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"patronizingly" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows that you think you are better or more intelligent than somebody else

49 Sentences With "patronizingly"

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

"Have your parents ever killed anyone before?" it asks patronizingly.
" Too often, he wrote, blacks were portrayed "sentimentally and patronizingly.
When the doctor patronizingly tells her to "calm down," Garner's character isn't having it.
Several family members assert, patronizingly, to Marta that they have "always taken care of" her.
Democrats, on the other hand, tend to patronizingly lead with how windmills will solve rural problems.
Toward the end of her life, she was sometimes patronizingly mistaken for a cute old lady.
The disease is often referred to by two names, myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) and, more patronizingly, chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS).
"That's okay sweetheart," Lee says patronizingly, and then immediately tattle-tales on Kenny calling him out on his lies.
InfoWars boss and far-right media personality Alex Jones got a stern warning Wednesday as he heckled and patronizingly patted Sen.
Lavinia claimed, a little patronizingly, that she refused to let her husband help with her paintings, except to fill in the drapes.
Detroit doesn't paint all police or all white people as uniform caricatures of badness, nor does it patronizingly suggest that all black people are innocents.
Any mention of how nursing and medicine differ, and how nurses, who are often viewed (incorrectly and patronizingly), as "doctors' little helpers" might actually be onto something?
Everyone can agree to hate gauche augmented reality consumerism, but what happens if a patronizingly benevolent technocrat picks a utopia for us, and we don't even notice?
"It was poorly managed, treated too glibly, patronizingly, completely lacking empathy at the fact that so many young people were going to be laid off," the person said.
Henry Beach did not want her to take composition lessons, either — he feared, patronizingly, that it might change her creative voice — but he still pressed her to work.
Rather patronizingly called the "girl reporter of this war" during World War II, she co-wrote the best seller "Thunder Out of China," chronicling the Chiang Kai-shek era.
The concert would provide the opportunity to conduct a first-rate regional orchestra in the core repertory, which he said some orchestras were patronizingly reluctant to offer minority guest conductors.
Even in the recent, universally despised Frozen short that accompanies Pixar's Coco, Olaf patronizingly sings about the Jewish children who are somehow celebrating their very own "holiday tradition" in a Scandinavian village.
"Our human compassion binds us the one to the other -- not in pity or patronizingly, but as human beings who have learnt how to turn our common suffering into hope for the future."
We're made to understand that Ailes demoted her after she complained of sexualized treatment on Fox & Friends; later, after he greets her patronizingly as Miss America, she openly fights with him in the studio.
Schiff did patronizingly praise Amash for his "courage" albeit in much the same way that liberals had used to praise the late Senator John McCain for his "courage" every time he defied his own party.
We are told in the title of one section near the end that " HE HAD A QUALITY OF GROWTH ," something that Democrats have patronizingly conceded to G.O.P. moderates from Charles Evans Hughes to John McCain .
And it beautifully illustrates the sure-handed way Ms. Greenidge deals with even the most grievous racist stupidity, just as she does when the Freemans are patronizingly told by a white "expert" how black they are.
A stressed, young white mother patronizingly tries to connect with black child-minders in a park; a mother and her teenage daughter bicker over the care of the older woman's infirm mother, revealing the narcissism of each.
The ire stemmed from a series of Instagram exchanges between Stefano Gabbana, one of two designers behind the fashion line, and a model, Michele Tranovo, who pointed out one of Dolce & Gabbana's ads came across as patronizingly and potentially racist.
An intellectually disabled person may not be able to parse difficult texts at the library; a physically disabled person may not be able to get up the front steps to that same library; someone with a speech impediment may be dealt with patronizingly there.
Vincent Canby, who reviewed "Daughter of the Nile" in The New York Times when it was shown at the 1988 New York Film Festival, patronizingly characterized Mr. Hou, then well into his career, as "an earnest film student," noting his affinities to the Japanese master Yasujiro Ozu.
