As artists we enjoy being provocatively inventive, suspicious of authority, and dismissive of the past. |
|
Woodward, you can also gather, wouldn't have been so dismissive if England had been on the receiving end. |
|
Both Dodge and Hollis were sceptical of the worth of intervention and dismissive towards the coalition. |
|
When quite modest health care reforms were introduced by New Labour in England, Scottish Labour was haughtily dismissive of them. |
|
He was dismissive of his television work, saying it had paid the rent and bought the groceries, and was now behind him. |
|
Such a dismissive and negative view of these two giants isn't fair, of course. |
|
Sourav Ganguly, once legendarily dismissive of spinners but now woefully out of form, was dropped by Younis Khan at silly mid-off. |
|
Vivek says that some senior professors have been dismissive of their ideas. |
|
Yet overall, the summer school flaunted a dismissive attitude toward folk history. |
|
He was the father of experimental science, the sharpest thinker of his time, a great debater and a dismissive polemicist. |
|
The Turkish goalkeeper had been so dismissive of United's chances before the game but he obviously had not seen much of Rooney. |
|
His literary criticism, often intemperate, was cruelly dismissive of his fellow Irish writers. |
|
He denied the trust had been dismissive towards Mr Blackbird and his family. |
|
She is dismissive of talk that the island is any less deserving of public support than any other community in Scotland. |
|
I've been watching all this California stuff with a really dismissive attitude. |
|
It's much easier to be hyperbolic, or dismissive, or to give up trying to make judgments and just stick to writing lists. |
|
Miss Regan complained to the manager but said he was dismissive of her complaint and walked off while she was still talking to him. |
|
However dismissive the supporters are of a move to Murrayfield, it would be a tasty venue for Champions League football next season. |
|
The same sort of dismissive attitude is evident in response to the latest findings. |
|
And did you feel that your colleagues were being dismissive of you because of that? |
|
|
He has to provide an authoritative, paternal perspective without being dismissive of the disparate viewpoints enclosed. |
|
It is not clear if Matt is himself an active churchgoer or a believer, but he is hardly dismissive of his father's faith. |
|
Don't be dismissive, however, as there is a large choice of starters, main courses and desserts. |
|
The president abhors dissent and is totally dismissive not only of dissenters, but also of the people's right to dissent. |
|
The balance between being either overly nostalgic or dismissive of the past. |
|
Handsome, dedicated and dangerous young men were a dime a dozen in Ireland, and his frequently dismissive treatment of women didn't help. |
|
Perhaps this is why she is dismissive when her performance is talked about in terms of Golden Globes, Oscars and Baftas. |
|
First you get a period of moral panic, then a grudging, dismissive acceptance, and then, eventually, a recognition of cultural worth. |
|
Interviewees have thus been treated to loftily dismissive asides, barely stifled yawns and muffled harrumphs. |
|
You're going to get a lot of guff from readers who actually follow the link to that review and see how glibly dismissive it is. |
|
Where's his old fire, the dismissive rebuke, the sardonic encapsulation, the trademark outspokenness? |
|
The answers range from the dismissive and the trite to the droll and unexpectedly sincere. |
|
I think you are denying the shock of this experience upon you because you speak of it in a dismissive sort of air. |
|
This dismissive treatment of local residents by the council is disgraceful. |
|
Despite the dismissive tone of voice, a serious expression crossed her face. |
|
Your Honours, despite the vigorously dismissive submissions by my friend, we maintain that this is a meritorious application. |
|
And thinking back, it seems that the ladies present weren't quite so dismissive as their menfolk and some were unashamedly enthusiastic. |
|
Yet despite my dismissive attitude towards apocalyptic theories and prophesies, last year's Y2K version did somewhat discomfort me. |
|
It shocking to see how ignorant and dismissive of the arts scientists can be. |
|
Some of the regulars are dismissive and civilians don't view them with the same respect as they do the full-timers. |
|
|
Benzon is dismissive of accounts of evolution of culture that rely on memes being intentional states. |
|
