Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"condescend" Definitions
  1. [transitive] condescend to do something (often disapproving) to do something that you think it is below your social or professional position to do synonym deign
  2. [intransitive] condescend to somebody to behave towards somebody as though you are more important and more intelligent than they are

102 Sentences With "condescend"

How to use condescend in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "condescend" and check conjugation/comparative form for "condescend". Mastering all the usages of "condescend" from sentence examples published by news publications.

They're just supporting delicacies, but neither Strauss nor Mr. Ratmansky condescend.
Below is a condescend and edited version of my conversation with Schrager.
And it better not sneer at Trump and condescend to his supporters.
Usually, books marketed to the nostalgic adults demographic will condescend to the reader.
Cosmopolitans continually condescend to nationalism, but my patriotic pride is your nationalism, right?
Any guy who'd condescend to this forthright young woman has got serious problems.
They feel that politicians of both parties sometimes condescend to them, something they hate.
He somehow doesn't condescend to Arthur's condition, even if the movie around him sometimes does.
Kkondae is a modern word of uncertain origin—perhaps an adaptation of the English word "condescend".
They do not condescend to inform us who is to be the judge of that accordance.
Mr. Ratmansky doesn't condescend to them or to the six couples of the corps de ballet.
She knows what will happen when she testifies: they'll condescend to her, accuse her, tear her apart.
I march in the army of optimism, and I've always refused to condescend or speak out negatively.
You know it's dumb when you can't even condescend to a reporter when they ask the question.
It's all too easy to condescend to the character because, let's face it, he is a gullible idiot.
To continue to condescend to people because of their race based on historical injustices simply promotes those injustices.
Instead of showing magnanimity to the other side of the political aisle, Obama chose to lecture and even condescend.
The original script doesn't condescend to the audience by spelling it all out: it preserves the final version's mystery.
The novel takes pains to pierce the bubble of liberals who dismiss Fox News and condescend to its viewers.
Surrounded by peers who taunt her and adults who condescend to her, Patricia's problem is only partly one of geography.
Pundits said she should smile, not cough, not laugh, not condescend, show some levity, provide substance and entertainment, and more.
Ute Frevert, Germany's leading gender historian, observed that Ms. Merkel has resisted all attempts to pigeonhole or condescend to her.
I would never condescend to do TV, and then "Taxi" called up for a guest spot in the first season.
It's always easier to condescend to a reality show before you start watching it—and watching it, and watching it.
What's the point of having a better world if the people who made it are just going to condescend to you?
It was a smile that said, I know what you're thinking, and I'm not going to let you condescend to me.
For he has made a special that works hard to not condescend or speak down to children, sometimes to a fault.
He repeatedly answered "no" when asked by McFarland if he had ever seen Mueller disrespect, demean, condescend or act inappropriately toward women.
On the one hand, it is no longer easy to condescend to a consumer who has curiosity, access to information and capital.
" Pareles added that the two-time Grammy-winning track is also "palatial-sounding pop that doesn't condescend to listeners of any age.
The show's two signature nerds, Bran and Samwell Tarly condescend to each other, decide to compare mythologies, and indulge in a flashback together.
SpontaneousWe listen to our readers, we don't condescend to them, and we reject the artifice and sanctimony of news delivered from on high.
The show keeps inserting new perspectives, drawing fascinating parallels to all the sub-rosa genres that critics condescend to: soaps, tabloids, punk, horror.
Only the rustic men in his late works flash much in the way of personhood; I suppose because he could comfortably condescend to them.
She's 17, Sardonic and Ready to Sing in 'Beetlejuice' Condescend at your own risk to Sophia Anne Caruso, the go-to girl for adventurous stage roles.
Please do not condescend to me and pretend you don't understand the imagery of a six-sided star when juxtaposed with money and accusations of financial dishonesty.
Randolph wasn't trying to condescend to me with his laughter; it's just that he's heard the phrase before, and because in this evolutionary analogy he's the caveman.
Maybe she was one of those people who'd never condescend to use a restroom at a Popeyes, let alone house a spicy dark-meat combo at one?
