Written with erudition and firm, if sometimes quirky, opinion, the book is interlarded with humor and acerbic comment. |
|
The movie is a series of pictorially splendid set pieces, interlarded with broad rural and army comedy. |
|
Both the shadow play and the passion play were interlarded with musical prologues, accompaniment, and interludes, but these were not necessarily an integral part, serving rather to create a mood. |
|
There is the French notion here of endless philosophical debate with one's self interlarded with significant art and politics. |
|
The text is essentially descriptive, interlarded with perhaps too much history exhibiting the author's pedagogic background. |
|
Lavishly interlarded with statistics and tables, the book is of special value for students or graduates specialising in German politics. |
|