García, who starred in the acclaimed 2013 golden-years romantic drama Gloria, is Little Men's tart center, playing Leonor not as some patronizingly innocent, helpless foreigner but, rather, as a tough-as-nails single mom who isn't above needling Brian and Kathy's liberal guilt, determined to make it as difficult as possible on them to kick her out.
There was Morning Joe's Katty Kay, whom Ben Carson patronizingly screeched at when he commanded her own producers to "turn her microphone off" after she asked about Trump's accusers; and Megyn Kelly, who has been accused of being "obsessed with sex" by three conservative white-haired men who clearly don't understand the difference between sex and sexual assault.
Gismonda kindly and patronizingly thanks Almerio, and begins to look for a loophole out of her promise. She decides to appeal to the Pope. Almerio, however, wants her to live up to her vow. Gismonda promises him whatever he wants, except herself and her duchy.
He highlighted as a concern the "downright racist" scene ten minutes into the show between Rachel and Sunshine which he could have "done without". Meghan Carlson of BuddyTV also described Rachel's behavior in the aforementioned scene as "totally, patronizingly racist". Writing for The Stir, Brittany Drye asked "Is Glee racist?", and cited several moments in "Audition" which could be perceived as racist.
A "Black 6" mouse Mammalian geneticist William E. Castle purchased some of Lathrop's mice in 1902. He trained C. C. Little who bred C57BL/6J ("Black 6") from Lathrop's mouse number 57. Black 6 became the most frequently used strain of laboratory mouse. While Little patronizingly called Lathrop a "talented pet-shop owner," his own DBA strain was probably derived from her partially inbred silver fawn mice.
The Accord only granted the state government the right to review those laws which were specifically from the Center and State's shared list of "concurrent powers" extended after 1953 to the State. Only these laws could be considered for amendment or repealment. The Accord also "patronizingly" recognised the State's right to legislate on matters such as welfare, social and cultural issues and Muslim personal law.
Arthur D. Murphy of Variety agreed and found the film's plot "requires a sensitive adult mind," but "lacks by a wide margin the requisite treatment, more often than not being patronizingly voyeuristic."Murphy, Arthur D. (March 24, 1971). "Film Reviews: Friends". Variety. 26. Howard Thompson of The New York Times called the film "rather exasperating" until the "deeply touching finale" when it finally makes its point about pure love with the birth of the baby.
This irritates party planner Angela Martin (Angela Kinsey), who has already been in an exceptionally irritable mood. She viciously and patronizingly takes out her frustrations on fellow Party Planning Committee member Phyllis, who quits the committee in frustration. Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson) decides to compete against the website to see who can make more sales. Andy Bernard (Ed Helms) keeps a running tally of reams sold, blowing an airhorn each time Dwight makes a sale.
Simon J. Bronner, Explaining Traditions: Folk Behavior in Modern Culture (University Press of Kentucky, 2011). The project was (patronizingly) celebrated as a harmonious collaboration among immigrant artists--"iron work by Samuel Yellin from Poland; wood-carving by Edouard Maene from Belgium; stained glass by Nicola D'Ascenzo from Italy."Allen H. Eaton, Immigrant Gifts to American Life, (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1932). Medary also designed, and Maene also carved, the Crucifixion tympanum over the church's rear door.
Tessa visits Rubina and her teenage son, who holds Tessa responsible for his father's death much to Rubina's disgust. Rubina refuses to answer questions about Tessa's father but when given some money for the children, she tells Tessa to ask the Dons. Visiting Don Hidalgo, he is not forthcoming and advises her patronizingly to go home, find a husband, and find fulfillment in marriage. Interrupted by one of Grisham's soldiers with an invitation to lunch at a beach with Grisham.
When asked about the remark prior to the first test, the West Indian captain Clive Lloyd gave Greig the benefit of the doubt surrounding the use of the word grovel. Lloyd however declared being furious about how Greig had patronizingly characterized the West Indies team as unprofessional and nonchalant Calypso cricketers. During the final match at The Oval as defeat became eminent for the English side, Grieg kneeled down on to the pitch smiling and performed a ‘grovel’ crawl on the ground.