Unswervingly straight, Edvard was also such a snob that he wouldn't even condescend to address Andersen, his lifelong correspondent and eventual benefactor, in the familiar "Du" form.
Foster doesn't condescend to us with Tin Pan Alley cheapness or sentimentality; she plays to what's best in her characters and, therefore, what's best in the world.
On Comedy "John Mulaney & the Sack Lunch Bunch" on Netflix doesn't condescend to his 8- to 13-year-old co-stars or the youngsters it's aimed at.
My family is as strong-willed, stubborn and opinionated as they come (I get it honestly), and I won't condescend to you and tell you how to handle yours.
"Please do not condescend to me and pretend you don't understand the imagery of a six-sided star when juxtaposed with money and accusations of financial dishonesty," Schwartz writes.
For fans of TV shows where two older gentlemen interrupt each other and compete to condescend to each other, Tuesday night's vice-presidential debate was a dream come true.
Diana will argue with other women and fight against them, but she'll never be their rival or feel threatened by them, and refuses to condescend to them as well.
It's very easy for a literary person to condescend to 'Casey at the Bat,' but no poem remains universally popular for more than 100 years unless it has considerable merit.
Whether it's one of Raquel's services or a sermon delivered by Colton, the show doesn't condescend to believers — though it always understands why it's so hard for others to believe.
We're happy when the higher-status person acts as if she's on our level — which is why, as that Duke of Devonshire understood, you condescend best by pretending not to.
Describing the article as "an attempt to condescend and affront rather than reflecting an effort to understand Turkey," Ms. Kaplan said that Turks have good reason to be suspicious of the United States.
But the remarks take on a different tenor and a different historical significance when white athletes condescend to his activism, self-positioning themselves as arbitrators of what constitutes an appropriate response to racial injustice.
It's barely a movie so much as a confused attempt to both condescend to an audience about their short attention spans thanks to mobile devices while also trying to profit off of that very same audience.
Initially, we wanted to do something typographic—inspired by protest signs or how the media tends to condescend to the youth—but all our attempts ultimately proved too clichéd or overly playful and missed the mark.
Many conservative Republicans feel that frightening news of climate change usually comes from alarmist liberals who belittle their religious faith, elitists who condescend to them and a federal government that, until Mr. Trump, had forgotten them.
If your children have finally reached the stage at which they'll condescend to eat something more exotic than a chicken nugget, or even if they won't, you can encourage them to go on a culinary adventure.
The girls both condescend to and make genuine attempts to understand Mélissa's culture, but as mounting horror tropes illuminate the irreconcilability of Enlightenment liberalism and the legacy of French colonialism, they instinctively drift toward skepticism and appropriation.
A Comedy Special for Kids That Gets Their Dark Sense of Humor "John Mulaney & the Sack Lunch Bunch" on Netflix doesn't condescend to his 8- to 13-year-old co-stars or the youngsters it's aimed at. _________
Director Phil Morrison's 21980 comedy Junebug is the rare indie film about the rural South that doesn't condescend to its subjects, as art gallery owner Embeth Davidtz accompanies her new husband home to North Carolina to meet his family.
Mr. Hunter, admirably, does not condescend to his characters for their faith, presenting them not as obsessive or emotionally aberrant but as relatively normal young men and women who just happen to have developed a deep commitment to Christianity.
The show's challenge is to milk humor from his irritation and superiority without seeming to condescend to the Sri Lankans and their culture, a feat achieved in the usual way, through a constant undercutting of Mr. Ranganathan's Western assumptions.
Matt Gorman, a spokesman for the National Republican Congressional Committee, blasted Pelosi's comments Tuesday evening, "Leave it to a San Francisco liberal to belittle and condescend to the 63 million voters who called for real change last November," Gorman said.
The Florida Project's uniqueness gives it a fragile feel: It seems impossible that the setting, acting, and directing could all align in a way that manages to make the story feel this right — but also doesn't condescend to its subjects.
