The dialogue between the characters, while littered with profanities and raw language, is verbose and prosaic. |
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I don't think I've seen prose this, well, prosaic since I was a teaching assistant grading papers at Columbia. |
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The methodical and rather prosaic style may not have the literary skill of, say, Abanindranath Tagore's diary. |
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Horenstein and Wild take it just this side of prosaic, so that when they indulge in their rubati, it hits with all the more punch. |
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These poems and a few others tend to be prosaic, obsessed with private matters in banal terms. |
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But both in his words and especially in his music, his language is surely prosaic. |
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No more than we want our poems to be poetic do we want our prose to be prosaic. |
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Many poets seem threatened by the apparently easily appropriated and fungible modes of prose and prosaic rationality. |
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As it is, the prose passages are prosaic and the rap doggerel is merely tedious. |
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Here is a prosaic translation which is a complete disgrace to the original language. |
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David, it's horrible when that language is prosaic but I thought that this language was really beautiful. |
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The style seems prosaic and indicates a distance from the original oral narrative style. |
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Indeed, in a literature that perhaps some find prosaic, these papers stand out for their wit and charm as well as their scholarship. |
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He also performs some prosaic poetry of more recent vintage, before nervously taking to the mic to croon. |
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But the unorthodox screenplay and prosaic dialogues struggle to convey something more than what other such films generally attempt to. |
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They've already done a medley of titles and we're not going to be bothered with such prosaic trifles, or their authors, tonight. |
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We rarely have to think deeply at all because the prosaic nature of our instrumental language does not call for it. |
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Though aware of surrounding political, military and social developments, they focused on more prosaic concerns. |
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He has the knack for creating excitement around the most prosaic merchandise. |
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They're mostly worried about a more prosaic concern, which is whether the game is fun. |
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But for all these prosaic explanations, there is also a sense of mystery about this work. |
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They concluded that at least five percent of reported cases defied a prosaic explanation. |
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I find I prefer the dub to the subtitles for this series, as the subtitles are a bit dry and prosaic. |
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At the most prosaic level, any journalist has experience of how bad some press officers can be. |
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Old sportswriters tend to use mysticism to clarify events that have prosaic, tangible explanations. |
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And he understood that the grand sweep of history was sometimes found in the prosaic. |
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The ordinary and prosaic details of a work of art often end up telling a story independent of the one the author intended. |
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Yes, because obviously any such diagnosis won't hinge on anything as prosaic as actual symptoms. |
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As well as its widespread deployment in broadcasting, mobile text culture has been the language of prosaic, everyday transactions. |
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But this determination to bring everything down to the most prosaic level just inspires indifference in the reader. |
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Singer notes well the various analogies between mutation and more prosaic political and cultural concerns. |
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These seemingly matter-of-fact, prosaic pictures are frequently animated by a quality that suggests the spiritual. |
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Think about how often we settle for a routine that is rather prosaic or practical. |
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Many of his works consist of portraits or series of portraits of prosaic objects. |
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The North American lawn as we know it has a more recent history, as well as a more prosaic one. |
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Perhaps the most disappointing note is the prosaic nature of the display of the smaller archaeological artefacts in vitrines against one wall. |
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But he doesn't spell out his theory in dull, prosaic, Kantian or Cartesian fashion. |
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When they decided it was a whole laundry list of phenomena that were very prosaic, they sort of dropped their investigation. |
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Despite the expressionistic framing and fancy camera angles, the film feels remarkably flat and prosaic. |
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Though Shaun eventually gets wise to the crisis, his pressing problem on the macrocosmic level is compounded by more prosaic hassles and neuroses. |
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Rhythm and movement are everywhere in India, like air and water, and affect even the most prosaic shopkeeper in the bazaar or the academic in his ivory tower. |
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The prosaic reality often falls short of this exalted ideal. |
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On Monday, Wall Street reopened for business in defiant tone but more prosaic realities quickly took over, dragging the Dow to its largest ever one-day points fall. |
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Unfortunately, the music on the whole is prosaic, even boring at times. |
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The campaign, from the Nabisco division of Kraft Foods, promotes the ability of Premium saltine crackers to liven up a prosaic bowl of soup. |
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Freud believed that dreams were compounded out of the primal matter of the unconscious and the prosaic events of daily life. |
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In our more prosaic age, we have settled for blandly defining it as eagerness, or a strong excitement of feeling. |
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From the review of the bardic political work above, it becomes clear that bards were manipulating not just words but also systems of knowledge, both prosaic and beyond. |
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The ship was christened in 1942 but her first prosaic name, J-826, belied the exceptional life she would lead. |
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The prosaic business of lending to business and serving customers delivered lower profits and was done by the banks' drones. |
