We have no meanings for "slight tincture" in our records yet.
1 Every man had a slight tincture of soldiership, and scarcely any man more than a slight tincture .
2 In the course of her becoming habituated with foreign manners, Mrs. Bethune Baliol had, perhaps, acquired some slight tincture of them herself.
3 I could not help making a casual inquiry, whether, among the graces of polite literature, he had included a slight tincture of metaphysics.
4 He was a Mir-liwa, or brigadier-general, and had some reputation as a soldier, together with a slight tincture of European science and language.
5 Extreme ignorance and frivolity were thought less unbecoming in a lady than the slightest tincture of pedantry.
6 Thus all in China who receive the slightest tincture of learning do so at the fountain of Confucius.
7 Na krichechramanupasyati is the reading I take, meaning "in which no one sees the slightest tincture of sorrow."
8 She was not troubled by the slightest tincture of modesty, but philosophized on coition as coolly and much more learnedly than Hedvig.
9 "Yes, that's what he says," said Charles, in a tone that showed no slightest tincture of conviction.
10 "You will yet do so!" said Count Paulo, with a slight tincture of bitterness; "Carlo and your future yet remain to you!"
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