She showed him which ones, but he didn't seem all too anguished about it, for he gave her a dismissive wave. |
|
It was also very dismissive of the last two albums, which was rather narrow minded. |
|
There came a sharp yell directed towards the six newcomers, and Tamora swiveled her head in its direction with dismissive interest. |
|
So she is understandably dismissive of the dismal gorse and whin on view outside the living room window of her Council house. |
|
Brady's carefully-cultivated air of dismissive dourness offset Giles' sombre demeanour perfectly, as it usually does. |
|
While most continental astronomers were airily dismissive of Herschel's choice, this letter shows Piazzi trying to reason with Herschel. |
|
Kitsch, I decided, is art that bears a cynical or dismissive relation to life. |
|
Despite the evident rock input on the album, it would be too dismissive to lump Fragile in the rock category and leave it at that. |
|
No doubt, the Government's somewhat dismissive and deprecatory attitude towards those opposed to ratification succeeded in turning off a big section of the electorate. |
|
Even raising the issue draws derisive and dismissive responses. |
|
Activists had to encounter an initially dismissive public, hostile populist politicians, excoriation by religious fundamentalists and the slow wheels of government. |
|
It was almost totally lacking in detail, and Assange was dramatically dismissive of it. |
|
He knew his value as a crowd puller, and was extremely demanding of the teams for whom he rode, and often dismissive of his team-mates. |
|
Even as courts have, over the past two generations, grown more dismissive of hunches, there has been a counter-revolution in the cognitive sciences. |
|
This spring, he made an offhandedly dismissive remark about Taylor Swift — God forbid! |
|
It's impossible to say whether they were reformed, or whether Davuluri's elegantly dismissive demurral elucidated the error of their ways. |
|
He watched Burke in action, too, and was equally dismissive of Burke's dismissiveness. |
|
It would be illuminating to explore the broader issues at work in the assumptions that may undergird this dismissive approach. |
|
Others are dismissive, rolling their eyes at the prospect of having to contemplate still another category of dire monition. |
|
|
If you are met with dismissive, intimidatory, or bullying behavior, don't ignore it. |
|
Mr. Speaker, I really take exception to the hon. member's dismissive attitude toward this bill. |
|
There is true poetic justice in receiving such a dismissive judgment on this day. |
|
Even these lordly and dismissive gestures clearly cost him something. |
|
Your advice in this matter is politically simplistic and dismissive of the serious concerns of many members of our caucus. |
|
The author also claims a violation of article 17 in that the court attacked her reputation and dignity by being too dismissive of her claim. |
|
They tended to be very dismissive of whether the government would actually follow through on any of the actions mentioned. |
|
Malcolm didn't help matters by being dismissive of several ideas that team members thought required further analysis. |
|
He should beware of perhaps being overly dismissive of parts of the material world. |
|
As Canadians learn more about this problem, we find that we have a minister who is dismissive of the challenge and unprepared to confront it. |
|
Local 378 did meet with the Liberal caucus and found the MLAs to be dismissive of our issues. |
|
They are non-partisan, objective and separate, and made a recommendation that we should take seriously and should not be so dismissive of it. |
|
I cannot characterize its decision as dismissive of the child's best interests. |
|
As a result, our understanding of the world outside our own country is glib, frequently dismissive. |
|
She was very dismissive of writing that she thought evaded the issue or was coy or half-hearted. |
|
Senior members of the Liberal Democrat campaign are dismissive of the idea that the deputy prime minister could lose his seat on 7 May. |
|
We need to remain open to the convictions of others in order to truly understand them without being dismissive or closed. |
|
The settlers introduced oak trees in the smarter parts, and they've come to value the indigenous vegetation that they were originally very dismissive of. |
|
But I discerned a dismissive attitude towards this kind of working process, and without making any alternative suggestions. |
|
Officials may treat potential complaints in a rude and dismissive manner or be overly bureaucratic in dealing with them. |
|
|
These include inadequate, negative or dismissive responses by police, medical and judicial personnel. |
