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"nicety" Definitions
  1. [countable, usually plural] the small details or points of difference, especially relating to the correct way of behaving or of doing things
  2. [uncountable] (formal) the quality of being very detailed or careful about something synonym precision
"nicety" Synonyms
particular point subtlety fact nuance specific detail distinction particularity shade datum minutiae refinement fine distinction fine point punctilio small point overtone modulation gradation delicacy accurateness closeness exactitude fineness perfection preciseness precision rigor(US) ultraprecision veracity accuracy exactness meticulousness rigorousness rigour(UK) strictness scrupulousness carefulness punctiliousness comfort convenience amenity luxury accommodation creature comfort mod con frill indulgence benefit extra accessory extravagance superfluity nonessential joy delight treat betterment bonus technicality triviality trifle incidental inessential part deets nothing trivia insignificant item minor detail non-essential petty detail trivial fact mere detail tastefulness elegance grace polish class sophistication style cultivation finesse beauty attractiveness chic aestheticism taste good taste courtliness politeness touch feature element addition aspect attribute highlight ingredient note quality characteristic component finish peculiarity property slant ceremony courteousness ceremonial ceremoniousness conformity decorum form formalism formality pomp propriety protocol formal courtesy etiquette niceties formalities nice touch nice detail nice feature item consideration factor position subject argument facet tact discretion tactfulness correctness diplomacy politesse sensitivity merit value asset advantage hallmark profit strength advantageousness advisability mark plus virtue worthiness endowment uniqueness good point More

72 Sentences With "nicety"

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

Teaching real business isn't just a nicety; it's a necessity.
Each nicety becomes more sterile and each withdrawal more permanent.
It's funny to me now that I should remember this social nicety.
Is being presumed innocent - something that's useful when defending one's self - a legal nicety?
Is being presumed innocent - something that's useful when defending one's self a legal nicety?
Why it matters: Long considered a money-losing nicety, ESG is rapidly going mainstream.
It's a nicety on the Mi Mix 2S, but not an essential by any means.
I like to drum, so NC is more of a necessity than a nicety for me.
This legal nicety, however, may not win the hearts of those opposed to the Little Sisters.
On my break we sit and have dinner together — I pay for hers as a nicety.
One, it could be a simple nicety extended to a foreign leader, without much forethought on Trump's side.
For example, translation services, slated for elimination, may appear to be a nicety but are in fact, a necessity.
The company has long fancied the Apple Watch a fitness nicety, and that impulse has only grown in recent years.
Some might say posting "HBD" or another simple nicety is better than nothing, but it's so easy to be more heartfelt.
Pound chose to interpret this nicety as evidence of il Duce's genius and appreciation of his own; his ruinous devotion to him intensified.
Stating your case precisely as you see it, with absolutely no regard for diplomacy, nicety or consequences, can be a genuinely cathartic exercise.
Imagine if brides, so often mocked for demands couched in nicety-laden emails, chose to tweet desires and disappointments (in all-caps) instead?
The Philippines looks poised to reintroduce capital punishment—and in practice the police administer it frequently, by shooting drug suspects without the nicety of a trial.
At the same time, Mr. Trump does not take criticism well and lacks a sophisticated appreciation for operational nicety, policy deliberation or sound civil-military relations.
I'm then always angry at myself afterward for having ever said sorry, for the sake of other people's discomfort, and for the sake of social nicety.
John Delury, associate professor of Chinese studies at Yonsei University in Seoul, told CNN under normal circumstances the message would be little more than a diplomatic nicety.
Hillary Clinton is skipping the nicety of pretending Trump voters are too stupid to understand her brilliance and explicitly hurling vile invectives at anyone who may support Trump.
The astonishingly favorable reaction to the strike throughout the world underscores that bold American leadership and decisive action is the way to win friends, not multilateralism and diplomatic nicety.
