For those who spend down their wealth on a lavish and ostentatious lifestyle, there is no tax. |
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Jackson believes that wood is making a resurgence in popularity partly because it offers a sophisticated look without looking ostentatious. |
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She doesn't own a fleet of ostentatious cars or a portfolio of grand homes. |
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I rang the home electricals department last week to ask what the biggest, fattest, most ostentatious coffee machine they had was. |
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They should be committed to fighting corruption and nepotism and guard against ostentatious displays of power. |
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His way of life may seem a bit ostentatious, but his energy and enthusiasm is infectious, and there is nothing snobbish or affected about him. |
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I love underdone, or ideally raw meat, but not all my friends are quite such ostentatious carnivores. |
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Special and often ostentatious efforts are mounted for public holidays and festivals. |
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Art today is rich in witless posturing, philosophical boilerplate, ostentatious anger, and conventional shock. |
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All credit must go to her for keeping ethnic-style designs at the forefront of local fashion, even with the swing to ostentatious evening wear. |
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My own veranda in Cockermouth is a larger example, as is the more ostentatious orangery at Brockhole. |
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Civilised behaviour is the key to appearing middle class, so don't binge drink, never swear and don't do anything ostentatious. |
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They contribute generously to village and family enterprises and avoid ostentatious displays of affluence. |
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They are now seen more simply as part of a general trend to ostentatious display of personal wealth, introduced at that time from central Europe. |
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In Pakistan we have made our lives miserable by the never ending competition and the ostentatious display of wealth. |
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The ostentatious display of ill-gotten wealth only added to Adam's carefully masked anger. |
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Others find her propensity for tacky glamour and ostentatious lack of decent clothing a little too much to bear. |
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Instead, they show us a suite that would, perhaps, have been a little too ostentatious for a spiritual leader. |
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As I've said before, I don't want to put up pictures, because it seems boastful and ostentatious. |
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He hated waste and ostentatious consumption, and the car he developed at Ford, the Falcon, reflected his twin commitments to economy and safety. |
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Extravagantly showy and ostentatious work is pretentious when the merit it demands is unjustified. |
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There is a continuous need to control urges to enter grandiose schemes and avoid ostentatious manners. |
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If you are with a lady friend, make sure you cling to her for dear life and make sure all gestures of affection are as ostentatious as possible. |
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However, the domestic life of the imperial family was, considering their status, not ostentatious. |
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But don't you think a mayoral chain of office would be just a little too ostentatious, even for your most dumb-witted feral toerag on the street? |
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At 2.39 leva the Stara Planina salad is a slightly less ostentatious plate of tongue, sausage, tomato, cheese and olives. |
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Hat designer Tracy Rose, 42, renowned for her ostentatious hats on Ladies' Day, was also attired in a weather theme. |
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Fetishistic and glitzy, the work was intended to critique the ostentatious display of jewelry signifying materialist obsessions. |
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Way beyond merely luxurious, the baroque decor is jaw-droppingly ostentatious. |
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But it was so colorful, so riotous, so hilarious a solidarity that its ostentatious fusions established a special art form. |
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The effect is subtle, yet it works, and while the overall result is undeniably decadent, the space feels individual as opposed to ostentatious. |
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London at the time was a curious mixture of ostentatious wealth hiding harrowing poverty. |
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It's gaudy, it's ostentatious, and it's exactly what one would expect from a rock star that thinks he's God. |
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There's no easy remedy, especially when ostentatious teen role models portray money as no object. |
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The villa galleria was baroquely ostentatious and many of the artworks just clutter-glitter. |
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While we do not insist on you taking to the streets on a bicycle, we do encourage a less ostentatious lifestyle. |
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The book was needlessly massive and it came in a choice of eight ostentatious satin covers. |
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Bernard rides around the town in an ostentatious sports car and behaves like a cowardly bully. |
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She wears an ostentatious diamond ring and a pearl the size of a marble. |
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Buying an island seems the pinnacle of ostentatious extravagance. |
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Could it be that, as the economy recovers, ostentatious displays of wealth are becoming fashionable again? |
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Her ostentatious display and over-the-top emotions were mercilessly parodied. |
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She built an ostentatious mansion, wore designer fashions, and fetishized the color pink long before Mary Kay Ash, with a pink convertible and even a pink canary. |
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In any case, the Bajrang Dal does not oppose the selling of birthday cards, the cutting of birthday cakes, and birthday bashes, some as ostentatious as weddings. |
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Sometimes, enunciation pierces through narration with ostentatious camera moves or reflexive images, but it finds itself swallowed by the diegesis in the end. |
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Eschewing the ostentatious gentility of readers, who enjoy parading their superficial knowledge, she pursues her intellectual work without need of an audience. |
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The point, for a new wave of hobbyists around the globe, is the ostentatious tactility. |
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Being expansive and extrovert is all very well but when it's done in an ostentatious way it can get a bit vulgar. |
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Inside, the layout of the rooms has been cleverly thought out, the decoration is refined without being ostentatious. |
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The mega arches erected at various points in the city might have put to shame even the political parties that are known for their ostentatious celebrations. |
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But the player's ostentatious manner off the pitch made him an easy scapegoat. |
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He's wearing an ostentatious blazer and is with a model who looks Photoshopped into the scene. |
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Old, middle-class home with no ostentatious features, but with undeniable charm and an obvious comfort. |
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I build ostentatious entryways in the mansions of the rich that display just how much wealth they have. |
