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Word: pompous (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...author is not pompous. A typical sentence, suitable for diagramming, goes like this: "He was a good student, and although he was well liked by his classmates, he was not a joiner or an activist." Solid stuff, with a sensible content exactly suited to its style. Three hundred pages of it produce a book like one of those wistful, timid little men Thurber used to draw...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Three Levels of Mitty | 11/20/1972 | See Source »

Maria (Tuesday Weld) passes her days wandering about the grounds of a psychiatric hospital where she is a patient. "Nothing applies" she scrawls across the battery of psychological tests they give her. Her husband Carter (Adam Roarke) is a pompous young hack who makes motorcycle movies and discusses the auteur theory. His producer B.Z. (Anthony Perkins) tries both to meddle with and mend their broken marriage. Maria has already had one child-Kate, herself disturbed-and aborted a second. In her sickness and despair, she clings to Carter, who humiliates her with the kind of bitter brutality she usually heaps...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Nothing Applies | 11/13/1972 | See Source »

...once was an Air Force research historian, and then taught American history at New York University, Goldman, 51, came late to journalism as a senior editor of Look. He still looks and sounds the academic, defining ID as "a university of ideas, if that's not too pompous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Idea Mill | 9/25/1972 | See Source »

...American lady vacationing in Italy seeks advice at the American consulate in Florence. She gets a crisp brush-off from a pompous young vice consul. "I pay your salary, young man," she protests, but in vain. That scene in Olivia de Havilland's 1962 movie, Light in the Piazza, often evokes a knowing chuckle from seasoned American travelers. U.S. consuls have a reputation-sometimes deserved, frequently not-of being coldly impervious to fellow citizens in distress. Now that the expanding but unreliable charter-flight business is leaving a growing number of travelers high and dry (TIME, Sept...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: EUROPE: Down and Out in London or Elsewhere | 9/18/1972 | See Source »

...absurdist tragedy, and the escalating force of Casey's convincing verse can best be appreciated when he work is taken in as a whole. Amidst what would seem to be his verbatim transcription of his portion of the war, the poet's moments of reflection are neither disruptive nor pompous, but as frugal, honest and ironic as his descriptive poetry. Somewhat misleadingly, it is his most philosophically-inclined poem "A Bummer" which appears on the front of the book; it concludes with a rare instance of generalization...

Author: By Peter M. Shane, | Title: Obscenities | 8/15/1972 | See Source »

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