Word: sneering
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...superimposing a sneer upon his menacing demeanour) You have fallen in love with that Austrian--(gargling the--). But you have sworn the oath with us! You shall get that...
...last year at various times I have been surprised at articles that made me wonder if the good old TIME was operating in its usual unbiased manner. I received this week's magazine today, and I am completely disillusioned. I will not go into the details of the sneering article that appeared in it concerning Rev. Charles Coughlin. I will not attempt to defend him for he needs no defense. His magnificent loyalty and splendid principles are well known to the American people. For a publication like TIME to put the stamp of bigotry on itself and to openly...
Once upon a time an ageing, king with a Satanic sneer and a great peruke lived in a Baroque palace. From this palace he made occasional raids, foraging among his neighbors for the means to gratify his Teutonic tastes. For these raids he gathered from Europe the bravest and strongest soldiers that money could buy, them he drilled and disciplined as soldiers had never been disciplined before. He won battles, and became the hero of his countrymen. But battles palled, he was not amused. So he built Sanssouci, which in its Baroque lushness reflected his Northern, Germanic, emotional temperament...
...over the hard cobblestones and sharp rocks of the highway towards a suburb of Paris. Thin rags hung about them for clothes, their shoes showed great holes, and the filth of a century clung to them like a disease. On every animal face there was a snarl and a sneer that represented the discontent of a thousand others, and the lines and hollows that only starvation can leave distorted their features. They hardly knew where they were going, yet they dreamt that each painful step they took would bring them nearer to food, to the Baker and the Baker...
...perhaps within a few months of political ruin ... is sticking at nothing to restore his fortunes." Japanese editors also struck the sour note that the President's proposals were mere electioneering. Icy and astute, Sir John Simon steered the British Press away from this cheap and ineffective sneer by summoning to his hotel all the British correspondents in Geneva. "I implore you," he said, "to give no emphasis to the possible bearing of Mr. Hoover's proposals on the coming presidential election...