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"soupçon" Definitions
  1. a very small amount

62 Sentences With "soupçon"

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

Then he adds an elegant soupçon of detergent to the water.
Les controverses, pourtant, sont aussi teintées d'un soupçon de préjudice social.
"My wallet is into Goop," he said with just a soupçon of rue.
Think Pokémon Go, but more historically challenging, with a soupçon of celluloid glamour.
" Coats then added with a soupçon of sarcasm, "Okay ...That's going to be special.
His character needs a soupçon more of actual work in his life, and fewer feelings.
Despite a soupçon of authenticité from the Orchestre Symphonique Kimbanguiste, these do spoil the mood.
It does well in a martini, with a little more than a soupçon of vermouth.
RedZone, an iOS app launched today, adds a soupçon of street smarts to your navigatory efforts.
The Fall of the American Empire Rated R for themes, language, violence, un soupçon du sexe.
Apply the tried and true attitudes of the cautious investor and then add another soupçon of caution.
The retro visuals call to mind 1980s French movies about teenagers, with a soupçon of vintage Jane Fonda.
Her rhymes range from bold and aggressive, to coquettish, to wanton and sultry, with a soupçon of women's empowerment.
The 2020 Nissan Maxima Platinum is optimized for family comfort with a more than a soupçon of driving thrills.
The director, Hugh Ross, adds a soupçon of farce to the percolating proceedings, keeping his busy cast on point.
Healthy knees contain only a soupçon of the stuff; arthritic and otherwise unhealthy knees tend to contain much more.
Such injured cyclists are said — in Tour speak — to have "abandoned" the race, which carries a soupçon of disapproval.
Here that subject is French charm, which is some combination of intellectual curiosity, spontaneity, style and a soupçon of reserve.
Everything feels incredibly safe, which I think is a wonderful thing, but I do miss that little weird soupçon of danger.
Now, I've never met a sangria I liked, though I will drink just about anything that contains even a soupçon of alcohol.
Turkey has been leaking just enough to keep the issue in the headlines, judiciously serving up a soupçon of evidence at a time.
There was a soupçon of negativity — a few boos and whistles — but much more buzz with "Chang" and "cuillère" as part of the hubbub.
Short black skirts were given a soupçon of fluidity in the form of a pleated silk insert dipping down and fanning out on one side.
But the resolutely optimistic Mr Hollande may reckon that even a soupçon of job growth is enough to let him run again, however doubtful his chances.
Front Burner Add a soupçon of intrigue to your next cocktail or glass of sparkling wine with a splash of poblano green chile liqueur from Mexico.
The lingering pauses with which Ms. Barabas punctuates the tersely written dialogue lend an extra soupçon of suspense and even some unspoken sexual tension to the story.
Luxurious gold-dusted marshmallows with a soupçon of wine in their flavor deserve to adorn a holiday mince pie, a festive roulade or an ice cream confection.
It's a great solve — there are creative elements in the clues, the geometry of the grid and the little soupçon of grid art — and it's perfectly timed.
Once formidable emerging countries are in disarray: Brazil and Russia have fallen into deep recessions, and China is, at best, decelerating; only India emits a soupçon of positive energy.
David Kahn offers a soupçon of commentary: There's not a whole lot of theme in this puzzle, but I wrote it because I liked the payoff at 62 Across.
The performers, who look like suppler members of Blue Man Group with a soupçon of sphynx cat, are of average height, a shrinking of the nine-foot-tall Na'vi beings.
Instead, he seems to be channeling the entire ensemble from the early years of "Saturday Night Live," with a soupçon of Jerry Lewis and Robin Williams at their most frenzied.
Over the years, much has been made of the first lady's supposed animosity toward both Clintons (mostly fiction, with a soupçon of truth), a vestige of the bitter 2008 campaign.
Described in the press as a "pop surrealist," Ryden is a Jeff Koons type, with a touch of Margaret Keane ("Big Eyes") and maybe a soupçon of the "outsider artist" Henry Darger, minus the sadism.
Richard Lawler, Vanity Fair: It's simply a dull chore steeped in flaccid machismo, a shapeless, poorly edited trudge that adds some mildly appalling sexism and even a soupçon of racism to its abundant, hideously timed gun worship.
Nyong'o and her five siblings, then living in a suburb of Nairobi, could only partially savor the lyrics of the song — a hearty, slang-ridden narrative of a thwarted mugging, topped with a soupçon of ceremonial group sex.
The crust, cut into a circle and drawn up around the apples, is sturdy and flavorful, flaky and equally important as the apples, adding another taste, a different texture and its own soupçon of drama to the dessert.
