I agree that media coverage of the issue too often has been laden with generalizations, hyperbole and sensational images. |
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Any hint of talking down to the troops with high-flown hyperbole was promptly greeted with catcalls and Bronx cheers. |
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There is, however, no cost implication where hyperbole is concerned in this business. |
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They're calling it the deal of all deals, and for once you can forgive the hyperbole. |
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The repetition and hyperbole involved in castigatory preaching approach suggest, paradoxically, its limited effect. |
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The lyrical grandeur of his language covers every known figure of speech from metaphor to simile, hyperbole to hendiadys. |
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So do not take the following sentences as some fluffy hyperbole meant to substitute for a real, five paragraph review. |
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He rarely engages in the hyperbole or overembellishment so characteristic of many sportswriters. |
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While they may be provocative, they're quite bereft of the histrionics and hyperbole we've become used to in contemporary art. |
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It smells like some sort of crazy hybrid of fragrant, sweet berries and the floral hyperbole of lavender. |
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At first glance, such a comment seems like hyperbole, an eulogizing overstatement. |
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And the only one who saw through the hyperbole and the meaningless superlatives was my Aunt Petunia, and she was half-deaf. |
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The Greens specialise in hype hyperbole, to give it its full name, extravagant and exaggerated comments. |
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It's safe to say that hyperbole is the stuff of both poetry and protest movements. |
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Pack up the breathless hyperbole and just point us in the direction of better gear. |
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Whether Alice actually wanted to put a hospital in the casino or the claim is merely gossipy hyperbole is unclear. |
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We see this in the recurrence of his favourite rhetorical figures of paradox and hyperbole. |
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In a literary world filled with emotionalism and hyperbole, there are a few guiding stars. |
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Real tragedies do not need hyperbole, for they are intrinsically hyperbolic. |
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In any other case this might sound like directorial hyperbole, but Lloyd has reason to be confident. |
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It is impossible to create a responsible ethical and policy debate in a climate of hyperbole. |
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Such hyperbole deadens the sensitivity to moral distinctions in public discourse. |
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According to the narrator, fierce would be hyperbole for even the bravest of hobbits. |
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They generally strike me as hyperbole that works to insult but not really to enlighten. |
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Behind every food scare, there is a barrage of claims and counter-claims, hyperbole and damage limitation. |
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The instances are inconspicuous, but do make for a slight forcing of the effect towards hyperbole. |
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Similarly, claims about the potential of the Internet are usually overstated and often hyperbole. |
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He should then appreciate the fine line between Churchillian rhetoric and hyperbole. |
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In addition, however, the speaker's unrelenting hyperbole draws attention to the incredibility of his praise of the Sidneys. |
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These narratives were overblown exaggerations, but polemicists employed their hyperbole to further political ends. |
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These include promises that attempt to create a climate for their own fulfilment, and promises that are more accurately described as hyperbole. |
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It's what you get for reading books of futurist hyperbole before you go to sleep. |
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Even in the long debased hyperbole of historic moments in the Northern Ireland peace process, this was a monumental announcement. |
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It is not hyperbole to say that those beneficiaries of wartime tax cuts and contract deals should now be called war profiteers. |
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He is a quietly-spoken individual off the park, not given to effusiveness or hyperbole. |
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These ranged from insult and hyperbole to completely destroying property and literally eviscerating enemies. |
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In a country with proper respect for its rights and freedoms, this should not be a subject distorted by hyperbole nor confused by double-talk. |
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Politics in our nation have become increasingly polarized, marked by ideology, anger, hyperbole, and blaming the other side. |
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Across all platforms, he will hawk his toxic mix of anger, hyperbole, falsehood and braggadocio. |
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The formality and scale of her attire, her pose, and her lack of affectedness suggest class and gender and also hyperbole and overstatement. |
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If such infantile hyperbole doesn't have you laughing like a drain, you haven't a hope of wading through this somewhat too hefty book. |
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But nobody can fault him for not lavishing enough hyperbole on his creation. |
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Stripping aside the zingers and hyperbole, you get a fairly clear picture of the respective strategies for the summer campaign. |
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There is some hyperbole in this, but the leap of imagination was certainly enormous. |
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Let us note, first of all, that hyperbole and apostrophe are the forms of language not only most agreeable to it but also most necessary. |
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It is not hyperbole to say that the derivatives industry is looking increasingly like a basket case, or at the minimum a potential accident. |
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With characteristic hyperbole, the Servites remarked that it was one of the finest works Poccetti had ever executed. |
