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14 Sentences With "idiosyncracy"

How to use idiosyncracy in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "idiosyncracy" and check conjugation/comparative form for "idiosyncracy". Mastering all the usages of "idiosyncracy" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Another idiosyncracy was the flying of the blue instead of the red ensign.
This association with idiosyncracy or individualism is in turn related to the physiological and pathological usage.
A list of their faults could continue with irascibility, narcissism, idiosyncracy, high-handedness and a poor taste in friends.
The trustworthiness of oral tradition varies inversely as the square of the distance and directly as the idiosyncracy of the narrator.
I prefer it when Byrne forgets about consensus-building, and offers himself up in all his unadulterated idiosyncracy.
A 21st-century instinct toward idiosyncracy can yield especially memorable results when coupled with a revival of historical styles and traditions.
Reversals in the direction of derivation like those in are accidental on this approach, a consequence simply of the idiosyncracy of morphology.
The diversity and increased specialization of older adults' experience with routine events may be responsible for their increased idiosyncracy in script reports.
If one extends this observation further, one discovers that whereas all the tales explored earlier present a reasonably positive case for idiosyncracy and isolation.
Certain it is that it must be the object of the human as well as the divine Governor in attaining implicit obedience to attain freedom for individual idiosyncracy.
If so, it seems like you're also talking about a pretty large jump away from more traditional forms of Jazz to some very different ideas about form and style and idiosyncracy.
Such idiosyncracy seems to be a hallmark of the 1920s and 30s, when that first generation of Hollywood actors attempted to gain a foothold, or earhold, in the brand-new landscape of sound cinema.
In July 1837, Dottin and Walter resigned as directors. In 1835 Walter founded and subsidised the Railway Magazine, having seen the potential in the Mechanics' Magazine and its railway promotion; he brought in John Yonge Akerman as its editor.J. E. C. Palmer (edited by H. W. Paar), Authority, idiosyncracy, and corruption in the early railway press, 1823–1844, Journal of the Railway and Canal Historical Society, July 1995, pp. 442–457, at p. 447.
In 1900, Helm published a series of "Studies in Style" examining the writing styles of various authors, and was described in The Morning Post as having "hit on the happy idea of reproducing them with just sufficient caricature to make apparent to the simplest intelligence the affectation, or the vulgarity, or the idiosyncracy of the particular writer"."Studies in Style", The Morning Post (27 November 1900), p. 2. The review found the work to be "ample evidence of Mr. Helm's fitness for the delicate task he undertook". A 1904 book, The Blue Fox, parodying the style of Guy Boothby, was less successful, with one review finding that it "starts well with a clever burlesque of the modern Anglo-American alliance between title and dollars", but later "misses fire somehow", being not sufficiently extravagant.

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