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Of course, the problem with this prosaic explanation is that it is much less exciting. |
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But then, these people aren't powerful and their crimes are merely prosaic. |
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To West Germany must go the credit for transforming a predictable and at times prosaic game into a memorable match. |
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The whole combines the stately and prosaic in a great synthesis, and on a formal level abstraction and realism. |
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There are many ways of coming at this issue, but I wish myself to be rather prosaic. |
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The most mechanical and prosaic of instruments, the piano, is at the same time the one with the greatest expressive potential. |
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Finally, a more prosaic reason why the Court has not yet referred to the Charter may be its decisional procedures, which require unanimity. |
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The principle of natural forces is embodied as a frozen snapshot in an everyday product that is anything but prosaic. |
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With its pink colour, it was originally intended as the definitive women's drink, though that role is now occupied by the rather less prosaic Red Bull and vodka. |
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That's why in rehearsals he often decodes classical mime to prosaic prose. |
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Even a riggish French noblewoman could hardly throw a glamour of romance over so prosaic an interest as the Franco-American trade in fish-oil and salt cod. |
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The prosaic answer is that the Mercury takes itself very seriously indeed. |
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Again, the harsh conditions under which Shostakovich was compelled to represent himself are often found transposed to the prosaic sphere of paranoid nostalgia. |
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Harris wishes to convict religious belief of mulish literalism, while attacking its tenets in the most bluntly prosaic and anachronistic terms he can muster. |
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This brave and exciting cityscape gives way to more prosaic buildings on College and Queens Street, while further uptown is the amiable Victorian enclave of Cabbage Town. |
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But too often, Bowering chooses to write at a loping gait about prosaic, ordinary things, which can be uneventful and boring for the reader on the outside looking in. |
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Though I suspect Vaananen's instrument has more prosaic origins, he extracts a magical sound from it, from staccato guitar like chording to bell-like swirls. |
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For one thing, it's not clear that at the moment the political energy behind the 99-percenters and Occupy Wall Street protests can be channeled into anything so prosaic or, shall we say, coherent as a primary challenge. |
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I left the tourists to wonder, but knew the truth to be more prosaic. |
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But the closing Euston Road, with its lostin-a-traffic-jam musings, takes her prosaic songwriting to new levels of charmlessness. |
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It uses rhyme and metre and not infrequently also antithetic structure, but, despite occasional flights into the realm of the poetic, it retains the features of prose without being necessarily prosaic. |
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Their subject matter featured rural, prosaic scenes from in and around Glasgow. |
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They are associated with specific kinds of activities. They are linked to society through repetitive prosaic practices, ritualized performance, and institutionalized commemoration. |
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David Hockney is usually classified as a Pop artist, along with John Baldessari, Llyn Foulkes, Ed Ruscha, Vija Celmins and Joe Goode, because he's interested in the prosaic and the aesthetics of popular culture. |
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Economists tend to take a more prosaic perspective. |
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The Lima press reacted with disbelief, and the case is under investigation as a possible coverup for more prosaic evildoing — death squads and cocaine traffic. |
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In this sense, Canadians can take justifiable pride in the efficient manner in which the rather prosaic service of earmarking of gold was turned to commendable Allied and, at times, humanitarian ends during the war. |
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In fact, when not personal, they are prosaic. |
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This representation tends to give emphasis to the intrinsic characteristics of the painted subject, and thus stands apart from Pop Art which on the contrary would usually stress the prosaic and the humdrum. |
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Let me make a point that some may regard as rather prosaic. |
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His account of the incident was so prosaic that I nodded off while reading it. |
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Formal dance poses and strenuous balances rub against prosaic positions. |
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The style of his first three films, at once delicate, lyrical, and exceptionally fertile in cinematographic invention, has become, partly by choice, more prosaic and conventional. |
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But Matthew Green, a cryptographer at Johns Hopkins University who is helping to co-ordinate a formal security audit of TrueCrypt, thinks the real explanation is more prosaic. |
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Touches of prosaic detail are imperative and a rigorous adherence to the hypothesis. |
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Until now, we have been preoccupied with safeguarding relatively prosaic bits of personal information, such as names, addresses, phone numbers and credit card numbers. |
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The tenor of Eliot's prosaic work differs greatly from that of his poetry. |
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I was simply making the prosaic point that we are running late. |
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Ultimately, though, the more prosaic goals carried the greater significance in this contest. Madrid have managed only one clean sheet on their way to winning this competition. |
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Their steepness and abruptness were even greater than I had imagined from hearsay, and suggested nothing in common with the prosaic objective world we know. |
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He's actually talking about a plant, and a more prosaic soul might add that it belongs to the same family as calla lilies and jack-in-the-pulpits. |
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Predictably the seminarians' lives are littered with the minutiae of modern life, and at times Englert gets bogged down in recounting the prosaic details. |
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However the spectacle on the main street side is more gently prosaic, as the self-important, space-age interloper nuzzles up to workaday terraced houses. |
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The four musicians come from wildly different musical places, from the experimental polyrhythms of Stravinsky to the more prosaic and predictable punk. |
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