This restaurant began its life in the 1880s as a stage coach stop, became a speakeasy during Prohibition (with a brothel next door) and retains a soupçon of secrecy: There's no sign, you have to buzz to be let in.
Les élites politiques dans le monde arabe postcolonial, qu'elles soient conservatrices ou de gauche, restent allergiques à l'idée qu'un soutien externe vienne appuyer leur désir de démocratie locale: le souvenir de la colonisation frappe de soupçon toute assistante étrangère, ou presque.
As was the high/low smorgasbord prepared by Bertrand Guyon at Schiaparelli, who served up a soupçon of politics with his embroidery via a play on the concept of taste: the kind that comes from your gut as much as your head.
If there is a fruit-adjacent taste — a twist of lime, a soupçon of pamplemousse — it generally comes in the form of "natural flavor," which is what allows a can of seltzer to taste vaguely, kind of, a little like a tangerine.
In bending the knee to Trump last spring, they thought that they were buying party unity and a continued share of power, and paying for it with just a little of their decency, a mite of their patriotism, a soupçon of their honor.
Though the pictures were printed to fit on the pages of books and the film is destined for public television, it gains something on the big screen (for example at Film Forum, where it opens Wednesday): a sense of sweep and detail, a soupçon of epic, a hint of Hollywood swagger.
Other similarities to earlier movies abound, including a killer on grainy old videotape (à la "V/H/S/2"); spectral photographic phenomena (shades of "Shutter"); a soupçon of torture porn (as in the "Saw" and "Hostel" movies); dashes of morbid humor; and that hardy perennial the kitchen knife (but a special Tanaka knife).
Mr. Theyskens can cut a sweeping marigold moiré Victorian coat with a dash of poetry, disrupt it with denim, put a soupçon of Audrey Hepburn into a cap-sleeved leather mini, and bring it back down to earth with raggedy thigh-highs and black Beatle boots, but the clothes don't insist too much.
Hell, Dan is so rugged that chickens roam his living room, and anxious homeowners will wish to study his master class in how to make your own booby traps—get a jar of vegetables, tip out the contents, fill it with kerosene, add a soupçon of rusty nails and glass shards, and then lay it tenderly in a trench.
Ricœur's hermeneutical work Freud and Philosophy contains the famous assertion that Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche and Sigmund Freud are masters of the school of suspicionPaul Ricœur (1965), Freud and philosophy: an essay on interpretation, Book I Problematic, section 2: The conflict of interpretations, title: Interpretation as exercise of suspicion, p. 32Waite, Geoff (1996). Nietzsche's Corpse, Duke University Press, 1996, p. 106. (maîtres du soupçon/école du soupçon).
Voyage dans un pays au-dessus de tout soupçon. (Préface de Doudou Diène). Duboiris, Paris 2007, pp. 142-145 The book in its entirety was translated into Italian, part of it into French, and an abridged version into English, Latin and Spanish.
Joanna is an opéra comique in two acts by the French composer Étienne Méhul. It premiered at the Opéra-Comique, Paris on 23 November 1802. The libretto, by Benoît-Joseph Marsollier, is a revision of the same author's Emma, ou Le soupçon, set by Étienne Fay in 1799.Bartlet, p.
Words that retain their accents often do so to help indicate pronunciation (e.g. frappé, naïve, soufflé), or to help distinguish them from an unaccented English word (e.g. exposé, résumé, rosé). Technical terms or those associated with specific fields (especially cooking or musical terms) are less likely to lose their accents (such as the French soupçon, façade and entrée).
Next Time I'll Aim for the Heart () is a 2014 French thriller film written and directed by Cédric Anger. It was adapted from the novel Un assassin au-dessus de tout soupçon by Yvan Stefanovitch. Set in 1970s Oise, France, it is based on the story of Alain Lamare, a gendarme who was later revealed to be a serial killer.
In 2001, he was the co-screenwriter and the songwriter of the short movies Soyons sport and Un soupçon fondé sur quelque chose de gras. In 2002 he was the director of Dies Irae, a 14-minute short movie that is also the first draft of the Kaamelott TV show. In 2006, he featured in Hey Good Looking!, a French movie by Lisa Azuelos.
Penelope is stylish and fashionable in every aspect of her life. She is a world-renowned supermodel and celebrity and has appeared on the cover of Chic magazine. Her clothes are specially created for her by top fashion designers such as Elaine Wickfern and François Lemaire, who named a revolutionary new fabric "Penelon" after her. She wears an exclusive perfume called "Soupçon de Péril", mixed for her by Jacques Verre.
