World Bank assessments of those early loans are gushingly positive.
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At his death Goethe gushingly likened him to a "demi-god".
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You don't need to be gushingly lovey to have a positive conversation.
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The Chinese state-run news agency gushingly describes the "astonishing achievements" as "the epitome of the DPRK today".
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And they are gushingly prolific, releasing music in a torrent (at least, in the case of Lil Wayne, when he could).
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Donald Trump has gushingly praised the network, which is infamous for forcing (sometimes identically scripted) pro-Trump content onto its stations' broadcast.
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The black protagonist heads with his white girlfriend from an apartment in the city to a house in the woods, where he's gushingly welcomed by her parents.
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Shortly thereafter, Musgraves won her third Grammy of the night — best country album for "Golden Hour" — and gushingly doled out thanks to her manager, the Grammys and her fans.
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Two months later, she gushingly reviewed a book that called born-millionaire George H.W. Bush "one of us," and defended the very access journalism that her entire schtick rests upon.
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Steve Bannon called her a "rising star" and Sarah Palin gushingly named her a reminder of Joan of Arc, so perhaps Marion will attempt to lead the National Front to a coronation in 2022.
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Jeremy Meeks has gone from the big house to the dog house -- if you believe reports he and fiancee Chloe Green are on the outs -- which might explain his gushingly loving birthday message to her.
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The two-and-a-half-minute trailer spends a lot of time showing off the dazzling in-air CG that Variety gushingly compared to Gravity, but it still refuses to answer the one pressing question that the world has been asking since the first teaser dropped back in August: Namely, where do they poop up there?
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At Jezebel, for instance, Bobby Finger declared it his awards season villain, based mainly on the fact that it's directed by a straight white guy (La La Land's Damien Chazelle) and about a straight white guy (Neil Armstrong, played by Ryan Gosling), and had already gone over gushingly well with at least one prominent straight white guy (Variety's Owen Gleiberman).
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Rand scholar Mimi Reisel Gladstein said Nathaniel Branden's essays are "illuminating", but the biography is limited because it required Rand's review and approval. Historian Jennifer Burns called it "hagiographic". In an essay accusing the Objectivist movement of being a cult, Murray N. Rothbard described the book as an "authorized exercise in uncritical adulation". Other critics of Rand have called it "gushingly adulatory" and "sycophantic".
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He was amiable and neat in person and language, but never terse; and his style in manners and writing were bountifully steeped with gushingly effusive, but also often grating, cordialities. The poet Leopardi complained that: > Cancellieri is insufferable from the outrageous laudations with which he > overwhelms everybody who goes to see him, ... (and) which renders his > conversation utterly uninteresting, since one cannot believe a word of it. > ... Cancellieri—an old fool, a river of chatter, the most tiresome and > insupportable bore on earth. He speaks of absolutely trivial matters with > the utmost interest, and of things of high import with the coldest > indifference.
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The Bonzo Dog Band performed the song in a 1967 episode of the TV series Do Not Adjust Your Set, in which the band is gushingly introduced by Michael Palin (who gets the title wrong). The band appeared regularly on the show—a so-called children's programme which featured Palin, Eric Idle and other later-famous comedians. Alex Chilton of Big Star covered the song live on WLYX Memphis in 1975. The song is also referenced on the 1984 Culture Club album Waking Up with the House on Fire, in the song "Crime Time", which is a throwback to the early rock 'n' roll sound.
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In 1952, Grant starred in the comedy Room for One More, playing an engineer husband who with his wife (Betsy Drake) adopt two children from an orphanage. He reunited with Howard Hawks to film the off-beat comedy Monkey Business, co-starring Ginger Rogers and Marilyn Monroe. Though the critic from Motion Picture Herald wrote gushingly that Grant had given a career's best with an "extraordinary and agile performance", which was matched by Rogers, it received a mixed reception overall. Grant had hoped that starring opposite Deborah Kerr in the romantic comedy Dream Wife would salvage his career, but it was a critical and financial failure upon release in July 1953.
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