We have no meanings for "too prosaic" in our records yet.
1 His nature was too prosaic to admit the existence of such phantoms.
2 I must get the breakfast-thatsounds too prosaic for paradise.
3 Still, you are too prosaic to fancy they can have anything to do with-this.
4 Is there any work too sordid, too prosaic , to yield a return of beauty?
5 I am too old, too experienced, too worldly-wise, too prosaic for you in every way.
6 A little too prosaic perhaps.
7 Yet despite the group's professional advancement, the songs on Closer to Youare simply too prosaic to make any lasting impression.
8 She was romantic and perverse-shethought the world she had been brought up in too vulgar or at least too prosaic .
9 But the simple duties of the domestic hearth!-theyare too prosaic for you Alexandrians, who imbibe philosophy with your mothers' milk.
10 After enumerating a number of things which she intended to buy for Ikpe house, she said, Does that seem too prosaic ?
11 It is too precise, too matter-of-fact, too prosaic in the way in which it is told, to be resolved into ill-understood dreams and imaginations.
12 Detective stories make for riveting reading but the truth underlying the banking crash is too prosaic , far too dull, to make for a best-selling story.
13 "I feel much too prosaic to imagine spending my everyday working hours in it."
14 'Yes, but not a work of fiction- Iamafraid I am too prosaic an individual for that- amedicalwork.'
15 "Really life is becoming too prosaic , " she said, "since you dreadfully clever people began to discover a reason for everything.
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Too prosaic across language varieties