Chief among those odors was the stench of urea from men peeing everywhere (there were no public bathrooms, a fact which meant women did not stay away from home long, as very few women would condescend to micturate in the street).
Most of the time, the advice is written by people who've found partners and can now condescend to tell you exactly what to do to be as blissfully paired as they are (or, at least, that's what it feels like).
Here's my ranking of the Lessers, from Rags to Roses:Jeneve Rose Mitchell, Johnny Cash's "Ring of Fire" Leave it to Harry Connick Jr. to condescend to voters regarding an emotionally overwrought 15-year-old with a cringeworthy collection of embroidered vests.
She used to let that "anecdotal" feeling dissuade her from writing about Asian identity, recalling poetry workshops in which her classmates would condescend to it as an "insufficient and inadequate" subject unless it came paired with some sweeping assertions about capitalism.
Carlson details her allegations in the suit, in which she accuses Ailes of an ongoing pattern of harassment and describes a corporate culture of sexism; she names at least one male co-worker who, she alleges, would condescend and belittle female colleagues.
"It's a flat-out thrill to see a movie about African politics that doesn't condescend to audiences by placing a sympathetic white African at the center," Elvis Mitchell wrote in his review of the film for The New York Times in 2001.spectacletheater.
I've been out as a trans woman for a decade now and I feel a certain arrogance creeping upon my thoughts when I'm not looking: that yearning to condescend to newly out trans people, to declaim their lack of knowledge, experience, and, yes, suffering.
" That intimate understanding of what it is to be a child, and the ardent refusal to condescend to children, are just two of the elements that help explain why Sendak's books — like "Where the Wild Things Are" (1963), "In the Night Kitchen" (1970) and "Higglety Pigglety Pop!
The movie is another of his blunt social allegories: It follows an aging man (Lincoln Maazel) as he makes his way through an amusement park where other patrons condescend to him, assault him and otherwise treat him with roughly the same level of dignity accorded one of Romero's zombies.
She is one of those people whom Joan C. Williams writes about in The Harvard Business Review who admires rich people but disdains professionals — the teachers who condescend to her, the doctors who don't make time for her, the activists whose definition of social justice never seems to include the suffering people like her experience.
But in the end, it was articles like the one in The Guardian and this one in Newsweek that describe brosé—a word describing the phenomenon in which men with fragile masculinities condescend to drink something that is pink, the color of a vagina, god forbid—as a "movement" that ultimately pushed me over the limit.
I give them about two or three years on the outside and I'll take it even a step further -- and this is not to condescend over the the romantic appeal of a guy like Barney Frank to somebody like Jim Ready -- but something tells me that that Jim Ready may leave Barney for a real woman, not Barney Frank.
But it's even easier to forget that these are issues faced by pop music artists everywhere -- including America and the UK. The responsible way to talk about K-Pop is not to fetishize or condescend to it, but to acknowledge that Korean pop music shares the positive and negative traits -- and the artistic depth and diversity -- common to every creative industry around the world.
" He picked up the thread of what he had been saying in the car back in North Carolina: that, before the rise of the new-media universe, he had been able—even as a black guy "with a really weird name"—to meet people where they lived, and convey a sense "that I cared about them, that I could relate to them, that I didn't condescend to them, and that maybe I was in this for the right reasons. . . .
"If you are speaking to a financial advisor or someone in a bank or another financial provider and they do start to patronize you, or condescend, or can't explain without using jargon, then that's a bad sign and you should question if you want to be involved with that business," she tells Make It. Paying off sometimes large debts can seem daunting and was the main concern for a fifth (19%) of 2,000 U.K. adults surveyed on the impact of money on their mental health by bank TSB last week.
Ideas never condescend to the prosaism of The Verb, and words never return from the quest for their reference into the origins of time.
Here occurs the highly charged portrait of the chief Roman detractor of Salvator (we are not aware that he has ever been identified by name); and the painter protests that he would never condescend to do any of the lascivious work in painting so shamefully in vogue.
