Aún no tenemos significados para "mere affectation".
1The robe of philosophy is a mere affectation, I must confess.
2His praise of her was not all mere affectation of sentiment.
3He was impressed: Trajanus's military bearing was no mere affectation.
4The word "spiritual," as used in this connection, is a mere affectation.
5Does he believed in astrology, the casting of horoscopes, or is it mere affectation?
6Grotesque he is not seldom, but the grotesqueness is deliberate and effective, and no mere affectation.
7It was no mere affectation; she was not conscious, in smiling, of the expression upon her face.
8I find it mere affectation to protest that my grief prevents me from dealing with practical matters.
9Perhaps her suspicion is mere affectation.
10Yet this has not degenerated into mere affectation and softness; there is none of the over refinement of luxury.
11In the girl, quiescence was the natural outcome of womanly reserve; in the Boy, it would have been mere affectation.
12Nor is this demeanour a mere affectation, a tactic to seduce defenders into thinking Asprilla is either drained or disaffected.
13In his peculiar American way, he was very religious, and I knew that his piety was not a mere affectation.
14Therefore it would be mere affectation to copy the later orthography of Chaucer, or to interlard one's sentences with obsolete words.
15For instance: our reprobation of bright colour is, I think, for the most part, mere affectation, and must soon be done away with.
16There are no sillier things in life than the mere affectations of intellectuality.
Esta colocación está formada por:
Mere affectation a través del tiempo
Mere affectation por variante geográfica