This may sound like a mere nicety, but a person's culture is one of the most profoundly important factors driving his or her decisions when it comes to healthcare.
Beyond a nicety, it's an ecosystem play: Like your smartphone and computer, Microsoft is attempting to make the Xbox into a digital platform rather than just a physical box.
There's also the added nicety of Quick Charge 2.0, which can give you up to 13 hours of battery life with a 15-minute charge using the included Turbo Charger.
Which isn't just a "politically correct" nicety -- it's a recognition that the world has gotten tremendously bigger, and the stories that are rooted in these traditions have become less and less relevant over time.
He seemed to have somewhere between eight and 12 seconds of political nicety in him for everyone before he would declare what he would rather be doing ("I need a nap") and move on.
Observing that "Trump has violated these basic understandings of how our democracy works in an unprecedented way," Dionne, Mann and Ornstein go on: This norm breaking, is not simply a matter of political nicety.
I've heard of people leaving a one-night stand by waking someone up with a hasty lie and vague nicety before disapearing forever, but that's not exactly the best way to step down as Chief of Staff.
"Our analysis shows a least-cost power system without coal should be seen as an economic inevitability rather than a clean and green nicety," said Sebastian Ljungwaldh, energy analyst at Carbon Tracker and co-author of the report.
"Diversity isn't a nicety; it's a necessity if the industry is going to grow, thrive and truly reflect the tens of millions of people that play games every day in this country," UKIE CEO Jo Twist said in a statement.
All of which may seem like legal nicety to many in the aluminium market who watched physical premiums go super nova in tandem with the lengthening load-out queues, first at Detroit and then at the Dutch port of Vlissingen.
Or so I always assumed, but this nicety is clearly falling by the wayside, and I can't shake the feeling that its plunge is part of a larger story, a reflection of so much else that is going wrong in this warped world of ours.
Bevelled edges are a common aesthetic nicety added to window panes and mirrors.
When Casey and Chuck return home, Casey mentions that he should probably thank Chuck for saving his life. Although Chuck tries to play the nicety off by saying that that is what friends do, Casey softly says "thanks" as he closes his front door.
Tocáno (the Indian name, after its cries) proved to be an intelligent and amusing companion, with a voracious appetite. Mainly a fruit eater, he learnt the meal times "to a nicety", and would eat flesh and fish as well as fruit.Bates 1892, p. 350.
In 1993, owned by SeaRiver Maritime, it was named S/R Mediterranean, then in 2005 Mediterranean. In 2008 the vessel was acquired by a Hong Kong company that operated it as Dong Fang Ocean, then in 2011 renamed it Oriental Nicety. In August 2012, it was beached at Alang, India, and dismantled.
Ajanur is in fact a bureaucratic nicety. Some parts of Kanhangad town is put under an administrative unit called Ajanur Panchayath. The suburb continues to be part and parcel of Kanhangad town. Ajanur is just north of Kanhangad, stretching for some 5 km along the Kanyakumari-Panavel Road, encompassing an area of some 28 km2.
Members of the SDF being briefed for the op. Operation Nicety was an operation in September 1942 during the Second World War by Force Z a battalion of the Sudan Defence Force. It was designed to support the raiding forces taking part in Operation Agreement, Operation Caravan and Operation Bigamy.John W Gordon "The Other Desert War" p.
He spoke against the Corn Laws and for Anti-Slavery. On 19 March 1838, Burnet was with Peter Clare, Rev. W.N. Bunting; William Dilworth Crewdson when they presented a petition to Queen Victoria signed by 28,386 females of Manchester and Salford who requested freedom for the negro apprenticesbasically a legal nicety. "Apprentices" were nearly but not quite slaves.
The women are freed after Ben Avery recognizes Roxanne as a former lover. At Malden, the ownership of the Cooke estate is decided by a court presided over by Governor Nicholson. The claim by Lucy Rowbotham and her father are rejected. By way of a legal nicety, Malden passes back to the Cooke family because of Joan Toast's marriage to Ebenzer.
