Is there any with lesspretension, except in the matter of virtue?
2
The lesspretension you make, the better they will like you in the long run.
3
Old Nash was, perhaps, a better gentleman than his son; but with far lesspretension.
4
As to the Methodists, they made fifty years ago much lesspretension to an intellectual footing in the religious world than at the present day.
5
There is not a production in the whole realms of fiction, that has lesspretension to manly, or even endurable feeling, or to common propriety.
6
It should to conservatives complaining about "Who wore it best and with lesspretension?" when deficits are about to skyrocket under a President Romney.
7
It's a missionary book, and has lesspretensions to be literature than Spurgeon's sermons.
8
Still, it was my home, and as such I should have loved it, had it possessed even lesspretensions to beauty.
9
"There's lesspretension on Rodeo Drive," answered McDermott, who had grown up in the Ninth Street Projects.