It's been awhile since I've seen this much ignorant prattle spouted about the Pope, and that's saying something. |
|
Thanks heaps for dinner and the drinks, and listening to me prattle on for a couple of hours! |
|
For the next hour or two, they engage in serious debate, silly gossip or frivolous prattle. |
|
And a number of people have thought that the debate has shifted to tax but in fact that has only been elite prattle. |
|
You'll learn more that way than if I try to prattle on about submodifiers in combination, intensifiers and the like. |
|
Despite the fevered prattle of conspiracy theorists, the say-so of a few doesn't take America to war and certainly doesn't keep it there. |
|
But that is as much to do with her Yorkshire upbringing as long months spent puncturing parliamentary prattle. |
|
Such prattle demonstrates an inability and indeed an unwillingness to contemplate the affects of combat on the victor as well as the vanquished. |
|
Then, since the Battleground states are something about which the Talking Heads like to prattle. |
|
Some people take offense when wiki writers jump up on their soap box and prattle on. |
|
I might have ruined the weekend with my meaningless prattle, but at least I could do a decent Devonian. |
|
Then we hear comments from the member for Vancouver Centre, which frankly are just tiresome twaddle and partisan prattle. |
|
Practical experience of Europe, not media prattle on Europe, is a far more reliable and inspiring source of knowledge on Europe for young people. |
|
The old well and its shed are still ringing with the prattle of the chain and pail. |
|
If we find few to communicate with, maybe we shall be pleased to find in our grandchildren a docile generation willing to lend an ear to our prattle. |
|
After about half an hour of incessant prattle, an elderly man rose shakily from his seat and, with all his strength, slammed shut the door leading to vestibule. |
|
What does he really mean when uttering such ahistoric prattle? |
|
Remember, I don't write all my inane prattle here for personal or financial benefit, but merely to try and lighten the dark corners of your souls, and edify your weary minds. |
|
The effect on most of us will be an attack of acute crapulence, caused by our forced overconsumption of political prattle and forensic flatulence. |
|
He didn't have time to listen to the weak-minded fool prattle on. |
|
|
Yet many appear to engage in nothing more than ceremonial prattle and debate klatches. |
|
Her giggly, schoolgirlish prattle and singing of the famous Byker Grove theme tune struck the right chord with the theatre full of Geordies. |
|
A rare and seemingly small thing, I tell my walking pal as we prattle on about tear-jerkers, but when it happens, also a beautiful thing. |
|
As they prattle on, you step back mentally and start to catalog the irritating timbre of the offending voice, the reliance on cliché, the almost comic repetitiousness — in short, you begin constructing a story. |
|
Belinda was a jaybird and could prattle on for hours about the latest gossip. |
|
My old fussbudget aunt had a very preachy manner and would prattle on about the dangers of alcohol and other vices. |
|
Opinionated, comfortably middle class, bridge partners, gourmets, and patronizing patronesses of the arts, these two zany women regale each other with chat, prattle, gossip and collateral damage. |
|
And now hur prattle of Davie, I think yonder come prancing down the hills from Kingston, a couple of hur t'other cozens, Saint Nicholas' clerks. |
|
A pampered Westerner cocooned in a comfortable hotel may prattle about progress but it shows how little he knows about the real Poland. Such prickliness remains, but it is diminishing. |
|
It shames me that as a member of Parliament's Investigation Committee I took on more responsibility when I visited Darfur and Abéché, and yet today all I can do is prattle on, if you will excuse the expression. |
|
In my view, he has managed to pull away from the prattle offered to him. |
|
And Murphy reckons one section above all others will be of interest to his cabinet colleagues, especially those windbags known to prattle on without saying anything. |
|