A continuous dentil cornice runs below the roof except at numbers 14–19, where it is below the top storey. A "nicety of scale" distinguishes Burton's part of the crescent; the change in style is clear when looking at the discontinuous stepped roofline. The west side is plainer. In the foreground is the Grade II-listed retaining wall of the gardens.
He felt that big subjects sometimes "relieve a novelist of the burdens of nicety of style". Epstein said that reading the book is like "looking at a mosaic very close up, tile by tile", and that the big picture only emerges near the end. But he complimented Gordimer on the way in which she unravels Rosa's fate, saying that it is "a tribute to her art".
The SAS would attack Benghazi (Operation Bigamy) and the Sudan Defence Force would capture Jalo oasis (Operation Nicety). The LRDG would be used to guide the attacking forces to their targets and at the same time, a LRDG force would attack Barce (Operation Caravan). The Barce force consisted of 17 vehicles and 47 men of 'G1' and 'T1' Patrols, which had to travel to reach their target.
Following its release the record reach number 35 on the Billboard 200 and number five on the Top R&B;/Hip-Hop Albums chart. Five singles were released, "No More Lies", "Nicety", "If?", "Something in My Heart" and "Keep Watchin'". The most successful being "No More Lies", which peak to number seven on the Billboard Hot 100 and number two on the Billboard Hot R&B; Songs chart.
Strictly speaking, it is not as good as some of its predecessors, but it certainly contains plenty of laughs, nevertheless. One of the weak spots in the film is the injection of a theme song sung by Mickey Mouse; it seems rather flat. Another thing to notice was the cartoon work, which was not executed with the nicety that some of the other cartoons have. However, the laugh material far outburdens the few shortcomings.
Spelling of the word Kiwi, when used to describe the people, is often capitalised, and takes the plural form Kiwis. The bird's name is spelled with a lower-case k and, being a word of Māori origin, normally stays as kiwi when pluralised. Thus, "two Kiwis" refers to two people, whereas "two kiwi" refers to two birds. This linguistic nicety is exemplified by the BNZ Save the Kiwi Conservation Trust, which uses the slogan "Kiwis for kiwi".
Operation Caravan was a subsidiary of Operation Agreement under which four simultaneous raids were carried out against important Axis Lines of Communication positions in September 1942. The operations were against Tobruk (Agreement), Benghazi (Bigamy), Jalo oasis (Nicety) and Barce (Caravan). Caravan was the only successful operation of the group. As well as aiding in some of the operations, the Long Range Desert Group was to carry out the attack on the Italians at Barce, particularly the airfield there.
He had timed his plot to a nicety. The government were overweighted with anxiety. They thought Young's story plausible enough to order Sprat's arrest, and messengers were sent down to Bromley on 7 May 1692 with a warrant from Nottingham to take the bishop into custody, and to search his apartments for the signed instrument in which the alleged conspirators avowed their aims. Young particularly requested that the officers might be ordered to examine the bishop's flowerpots.
The two municipalities Kanhangad and Nileshwar, out of the three in the district comes under the Hosdurg Taluk which has a total of 29 villages under it. After the inauguration of Mini Civil Station, the old Taluk office building which was constructed during the time of British was renovated as a historic monument. Under the local self-government, Kanhangad block has a total of 5 Panchayats. Kanhangad Municipality Office A part of northern Kanhangad, Ajanur is a bureaucratic nicety and a Census town.
Mingaud's reputation grew rapidly and he became known as the 'great master of the game'. According to Roberts on Billiards published in 1893 by John Roberts : > A few years later [after 1807] he became known as the great master of the > game. He could nurse a break, screw, and cause his ball to follow with the > utmost nicety and certainty. > Mingaud quietly advanced, took up [the cue] and struck the white ball, > which, after contact with the red, recoiled upon him.