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Unfortunately, the ostentatious search on the part of the United States for a better result undermines this positive compromise achieved today. |
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What we need is solidarity with these children and these countries rather than ostentatious clout that degrades their dignity. |
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If they carry arms such as truncheons, it should not be done in an ostentatious or provocative manner. |
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They want products that are not simply ostentatious signs of success, but products that offer undeniable intrinsic qualities and timeless values. |
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This stately home built in the Middle Ages on a Danish island is prestigious without appearing ostentatious. |
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The ostentatious style of Montreal's commercial elite set the cultural tone of the nation. |
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Their weakness, if any, is that they fall easy prey to brand names and they would willingly go to any lengths just to be showy, extravagant and ostentatious. |
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They put this view into practice quite straightforwardly, avoided ostentatious clothing and wealth, refused to swear oaths in court, to bear arms or to defend themselves. |
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The big summit meetings are elaborate rituals, ostentatious shows of power that reinforce the entitlement and authority of the bodies they represent. |
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One needed a title, however, to appreciate the majesty of the tall, ostentatious chairs with upholstered, haughty-looking backs and stretchers reinforcing the legs. |
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His collection of embellished trousers and jackets were unapologetically ostentatious, unapologetically aimed at the one percent. |
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He was a big part of the social scene, was involved in society races at the yacht club, and lived in an ostentatious, loud manner replete with several bodyguards. |
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To simplify matters, he took some photographs with him of Lee's gold-encrusted fist so he could be sure of getting something equally tawdry, ostentatious and meretricious. |
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In the photo, the ostentatious monument is undercut by a temporary stall selling wares in its niche. |
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The extraordinary price for the ostentatious gown proves that fascination with Princes Diana remains as strong today as ever. |
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Still, even if expressed by a metaphor some might find ostentatious, vicarious atonement as a concept was nothing outlandish in first-century Jerusalem. |
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You hardly hear it now, but in 1979 it was a sneering term for a person who has acquired wealth recently, and is vulgarly ostentatious or lacking in social graces. |
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But there are few cases of ostentatious opulence amid the poverty. |
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He was always smartly dressed but not in an ostentatious way. |
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If a piece is too large or ostentatious, the rest of your garden could pale into insignificance, overshadowing all your previous months or years of hard work in an instant. |
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An ostentatious display of Japanese military might could scuttle those negotiations. |
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Its crown was quite ostentatious up until the XIXth century as it had a hormacina flaqueada de dos aletones in which stood an enormous Roman statue of Hercules. |
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It has a taste of ostentatious performance, evoking fear as much as joy. |
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Tastefully emulous, Villard wanted his home to transcend its less fashionable location and magnify its owners through classical restraint rather than ostentatious display. |
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These scams are very difficult to prosecute, particularly if the stripped assets have been well hidden and the scam artist does not give away the game by ostentatious living. |
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In those days I performed no ostentatious acts, my passage through the earth was humble, but he who was prepared witnessed the grandeur of my presence and of the time that he lived. |
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The publicity surrounding George W. Bush's divorce from his wife Laura and ostentatious marriage to Beyoncé, a singer, was not just arriviste but also unpopular. |
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A second factor that weighed heavily with many Muslims was the anti-Islamic behaviour of the Gulf Arab régimes associated with their ostentatious display of wealth from petro-dollars. |
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These costs might differ from currently observable costs as the lack of competition might allow for administrative rents or ostentatious projects. |
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All in it is superficial, false, outward, and ostentatious. |
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The TV cameras were in attendance and the newly elected ministers, caught on film making awkward small-talk moments before the prime minister's entrance, were careful to avoid any ostentatious self-congratulation. |
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Some may see it as ostentatious and over-the-top but there's no denying the bold statement made by 22-inch chrome rims and a cut and chiseled body. |
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No wonder that such ostentatious Francophilia was often snobbishly dismissed as le gout Rothschild. |
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As a group they have been described as being less ostentatious but more reliably vigorous as they age. |
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Because the wealthy classes wanted to keep distinguishing themselves, the cemetery became an ostentatious place: monuments tended to be increasingly voluminous and opulent, until they come to resemble private oratories. |
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It would be best not to overdo this symbol, to stop the ostentatious displays which may well put the public off in the long run and which detract from its meaning. |
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Particularly in the Renaissance and Baroque periods, rich burghers and noblemen would compete in ostentatious fountain decoration and build splendid waterworks. |
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His still, Vulcanic face hiding its burning brightness like a forge, he moved with ostentatious deference towards the scuttle. |
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Compact and shining: the London aesthete's ostentatious impassivity becomes the contented quiet of a younger brother peeking at a menagerie hidden behind a fence in a little mansion on Fourteenth Street. |
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The organiser was independent legislator Dadan Pehalwan who is known for such ostentatious tamashas. |
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Even Callisthenes, historian and nephew of Aristotle, whose ostentatious flattery had perhaps encouraged Alexander to see himself in the role of a god, refused to abase himself. |
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Though himself a millionaire, Brandeis disliked wealthy persons who engaged in conspicuous consumption or were ostentatious. |
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He would always show up for the visit wearing a pair of brightly polished shoes, a starched collar, and an ostentatious tiepin of extravagant poor taste. |
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Sadat is portrayed in all his contradictory glory, as visionary and paranoiac, his pious, austere public persona at sharp odds with an ostentatious private lifestyle. |
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On the other hand, however, Linguas scholarly audience could have responded to this ostentatious parade of panlingual skill as a confirmation of their own erudition. |
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