But what Craig lacks in loftiness he makes up for in, as he would put it, cragginess. |
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One cannot fail to be thrilled by the cragginess and gaunt loftiness of such a reading that is enshrined in the history of recordings. |
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The problem here is that while the joke is very clever and to be lauded for its loftiness in ambition, it doesn't make you laugh. |
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Always a promising singer, in the past he has seemed to hide something of his personality behind a certain emotional loftiness. |
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Ellis is a decent man in many ways, but he has a loftiness, an aloofness, that supporters and players find patronising. |
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Time will easily solve the latter inconsistency, but the loftiness of Paterson's tone is more troubling. |
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This desire for loftiness is neither Classical nor Byzantine but Germanic, and it continued into the Romanesque and Gothic styles. |
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Being there, one could sense loftiness, one could sense joy, hope, seriousness and dignity. |
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An aran weight cotton with the softest touch that carries a loftiness in texture and feel. |
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The loftiness of this supernatural vocation reveals the greatness and the inestimable value of human life even in its temporal phase. |
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Seeming to levitate, this painting gives the impression of loftiness, both visual and existential. |
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After accepting foreign missions in 1841, Bishop de Mazenod saw especially the loftiness of the mission of the Apostles and the Oblates. |
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The century-old cypress trees that rise up around the doorway dominate from their loftiness the entire landscape. |
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Basically any quality of weed will do, since the extraction of THC is the point and not the flavor or loftiness of effect. |
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The perceived loftiness of capacity development may in fact be a strength that can be harnessed to make connections between communities of practice more explicit and robust. |
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Although Edmund had been made head of the English hierarchy in a crisis for which he was not prepared, the purity of his motives and the loftiness of his ideals commanded universal respect. |
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Keats's desire to write something unlike the luxuriant wandering of Endymion is clear, and he thus consciously attempts to emulate the epic loftiness of John Milton's Paradise Lost. |
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And how do you find guests who can take a few steps down from their intellectual loftiness to explain ideas and concepts to the average person who just finished dinner and is lounging on the sofa? |
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