There is a general migration to the south. But one man sets off in the opposite direction to grapple with hardship. He is a sort of Cain, a slayer avoided by his fellow men, whom he holds in such contempt that he does not even condescend to take their god, fire, with him to the icy lands of the North. Defying the cold, he grows hardy and strong.
Mount of Danxia is identified by multi-layered red sedimentary rocks of sandstone and conglomerate, and the area of was formed by the fluvial deposition through the basin 140-65 million years ago. The weather in Danxia area assist the oxidation reaction in rocks, and turned the color of them into red. Then these sediments were uplifted and condescend by water, and being accreted during the process. Finally, the area of Danxia was formed.
When he sat down beside Liu Bei, which was odd because even Liu's longterm subjects like Zhang Fei and Mi Zhu always were formal. Jian he behaved boldly, ignored proper etiquette, and sat in a manner to make himself feel comfortable. When he attended banquets hosted by Zhuge Liang, he would occupy an entire couch, recline on a pillow, and speak to others in a relaxed position. He did not condescend to anyone.
At a town meeting, Homer rallies an angry mob to protest the change, noting that the upper class side of town got to keep their area code while the poorer half were forced to switch. Homer proposes that the town split into two halves, and the mob agrees. Homer is declared mayor of New Springfield and tensions arise between the two towns. Old Springfield businesses discriminate against customers from New Springfield, and condescend to them on the nightly news.
Ranks that were found on ordinary vessels of the seventeenth, and eighteenth century were found on pirate ships. They were a necessary part of working together efficiently to survive the perils of the seas. Failure of captains and other officers to condescend to seamen could result in the desire for the crew to mutiny, thus challenging the officers' right to deference. The late 18th century's challenges to monarchical and aristocratic power structures bled over into shipboard life.
One of the merit awards recipients, Ng Eng Teng, who was to receive Singapore's Cultural Medallion in 1981 and who now has his critically acclaimed works all over Singapore, commented unhappily: "We have never been so embarrassed or insulted in all our professional lives. No professional artist of our standing would condescend to receive such an amount. We felt we had been taken for a ride." In response, AIS expressed regret that the aggrieved sculptors had publicly stated their dissatisfaction.
However he had no interest in pursuing a life among this community and was only pushed to perform by McGuire. The manuscript was used by McGuire to fulfil his own ambitions and his search for publicity. He wanted desperately to know the secrets of the highest professionals and used his presence as Scott's intermediary to ingratiate himself. For others, such as Dai Vernon, McGuire was a pest who constantly used his position to condescend and frustrate Vernon's efforts to meet Scott in person.
During the campaign, Craig "seemed on a mission to destroy Hillary's political future." He emerged as "an outspoken critic of Hillary's foreign policy experience and ... a leading contender to be secretary of state after Obama got the nomination." In late summer and fall 2008, Craig, a skilled trial lawyer, assumed the role of John McCain in Barack's preparations for the presidential debates. The campaign expected "that McCain would condescend to Obama as a wet-behind-the-ears rookie" and Craig played his role as such.
In the caizi jiaren novel "sentiment replaces libido" and "refined, internal feelings replace vulgar, external sensations". One characteristic of the early Qing works is the mutual respect between the sexes. The men do not condescend to the women, and in many cases the talented and independent woman is the equal of her male lover. Since she is often an only child who has been cherished and educated by her father as if she were a boy, she skillfully helps her father and lover out of difficulty.
The film's greatest asset is the obvious > conviction of its actors, who never condescend to their roles. Mr. Depp may > look nothing like Buster Keaton, but there are times when he genuinely seems > to become the Great Stone Face, bringing Keaton's mannerisms sweetly and > magically to life. As Mr. Depp and the rest of the film makers surely must > have known, an impersonation like that is an all-or-nothing proposition. Ms. > Masterson, a remarkably incisive and determined actress, never > sentimentalizes Joon despite many ripe opportunities to do exactly that.
While some believe Chengan is inviting doom to his family, others condescend him as the evil eye of the community. Amidst the betrothal and confirmation of the alliance, sneers and snarls lead to a fight where Moothor calls off the marriage. After repeated attempts of trying to coax his community and Moothor to let them marry, Chengan decides to take the upper- hand and take the hand of Seethamma independently. The woman-centric plot spices-up when Seethama declares her love for Chengan in front of the community but refuses to walk out with him.