His friend, however, put up a show of nicety, later on plotting to sabotage her by puncturing the wheel of her scooter. Despite Gandhi's pleas to stop him, he continues to do so. When the former tried to rectify the punctured wheel, Shanmathi comes by and is revolted by Gandhi's actions, mistaking his intentions and thinking that he instead, was trying to puncture the tire for revenge. The real saboteur comes by, once more acting as if Gandhi was at fault.
The same year, having resigned as Prime Minister amid heavy press criticism of the Suez Crisis, Anthony Eden decided to write his memoirs as a way of giving his side of the story. He recruited a team of historians to assist him, and Bracken once more stepped forward to recommend Hodge for his "grace of style and nicety of perspective". Hodge joined the team, and was kept occupied through to 1959. In 1958 Brendan Bracken died, and Hodge was commissioned to write his biography.
178 In a Routledge publication c 1867, Papa Bear is called Rough Bruin, Mama Bear is Mammy Muff, and Baby Bear is called Tiny. Inexplicably, the illustrations depict the three as male bears.Ober 1981, p. 190 In publications subsequent to Aunt Fanny's of 1852, Victorian nicety required editors to routinely and silently alter Southey's "[T]here she sate till the bottom of the chair came out, and down came her's, plump upon the ground" to read "and down she came", omitting any reference to the human bottom.
Operation Agreement was a ground and amphibious operation carried out by British, Rhodesian and New Zealand forces on Axis-held Tobruk from 13 to 14 September 1942, during the Second World War. A Special Interrogation Group party, fluent in German, took part in missions behind enemy lines. Diversionary actions extended to Benghazi (Operation Bigamy), Jalo oasis (Operation Nicety) and Barce (Operation Caravan). The Tobruk raid was an Allied disaster; the British lost several hundred men killed and captured, one cruiser, two destroyers, six motor torpedo boats and dozens of small amphibious craft.
It was customary for the Canadians to be consulted when there was a meeting between the British and American leaders on the North American side of the Atlantic. This nicety was not observed when the Nassau conference was arranged, but the Prime Minister of Canada, John Diefenbaker invited Macmillan to a meeting in Ottawa. Macmillan countered with an offer to meet in Nassau after the Skybolt issue was resolved. Kennedy and Diefenbaker loathed each other, and Kennedy made plans to leave early to avoid Diefenbaker, but Macmillan persuaded Kennedy to stay for a lunch meeting.
So the talent I have, I > have tried to manage. Then you tend to become stubborn and you wish to > implement what you believe through your art, otherwise you are not an > artist, at least you don't achieve the color and the magic that you would > hope for. I see it as a necessary nicety to not have to compromise. Berggren continued to focus on mainly Swedish productions, including a 1969 television adaptation of August Strindberg's play Miss Julie, about the class struggle between a count's daughter and his man servant, Jean.
The book also contains chapters on coffee and tea. Abbott begins his discussion on coffee with a passage from Alexander Pope: > Coffee — which makes the politician wise, And see through all things with > his half-shut eyes Sent up in vapours to the baron’s brain New stratagems, > the radiant Lock to gain. In his analysis of coffee he states "The roasting of the berry to a proper degree requires great nicety ; the virtues and agreeableness of the drink depend upon it, and both are often injured by the general method." In discussing the proper preparation of both coffee and tea Abbott offers varied opinions on the worthiness of the drinks.
Retrieved 1 June 2013 A report at the time described Rogers as "...a cornet soloist of great merit... [who] executes the most difficult passages with a degree of skill and a nicety of intonation that display a wonderful command of the instrument...".John G. Scott, Cappa the Magician, The Music Trade Review, 1891, p.474 Rogers became Cappa's personal assistant and, after Cappa's death in 1893, took over leadership of the band.Richard I. Schwartz, The Cornet Compendium- The History and Development of the Nineteenth-Century Cornet: Well-Known Soloists, 2001. Retrieved 1 June 2013 He first played in John Philip Sousa's band in 1898, and in 1900 became its assistant conductor.
