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6 Sentences With "more ostentatiously"

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

After all, there is no child-rearing practice that more ostentatiously screams cosmopolitan upper class than having your kid learn Mandarin.
Some leaders prefer to travel more ostentatiously than others — prices in this list range from £11 million ($14.7 million) to a relatively economical £400,000 ($535,000).
Hamilton (1988), p. 75. The various chroniclers who comment on the issue do not agree entirely on the exact nicknames used. A thorough summary of the literature can be found in; Tout (1914), p. 13. Gaveston also began to exploit his relationship with the King more ostentatiously, obtaining favours and appointments for his friends and servants.
After many years of rambling across Europe the aging Giacomo Casanova is impoverished. He wants to return to the Republic of Venice but he doesn't dare going there directly because he was a fugitive when he left. While he tries to find a way to get a pardon he meets a young lady named Marcolina. The more he shows his affection, the more ostentatiously she rejects him.
What is most notable, though, is not the tune but the orchestration. Tchaikovsky is now introducing in both texture and tone color a more unobtrusive variety into the accompaniment than would be noticed in a ballet where the attention is divided between stage and music.Brown, Man and Music, 259. #Scherzo burlesque: Vivace, con spirito #:This movement is more ostentatiously brilliant than the Valse and includes a part for a quartet of accordions.
" He wrote that the episode "continued to defy our expectations of Twin Peaks here at the start. But I’m liking it and I find meaning in the challenge." The A.V. Club's Emily L. Stephens gave Part 3 an A, citing the scene in Hawk's office as an example of the way the series "employs the cute stuff, the cozy stuff, the comfortable stuff [...] as a counterpoint to its cruelest moments." She wrote that in the episode "women’s bodies are even more ostentatiously objectified", noting that Jade, "one of the few black actors in Twin Peaks, is introduced nude" and serves a small purpose to the plot, and that "the silhouette of Agent Tamara Preston [...] frames the scene" in which Cole and Rosenfield are told that Cooper is back; she clarifies that "[t]his is not a complaint", and praises it "as a comment on objectification" rather than "a thoughtless reiteration of it.

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