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Step Into Liquid is a surfing documentary that offers a satisfactory amount of thrills within a tsunami of platitudes and hyperbole. |
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All the hyperbole about how sacred the right to filibuster judges is is just bosh. |
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But by using hyperbole and muddling the difference between repressive regimes and the imperfections of democracy, Amnesty's spokesmen put its authority at risk. |
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This is an unhelpful hyperbole, but it is certainly true that there must be contexts in which a statement of these truths is politically inopportune. |
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That's how communication scholars have described the national frustration with the anger, hyperbole and personal attacks that substitute for authentic political debate. |
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Some films and television shows about trials lawyers in American courts, invite the conclusion that anger, hyperbole and bombastic rhetoric are persuasive. |
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They worried that it was full of venom and that voters would disengage because of all the anger, hyperbole and, sometimes, outright hate directed toward those who hold different views. |
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The work takes us from Hollywood hyperbole and reality TV to video-game warfare and the macho military leader's weakness for glamorous gold bustiers and high heels. |
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James Mason was not a man prone to wild hyperbole or flippant remarks. |
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It's difficult not to be impressed by this outrageous concrete hyperbole, but he is as right-on as they come and says he despises it as a symbol of tyranny. |
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I find that the general rules of debate are chucked out the nearest window, and replaced by a mixture of anger, hyperbole, half-baked legal discussion, and labelling of one side by the other. |
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Let us use my silly hyperbole as frontlets between our eyes. |
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The moralizing is given all the force which an accomplished rhetorician can provide and is enlivened by anecdote, hyperbole, and vigorous denunciation. |
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Much of the religiosity of Gladstone's liberal vision derived from Burke, but without his anger, hyperbole, fervent public emotionality and contempt and fear of Nonconformists. |
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Cassandra is sharp as a tack, awkward, and still young enough to greet her awakening desire and finer perceptions with astonishment and hyperbole. |
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Exaggeration and hyperbole are constant campaign companions, as useful and expected as hammers and saws on a construction site. |
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While some may say that our exploding obesity epidemic is a hyperbole, fat does beget fat. |
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As a community committed to fostering a vibrant discussion of the issues of the day, we can tolerate frustration, anger, hyperbole, dissenting views or the use of biting humor. |
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So ignore the hyperbole of the candidates and the hysteria of the partisan commentators. |
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One could just ignore the hyperbole and watch it follow similar groups down the path to irrelevance. |
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He comes up with a nice line in bumptious hyperbole in tribute to the acres of print spilled during our recent, prolonged spell in the horse latitudes of politics. |
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In return I can offer you glory, fame and a hatful of hyperbole. |
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More honest and accurate than laudatory adjectives on a fitness report or hyperbole in a medal citation, it is the true measure of a man by the people who know him the best. |
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Book jackets are known for their hyperbole and general flimflam. |
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The presiding deity of British pirate radio at the time was a fast-talking expat American who called himself, with standard transatlantic hyperbole, Emperor Rosko. |
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Having said that let us not get carried away in hyperbole and rhetoric. |
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The emails I received after that piece appeared, many from American tech workers who had lost their jobs, evinced fear, anger, hyperbole, xenophobia, and resignation. |
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It is the compulsion to resort to hyperbole that tells me how superficial the middle class bleaters' understanding of, and commitment to, reconciliation is. |
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So much has been said about Europe's long-awaited date with destiny that it was hard to sort out the predictable hyperbole from the reality. |
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The great staircase, however, may be termed, without much hyperbole, a feature of grandeur and magnificence. |
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In response and reaction to this hyperbole, modern historians and biographers have tended to take a more dispassionate view of the Tudor period. |
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Brearley's side showed again the hyperbole that is often spoken when one side dominates in cricket. |
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Film festival reviews are, as is their wont, often prone to hyperbole. |
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Finke, who regularly breaks showbiz news, is the master of hyperbole. |
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Still more likely, she has found a hyperbole that sufficiently expresses her pride and confidence in the superlativeness of her home. |
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Truth, perspective, and context give way to urban legends, hyperbole, and hysteria. |
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For all the hyperbole and hysteria, the psychosurgery and the Ritalin debates served a useful purpose. |
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In what follows, the boys use hyperbole to effectively ironize Alex's purported attractiveness. |
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The second part of the volume and several poems in various cycles are devoted to this topic, accompanied by definitions of such tropes as simile, periphrasis, and hyperbole. |
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Hyperbole was doubtless in play here, but so, too, was hypostatization, an awkward term for a common move in criticism, the inflating of a characteristic into a criterion. |
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