She was soon promoted to supervisor. Lyons headed CBC Radio's current affairs department and directed the AM radio service before being promoted to vice president of network radio in 1983, becoming the first woman vice president at the CBC. Within the CBC, Lyons held a reputation of "benevolent ferocity" and was affectionately referred to as the "Dragon Lady". During the early 1970s, Lyons was tasked with revitalizing CBC's struggling radio service, which, according to Barbara Frum, had become "ponderous, a sort of university of the air... it talked down to people and was patronizingly intellectual".
To this end Nathan persuaded the well-known singer John Braham (who was also Jewish) to lend his name to the title page in return for 50% of any profits.Conway (2012), p. 95. Byron's motives for cooperating are less clear, but he seems to have been genuinely sympathetic to the cause of the Jews and he patronizingly enjoyed Nathan's company as a sort of court jester. Byron gave the copyright of the poems to Nathan, and also left him a £50 note when the scandal of the poet's relationship with his half-sister Augusta caused him to flee England in 1816 – an event which also boosted sales of the "Melodies".
Decimus first trained with his father and received drawing lessons from George Maddox. Decimus's father James was a talented architect, in addition to the foremost contemporaneous property developer. Williams says of James Burton, "[He] was no ordinary builder. He could have put up an imposing and beautifully proportioned building, correct in every constructional detail, from the roughest of sketches tossed patronizingly at him by a 'gentleman architect'", and "James Burton became adept at relieving the monotony of long residential terraces by allowing their central blocks to project slightly from the surfaces to each side, and by bringing forward, too, the houses at each end", and that "the ironwork in a classical style in James Burton's Bloomsbury terraces was, and often still is, particularly fine, though mass produced".
" Food critic Katharine Shilcutt of the Houston Press criticized the episode for giving what she thought was an inaccurate depiction of foodies, as people that are "tacky, snotty, slightly racist, hoarders of food experiences that you gather like rare gems and patronizingly hold over other people's heads." Shilcutt added that she found it upsetting that what she believes to be the moral of the episode is that "Educated, passionate people are elitists. It reduces all the hard work that people put into creating good, honest food into a joke, and not a terribly funny one. There was no balance in the episode between smug, arrogant, obnoxious foodies and those who have a genuine, guileless interest in food and all its important permutations in our lives.
Ms. Pfeiffer is a vastly better actress than this one-dimensional character allows her to be… Never mind the complaints that could be made about LouAnne's teaching methods: she rewards students with bribes, flirts patronizingly and inflicts cruel and unusual punishment while analyzing the subtext of 'Mr. Tambourine Man'… The kids turn out to be angels, straight from central casting… Performances are as lifelike as the material allows, but Ronald Bass's screenplay doesn't trade heavily in surprises." Kenneth Turan in the Los Angeles Times wrote: "While films are admired for making fantasy real, some manage a reverse, unwanted kind of alchemy, turning involving reality into meaningless piffle. It is that kind of regrettable transformation that Dangerous Minds achieves… none of it, with the exception of Pfeiffer's performance, seems even vaguely real.
As is the story for most museums built from a core of personal acquisitions, the Lopez Museum collection is an amalgam of objects reflecting the overt as well as latent idiosyncrasies of each of its curators and directors. Apart from constituting a seminal contribution to extant Philippine heritage, the Lopez Museum collection stands as one of the oldest, publicly accessible private art collections in the country. Eminent historian Renato Constantino was Lopez Museum's first curator, from 1960 to 1972. Engaged by LMM founder and prominent antiquarian Eugenio Lopez, Sr (Eñing), it was only logical that it would be under his watch that the museum acquired Juan Luna's España y Filipinas, a seminal work much cited for capturing the image of a country patronizingly led up the rungs of evolutionary colonial tutelage.
