now all part of the process, as are dare I say, health and safety and quality control. |
|
|
And dare I say, the band is known to improvise a wee bit at times. |
|
It is, dare I say it, too preoccupied with being respectably booky rather than wildly bloggy. |
|
These levels have been unanimously agreed in Copenhagen, and, dare I say, the new member states got a sweet deal, with the EU going to great lengths to give the newcomers the best possible historical reference. |
|
Although we must give all the help we can to single mothers and their babies, the state is at best a poor substitute for a caring, supportive and, dare I say it, protective father. |
|
The occasion had a down-to-earth feel – even, dare I say it, couthie. |
|
Hockey is becoming as dull as — dare I say it? |
|
It has been the wettest and dare I say the muddiest in recent years. |
|
We have played safe by falling back into the comfort zone of either past imperialistic ideals or post-fascist commands or even, dare I say it, new 20th-century thinking with regard to human life and human rights. |
|
The supposed purpose was to ensure, dare I say the word, clarity in who was to be the official party candidate, since public money would flow to that person's and that party's electoral machinery. |
|