Few months after Enderlin's report, a small group of people in France (Gérard Huber, Philippe Karsenty, Luc Rosenzweig) launched a controversy with legal suits against France 2, and various accusations, from the contestation of the origin the bullets that killed young al-Durrah to the allegation of a "staging" of the whole scene.Hervé Deguine, Charles Enderlin. Il gagne la guerre du soupçon , Médias (11), décembre 2006, online version.
Norquist has competed three times in the comedy fundraiser "Washington's Funniest Celebrity" and placed second in 2009.The Americans for Tax Reform Foundation also issued a $5,000 grant in 2009 to the Funniest Celebrity Charity Fund. Humorist P. J. O'Rourke has described Norquist as "Tom Paine crossed with Lee Atwater plus just a soupçon of Madame Defarge". Norquist and his wife attended the annual Burning Man festival in August 2014 in Black Rock, Nevada.
However, the King produces it and points to the portrait of Don Carlos which it contains, accusing her of adultery. She protests her innocence but, when the King threatens her, she faints. In response to his calls for help, into the chamber come Eboli and Posa. Their laments of suspicion cause the King to realize that he has been wrong to suspect his wife ("Maudit soit le soupçon infâme" / "Ah, sii maledetto, sospetto fatale").
Lord Arthur Savile's Crime's was turned into a 1920 Hungarian film directed by Pál Fejös. It is also the basis of one of the three stories in Julien Duvivier's Flesh and Fantasy (1943) and became a BBC Radio 4 drama, starring Rupert Penry-Jones, in 2006. "Frasier-esque repartee abounds", reported Radio Times of the latter, "with a soupçon of Carry On… Of the starry cast, which includes Phyllida Law, most notable is David Bradley, playing Savile's butler as Norman Fletcher from Porridge." The story was adapted for the stage twice.
Diacritic marks mainly appear in loanwords such as naïve and façade. Informal English writing tends to omit diacritics because of their absence from the keyboard, while professional copywriters and typesetters tend to include them. As such words become naturalised in English, there is a tendency to drop the diacritics, as has happened with many older borrowings from French, such as hôtel. Words that are still perceived as foreign tend to retain them; for example, the only spelling of soupçon found in English dictionaries (the OED and others) uses the diacritic.
Described as a quiet student, Sarkozy soon joined the right-wing student organization, in which he was very active. He completed his military service as a part-time Air Force cleaner. After graduating from university, Sarkozy entered Sciences Po, where he studied between 1979 and 1981, but failed to graduateAugustin Scalbert, Un soupçon de vantardise sur les CV ministériels, Rue 89, 18 September 2007 due to an insufficient command of the English language.Un pouvoir nommé désir, Catherine Nay, 2007 After passing the bar, Sarkozy became a lawyer specializing in business and family law and was one of Silvio Berlusconi's French lawyers.
A 2008 study of more than 230 products found that approximately 20% of remedies (and 40% of rasa shastra medicines) purchased over the Internet from U.S. and Indian suppliers contained lead, mercury or arsenic. A 2015 study of users in the United States found elevated blood lead levels in 40% of those tested, leading physician and former U.S. Air Force flight surgeon Harriet Hall to say that "Ayurveda is basically superstition mixed with a soupçon of practical health advice. And it can be dangerous." Heavy metals are thought of as active ingredients by advocates of Indian herbal medicinal products.
Measuring spoons (metric) – 1 mL, 5 mL, 15 mL, 50 mL, 100 mL, 125 mL Measuring spoons (customary units) In recipes, quantities of ingredients may be specified by mass (commonly called weight), by volume, or by count. For most of history, most cookbooks did not specify quantities precisely, instead talking of "a nice leg of spring lamb", a "cupful" of lentils, a piece of butter "the size of a small apricot", and "sufficient" salt. Informal measurements such as a "pinch", a "drop", or a "hint" (soupçon) continue to be used from time to time. In the US, Fannie Farmer introduced the more exact specification of quantities by volume in her 1896 Boston Cooking-School Cook Book.
Sarraute's essay The Age of Suspicion (L'Ère du soupçon, 1956) served as a prime manifesto for the nouveau roman literary movement, alongside Alain Robbe- Grillet's For a New Novel. Sarraute became, along with Robbe-Grillet, Claude Simon, Marguerite Duras, and Michel Butor, one of the figures most associated with the rise of this new trend in writing, which sought to radically transform traditional narrative models of character and plot. Sarraute was awarded the Prix international de littérature for her novel The Golden Fruits in 1963, which led to greater popularity and exposure for the author. That same year, Sarraute also began working as a dramatist, authoring a total of six plays, including Le Silence (1963), Le Mensonge (1965) and Elle est là (1993).

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