In the housing sector, for example, only a few businesses will make part exchange deals. One such is Barratt Homes, where the part exchange deal, with buyers being offered discounts for part exchange of their old houses, has in fact been an integral part of the company's business model. There is another accounting nicety for the house builder in such deals, relating to when, exactly, to take the profit on the deal. House prices change over time, and it is possible that the housebuilder may not be able to eventually sell the old, exchanged, property for the same or more than the value that it was originally exchanged for.
Tea is a vital part of daily life and folk etiquette in Egypt. It typically accompanies breakfast in most households, and drinking tea after lunch is a common practice. Visiting another person's household, regardless of socioeconomic level or the purpose of the visit, entails a compulsory cup of tea; similar hospitality might be required for a business visit to the private office of someone wealthy enough to maintain one, depending on the nature of the business. A common nickname for tea in Egypt is "duty" (pronounced in Arabic as "wa-jeb" or "wa-geb"), as serving tea to a visitor is considered a duty, while anything beyond is a nicety.
Emlyn was anxious for reforms of the law, and very forcibly pointed out the defects in the system as then practised. He remarked in 1730 on the ‘tediousness and delays’ of civil suits, ‘the exorbitant fees to counsel, whereto the costs recovered bear no proportion,’ the overgreat ‘nicety of special pleadings,’ the scandal of the ecclesiastical courts. In criminal law he objected to the forced unanimity of the jury, the Latin record of the proceedings, the refusal of counsel to those charged with felony, the practice of pressing to death obstinately mute prisoners, capital punishment for trifling offences, ‘the oppressions and extortions of gaolers,’ and generally the bad management of gaols.Preface to State Trials.
Smithfield Foods is a wholly owned subsidiary of WH Group of China, the world's largest pork processor. In mid March, Kenneth Sullivan, the CEO of Smithfield Foods, wrote to Pete Ricketts, the governor of Nebraska, expressing "grave concerns" that calling for social distancing was a threat to the reliability of the food production workforce, adding that "Social distancing is a nicety that makes sense only for people with laptops." In mid-April 2020 the Smithfield plant in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, became a "hotspot" for the pandemic, with 300 of the plant's 3,700 employees testing positive for the disease. On April 12 the company announced the indefinite closure of the plant, which processes 4 to 5 percent of the pork production in the United States.
The first response to the poem came in an anonymous review in the July 1820 Monthly Review, which claimed, "Mr Keats displays no great nicety in his selection of images. According to the tenets of that school of poetry to which he belongs, he thinks that any thing or object in nature is a fit material on which the poet may work ... Can there be a more pointed concetto than this address to the Piping Shepherds on a Grecian Urn?"Matthews 1971 qtd. p. 162 Another anonymous review followed in the 29 July 1820 Literary Chronicle and Weekly Review that quoted the poem with a note that said that "Among the minor poems, many of which possess considerable merit, the following appears to be the best".
Those were sealed until required, if ever. The point of this nicety remains obscure, as there was no one to spy out the secret who would not shortly know all. The Biography says that the admiral named the first island seen Domenica, because discovered on Sunday. He named the second Marigalante after the ship. As the only extant edition of the original Biography is a translation of the Spanish into Tuscan, called Italian on the title page, by Alfonso Ulloa (Basque name), The translation notice on the 1571 edition is: Nuovamente di lingua Spagnuola tradotte nell’Italiana dal S. Alfonso Ulloa, “Newly translated from the Spanish language into Italian by Señor Alfonso Ulloa.” The Spanish manuscript, which was not otherwise published, is lost.