They will all be gathered together in > the Ka'ba and the area immediately surrounding it. Allah will condescend to > notice that they have assembled there, and He will say: 'My angels, ask Me > for whatever you wish!' Their response to this will be: 'Our Lord, the > request we wish to make is that You grant forgiveness to those who > faithfully keep the fast in Rajab,' whereupon Allah will tell them: 'That I > have already done!' Among some factions of Islam, the tradition is repudiated as a false tradition with no basis in the true writings of Muhammad.
Manohla Dargis, writing for The New York Times, notes that "Mr. Green's pedagogic style appears predicated on the idea that if you spare the insults, derision and eardrum-piercing assaults, you spoil the child" while Roger Ebert points out that "What is important is that he doesn't talk down to the students, and he is deadly serious about wanting them to work hard, practice more, and become good musicians. He rants and raves, but at least he doesn't condescend." Michael O'Sullivan of The Washington Post called the film "fascinating and funny" and an "entertaining portrait of a volatile but effective educator".
December 22, 1898. General Eagan took this statement as a personal insult and openly denounced Miles as a liar when called to testify on January 12, 1899. General Eagan was quoted in The New York Times as saying, in reference to Miles, "he lies in his throat, he lies in his heart, he lies with every hair on his head and every pore on his body, he lies willfully, deliberately, intentionally, and maliciously." Eagan also said of Miles, "he should be denounced by every honest man, barred from the clubs, barred from the society of decent people, and so ostracized that the street bootblack would not condescend to speak to him".
" A positive review came from Roger Ebert, who said "Polanski directs it without compromise or apology, and it's a funny thing how critics may condescend to it, but while they're watching it you could hear a pin drop."Roger Ebert on rogerebert.com Time Out commented that "Polanski treats this slightly protracted tale of erotic obsession partly as deeply ironic black comedy", "rich and darkly disturbing" and "also wickedly entertaining." Reviewing the film in 2009, Scott Tobias wrote: "Bitter Moon is my favorite of the later-period Polanski films...nasty, potent, and psychologically knotty in a way that recalls the devil-may-care, enfant terrible Polanski of old.
However, if the formal address itself contains a personal pronoun as in ("His Majesty") etc., this one would be put to the 2nd person plural: (not: ) ("What does [but plural] Your Majesty condescend to order?") Thus, all these go by a similar grammar rule pertaining to the verb used with these addresses as modern . The dated capitalized address demands the same verb form as the modern second person plural pronoun , the dated / demands the same verb form as the modern third person singular and , and the dated 3rd person plural address without demands, just as itself, the same verb form as the 3rd person plural pronoun ("they").
Robert Craufurd, though only a brigadier, and junior of his rank, had been chosen by Wellington to take charge of his outpost line because he was one of the very few officers then in the Peninsula in whose ability his Commander-in-Chief had perfect confidence. Only with Craufurd, Hill and Beresford, did he ever condescend to enter into explanation and state reasons. In one letter to Craufurd, Wellington writes "Nothing can be of greater advantage to me than to have the benefit of your opinions on any subject." In 1810 Craufurd was burning to vindicate his reputation and show that the confidence which Wellington placed in him was not undeserved.
Watermark received generally positive reviews from critics. In an April 1988 review, Hot Press reporter Liam Fay wrote the album is "A lifetime's worth of sights, sounds and experiences condescend into an orderly and lucid aural aquarium". He praised her orchestral-like vocals on "Cursum Perficio", the instrumentation on "Storms in Africa", "The Longships", and "Exile", and the "exquisite liqueous pop" of "Orinoco Flow" which, as he predicted, "should be a hit single". Fay was aware that lyrics in such types of music can be the weak point, but deemed Roma's lyrics are "integral and are ideally sculpted to allow Enya's voice to float between the gaps and pauses".