Critics addressed the series' portrayal of women after Game of Thrones began airing in 2011. Ginia Bellafante wrote in a piece from The New York Times that the series was "boy fiction patronizingly turned out to reach the population's other half" and considered it a "true perversion" that "all of this illicitness [in the TV series] has been tossed in as a little something for the ladies, out of a justifiable fear, perhaps, that no woman alive would watch otherwise". Although there may be women who read books like the Ice and Fire series, Bellafante said to never have "met a single woman who has stood up in indignation at her book club and refused to read the latest from Lorrie Moore unless everyone agreed to The Hobbit first". The article received so many responses that the New York Times had to close down the comments section.
Authentic Thaumaturgy is a sourcebook of ideas for improving fantasy role-playing magic systems by basing them on purportedly real magical practices; the author has a Bachelor of Arts in Magic from the University of California. The rules are based on the magic system Bonewits claimed to use in real life in his capacity as the Archdruid of Ár nDraíocht Féin. Bonewits presents 26 Laws of Magic which he explains "are not legislative laws but, like those of physics or of musical harmony, are practical observations that have been accumulating over the course of thousands of years, with remarkable similarity in almost every known human culture. Those of you who prefer to remain skeptical as to the reality of psychic phenomena and the systems of magic developed to control them will at least find these Laws an interesting and detailed guide to what psychologists and anthropologists so patronizingly refer to as “magical thinking.”" Bonewits then presents examples of how some of these laws work.
The series gained high audience figures, and 90+ on the audience Appreciation Index. Critics, such as Andrew Davies in the Times Educational Supplement and Armando Iannucci, have noted that the show had high expectations of its audience. Lynn posits that the public are more intelligent than most situation comedies, often patronizingly, give them credit for. Jay believes that the viewers were just as intelligent as the writers, but that there were some things that they needed to know but didn't. Yes Minister won the BAFTA award for Best Comedy Series for 1980, 1981 and 1982, and the "Party Games" special was nominated in the Best Light Entertainment Programme category for 1984. Yes, Prime Minister was short-listed for Best Comedy Series for both 1986 and 1987. Nigel Hawthorne's portrayal of Sir Humphrey Appleby won the BAFTA Award for Best Light Entertainment Performance four times (in 1981, 1982, 1986 and 1987). Eddington was also nominated on all four occasions.
Success came quickly for Chung on the Hawaiian amateur golf circuit, including three victories at the Moanalua Championship and two runner-up finishes in the Hawaiian Open. Chung's second-place finish in the 1921 Hawaiian Open helped motivate him to take his game to tournaments in the United States. Chung left Hawaii for the United States mainland for the first time the following year, where he participated in the U.S. Open at the Skokie Country Club in Glencoe, Illinois in July and the U.S. Amateur at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts in September. Chung's participation in the white-dominated world of American golf was met with frequent ridicule in sports pages of the country, with one 1922 story patronizingly referring to Chung as "the only big league oriental golf shark of the links" and intimated that he learned of the sport from the "strange words used by 'humorable boss'" while working as a clerk in a sugar company office.
Significantly, Ehrenfels believed that in his new society where men would not be burdened by the demands of family life would allow them to live more full and adventuresome lives like the type depicted in the "flight from domesticity" books. Ehrenfels's own fantasies about manly Aryan heroes battling the "Yellow Peril" who would single-handedly kill hundreds of the "evil" Asians while sleeping with every white women in sight, but never having a relationship or raising children appeared to be a sexualized version of the macho fantasies found in the "flight from domesticity" novels. Not all of the "flight from domesticity" writers took the same racist line as did as Ehrenfels, with May in particular being very sympathetic towards the plight of Native-Americans in his Old Shatterhand novels. In many of the "flight from domesticity" books, non-white peoples like the Zulus and the Apache were depicted admiringly if rather patronizingly as "noble savages" who in their primitive state had preserved certain spiritual qualities that people in the industrialized West had long since lost.

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