|
Mr. Aiken had discussed the results with Mr. Ewanovich and had found his response dismissive. |
|
Another novel with an overabundance of periods and a dismissive attitude toward commas. |
|
He was high-handedly dismissive of American film in general. |
|
I don't remember buying it, she said with a dismissive flick of the wrist. |
|
The dismissive attitude was previously the star quality of the north. |
|
I think the dismissive way people have been dealt with is a disgrace. |
|
He is dismissive of the tyranny of email, pagers and mobile phones. |
|
I tried explaining my feud with the waiter, but Jennifer was dismissive. |
|
When you show people real human beings, most people don't want to be dismissive and bilious. |
|
Mr. Krupp made a dismissive wave of his hand, as if to quiet his wife. |
|
He also makes himself seem arrogant and dismissive of reasoned argument. |
|
Why should we be so dismissive of the grammar schools selection process when most schools stream students of similar ability for science, maths etc? |
|
Klein is simultaneously not only cynical about political leaders, but dismissive of them. |
|
Hogue says that when he returned to the table and tried to enter the conversation, Cosby was dismissive. |
|
At a local poker club catty corner from the Lenin statue, players were dismissive of the pro-Russia protestors. |
|
The supermodel seems unaware or dismissive of the societal stigma that is often attached to public displays of breastfeeding. |
|
It was an impressively poised and subtly dismissive reaction to an infuriating, redundant, and offensive question. |
|
I have always been dismissive of organic beauty products, perhaps because I am old enough to remember them as being relentlessly brown, along with rice and sandals. |
|
Of these popular perceptions, institutional leaders were dismissive, unconcerned, or unsure. |
|
|
Impatient and dismissive, punctuated by forced, faked little laughs and peevish demands for more airtime. |
|
He is permanently monosyllabic unless the subject happens to be narrow-gauge North American railways, and he never uses a word where a silent, dismissive glare would do. |
|
Grey looks unfazed, but not necessarily dismissive, as she mulls this pronouncement over. |
|
But dismissing your opponents as uneducable and unlearned by making dismissive remarks about the quality of their teachers serves no useful purpose. |
|
He cites a ream of studies which refute Dr Cole's points in his response to the paper in the same issue of the Psychologist. Other experts are not quite so dismissive. |
|
In Tunisia talks were held and there was the feeling that those in power appeared rather dismissive of the European Union's capacity to influence human rights conditions in talks with Tunisia. |
|
He was dismissive of the ongoing dialogue. |
|
American courts have been similarly dismissive of proposals to accommodate for environmental sensitivities by providing a chemical-free environment. |
|
And it is both dismissive and wrong to liken Chinese repression to a Walt Disney fantasy, as Mr Freeman does. From no perspective was Beijing the right decision. |
|
Finally, we should not be dismissive of the Chief Electoral Officer. |
|
The report does not acknowledge that there has been extensive fraud involving the aid scheme for olive oil, and it is dismissive of the Commission's proposed changes in the aid. |
|
That being the case, and in comparison to the respectful tone of this government's advertisement, I submit it cannot be viewed as dismissive of the legislative process or the role of members of Parliament. |
|
Surly that day, he tried to psych out the young hammer thrower who eventually beat him, and he was dismissive when I asked him about reports that he had subverted the youngster's Olympic training with misinformation. |
|
The response I received to a Parliamentary question last week from the Commission was dismissive of Parliament's call made in September for such a uniform and compulsory code. |
|
This is not to be dismissive of the tobacco industry and their comments, but in order for us to continue to reduce that rate, we need to take further steps as a society, as a country. |
|
How can a civilized society be so tolerant and generous toward the savagery of a Clifford Olson and be so dismissive of the death sentences forever served by his victims. |
|
We should not be dismissive of our peacekeeping missions for one second, even in the heat of a debate on an important issue like the war in Afghanistan. |
|
Or does the Western expert's razor-sharp criticism levelled at the European Union for its dismissive attitude towards Roma asylum-seekers cut ice after all? |