In a small middle-America town in 1936, a group of parents have been gathered by a mysterious Lecturer for an assembly. The ominous Lecturer informs the parents that he has come to warn them about the evils of marijuana on their youth ("Reefer Madness") through the tragic tale of one boy's struggles with the demon weed in a film titled "Tell Your Children". Throughout the film, the Lecturer stops to detail a political point or to condescend any audience member questioning his credibility. Jimmy Harper and Mary Lane, a joyful teen couple, blissfully enjoy each other's company ("Romeo & Juliet"), unaware of the seedy goings-on in The Reefer Den across town.
Corbet sadly requested permission to return home, concluding: :"The Commendator will condescend to any reasonable conditions of peace, the same being proffered by others first to him, and withal his Papistical religion excepted. Whether this exception be unreasonable or not he leaves to Burghley to judge." Burghley was as much concerned by developments in the French wars of religion as in the Dutch revolt, but had no intention of committing English forces to either conflict. The very State Papers detailing Corbet's mission constantly refer to large sums expended subsidising Reiters (German mercenary cavalry) for John I, Count Palatine of Zweibrücken, called "Duke Casimir" by the English, whose forces were marching to the aid of the Prince of Condé in France's civil war.
On June 24, 1860, she married Rufus Mallory, who afterwards represented Oregon in Congress, and who was later one of the most successful lawyers in the Pacific Northwest, and was the senior member of the extensive law firm to which Senator Joseph N. Dolph belonged. She accompanied her husband to Washington, D.C., after which they returned to Salem, Oregon. In 1874, the old slavery prejudice was so strong in Oregon that some forty-five African American and mulatto children were prevented from attending the Salem public schools and kept from all chance of acquiring an education, as no Caucasian teachers would condescend to teach them. A public fund was set apart for them, but no one came forward to labor for it.
The Broadway production received fairly positive reviews. For instance, Elysa Gardner, in her review in USA Today, wrote: > "...Martin, a master ironist, captures some of that old-school spirit with a > book that's as forthright as it is smart, funny and charming....Martin and > Brickell refuse to condescend to their own characters, from the small- > townspeople Billy grows up with to the wry, knowing employees at Alice's > highly regarded journal in the city of Asheville....The tone in which that > story is delivered can also wobble a bit, especially later on, when what > seems destined to be a majestic, Hammerstein-esque resolution is mitigated > by zany musical-comedy flourishes. Still, in what may well prove to be the > richest Broadway season for new musicals in decades, this gently shining > Star holds its own."Gardner, Elysa.
If the addressee does not actually already possess the knowledge, it may be a way to condescend: the speaker suspected as much but wanted to call attention to the addressee's ignorance. Conversely, it could be a sincere and polite way to share necessary information that the addressee may or may not know without implying that the addressee is ignorant. Apophasis can serve to politely avoid suggestion of ignorance on the part of an audience, as found in the narrative style of Adso of Melk in Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose, where the character fills in details of early fourteenth-century history for the reader by stating it is unnecessary to speak of them. Eco and Weaver use the spelling paralepsis or "passing over" for the phenomenon.
The work was dedicated to upholding William Gostling's view of the structural history of Canterbury Cathedral, against Robert Willis' "fanciful hypothesis", that the cathedral was almost entirely built in Archbishop Lanfranc's time, after the Norman conquest. J. G. Waller (in the Journal of the British Archeological Association) reviewed it favourably, claiming it "is exceeding useful and will be read with profit by all who feel interested in the metropolitan church of Canterbury", praising it for correctly pointing out flaws in Willis' work. Modern biographer of Willis, Alexandrina Buchanan, has taken a less positive view of the work, declaring that "in reality, it was Sandys who was guilty as charged [in making incorrect historical deductions], though Willis did not condescend to make this point". In the 1846 third Annual Congress of the British Archaeological Association, then held in Gloucestershire, Sandys presented a paper, entitled "On the Celtic of Ancient British Mound, called 'The Dane-John Hill', at Canterbury", on the particulars of the local mound.

No results under this filter, show 102 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.