Kiranjit was convicted of murder in December 1989. At the trial, the prosecution argued that although on the night of the event she had been threatened with a hot poker, the fact that she waited until her husband had gone to sleep was evidence that she had time to "cool off" and weigh to a nicety her actions. In addition, the prosecution claimed that her prior knowledge to mix caustic soda with petrol to create napalm was not common knowledge and so was proof that she had planned her husband's murder. Her counsel did not make any claims about the violence she later claimed she had endured, and the prosecution suggested that Kiranjit was motivated by jealousy because of her husband's repeated affairs.
"The Exposition at St. Louis" Frank Leslie's Magazine (October 1893): 511. A Pennsylvania newspaper during this time praised her voice as "one of the few incomparable soprano voices of the generation...cultivated to such a nicety of perfection, as makes it a charm to the cultivated ear.""Chats by the Way" Wilkes-Barre Daily Times (December 3, 1892): 1. via Newspapers.com She sang with Hinrich's Grand Opera in Boston in the spring of 1893.Eugene Tompkins, Quincy Kilby, The History of the Boston Theatre, 1854-1901 (Houghton Mifflin Company 1908): 404, 424. She performed in a series of Wagner operas in German with the New York Symphony under Walter Damrosch,"The Season of Wagner Opera" New York Times (December 1, 1894): 4. via ProQuest at the Boston Theatre and at the Metropolitan Opera House.
In June 2019, Huscroft wrote in his dissenting GHGPPA opinion that the decision of the majority could have repercussions to the existing that division of powers between the provinces and the federal government. He noted: "federalism is no constitutional nicety; it is a defining feature of the Canadian constitutional order that governs the way in which even the most serious problems must be addressed" and "in effect, [the federal government] has asked the court to sanction a change to the constitutional order -- to increase Parliament's lawmaking authority while diminishing that of the provincial legislatures, and to do so on a permanent basis." Huscroft's dissent was described as "traditionalist" in its view of the division of powers and compared to Gérard La Forest, a former puis-ne on the Supreme Court of Canada, by former Attorney-General Peter MacKay.
Wisden, in its 1927 review of public school cricket, wrote that he had been "at once the most successful and the best" of the school's batsmen: "He has the quickness of foot and the nicety of timing that one expects in a good racquets player, but his defence was also good and he was clever at forcing the ball to the on." In 1926 he played one Second XI match for Kent and in September 1927 played at The Oval in a match between the Young Amateurs of Kent versus the Young Amateurs of Surrey, scoring 117 runs. Whilst at Oxford, Cazalet played first-class cricket regularly during 1927 for the Oxford University side. Against Surrey he shared in a first-wicket partnership of 207 with Aidan Crawley, although he contributed only 66 runs, Crawley making 150.
When a key was depressed, a little tongue of wood, one end of which stopped the string, was pressed against the revolving cylinder, and the vibrations produced by friction were transmitted to the string and reinforced as in the piano and violin by the soundboard. The adjustment of the parts and the velocity of the cylinder required delicacy and great nicety, for if the little wooden tongues rested too lightly upon the cylinder or the strings, harmonics were produced, and the note jumped to the octave or twelfth. Sometimes when chords were played the touch became so heavy that two performers were required, as in the early medieval organistrum, the prototype of the harmonichord. Carl Maria von Weber must have had some opinion of the possibilities of the harmonichord, which in tone resembled the glass harmonica, since he composed a concerto with orchestral accompaniment for the instrument.
The letter of marque and reprisal was recognized by international convention and meant that a privateer could not technically be charged with piracy while attacking the targets named in his commission. This nicety of law did not always save the individuals concerned, however, since whether one was considered a pirate or a legally operating privateer often depended on whose custody the individual found himself in—that of the country that had issued the commission, or that of the object of attack. Spanish authorities were known to execute foreign privateers with their letters of marque hung around their necks to emphasize Spain's rejection of such defenses. Furthermore, many privateers exceeded the bounds of their letters of marque by attacking nations with which their sovereign was at peace (Thomas Tew and William Kidd are notable alleged examples), and thus made themselves liable to conviction for piracy.

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