|
He can be dismissive, too, but prettily so. |
|
There can be the physical afflictions of progressive immobility and failing memory and senses, but often far harder to bear is the dismissive attitude of society. |
|
|
Mr. Netanyahu has been dismissive of sanctions. |
|
Within hours he bashed out a dismissive reply and carried on regardless. |
|
Canadian researchers have no such place, leaving those frustrated by existing processes in dealing with legitimate complaints and issues to become dismissive of the system. |
|
Jim Murphy is on blast... for being dismissive of the England football team. |
|
But Asquith's dismissive handling of Bonar Law also contributed to his own and his party's later destruction. |
|
It is my task to explain why it is that this statement is not merely somewhat dismissive and incautious, which even our learned friends across the room might concede, but also wrong in fact and in law. |
|
There is an unhelpful conflation of what Charlie Hebdo now represents – namely sneering and dismissive attitudes towards immigrants across Europe – and the reason for which it has been granted the award. |
|
I'm not as dismissive of the complaints of Canadians about the bias that the CBC has or is perceived to have against those who espouse a centre-right perspective on politics. |
|
The snobbishness and exclusivity of Oink were exactly what this new group was looking for: a place to show off their dismissive, elitist attitudes about both technology and music. |
|
He has nevertheless left the bottle out, in full view, to see who might be distracted by it, who dismissive, who disappointed by what he's been poured. |
|
If they wait too long, then Kurzweil's dismissive view may become valid. |
|
He's dismissive to women and unflinchingly brutal to his enemies. |
|
We've seen the same slow pace and dismissive attitude from the employer that we saw at the last round of bargaining in 2004 that led to a two-month strike. |
|
To both of those concerns, however, Herz is dismissive in three parts. |
|
Lockheed Martin, the lead contractor on the F-35B, was dismissive. |
|
There is a wide-spread willingness to participate in certification systems to ensure access to markets, even from actors who might previously have been indifferent or dismissive. |
|
They are trying to pull a fast one now because they do not want Canadians to realize how dismissive of EI and the needs of the unemployed they have been for the last several months. |
|
Alfano is probably overly dismissive of person-situation interactionism, which may well be the modal view in contemporary psychology. |
|
Mr Haygood is dismissive of mere celebrities. |
|
But it strikes me that club owners should never be dismissive of the wishes of the fans. |
|
|
Sometimes, the West Midlands can be a little dismissive of its own achievements. |
|
Harry, your dismissive attitude towards the country and the culture which has hosted and provided hospitality to you is shocking. |
|
O'Connor herself was never dismissive of any aspect of life, other than the intellectual's own dismissiveness or the bigot's blindness. |
|
Instead, both arrogantly wave away any criticism of their ability with the dismissive air of pseudointellectual academics. |
|
How can the Conservatives be so dismissive and out of touch with the reality of what average Canadians face right now, being ripped off by the banks and the credit card companies? |
|
This dismissive attitude goes back a long way. |
|
Conservatives were dismissive of nuclear war. |
|
White has retired from that role, but the BIS continues to produce an eminently readable report, if to my mind it is too dismissive of the risks of deflation, most notably in the eurozone. |
|
On hearing that he is to be put to death to end the demolition of the walls, the boy is dismissive of the advice, and tells the king about the two dragons. |
|
The controversial former Romania star, who tried to sue Caley Thistle over bonuses when he left in 2008, was dismissive of the Highlanders' chances. |
|
The giraffe was presented as the qilin, but this association was met with a dismissive attitude from the Yongle Emperor who rejected the laudatory memorials of his officials. |
|
My chum Richard Walker, formerly of Walker, formerly of Honley, however, was Honley, however, was dismissive when I told dismissive when I told him. |
|
Mark Silk argues that even assessments of premillennial dispensationalism have too often relied on stereotypes and resulted in dismissive attitudes. |
|
Looking at the swiveling seats in particular, he was dismissive. |
|