Drinking alcohol could amp up this vasodilation, making you even stuffier.
|
|
Does it suddenly feel a little bit stuffier in here to you?
|
|
"Before, it might have been on the stuffier side," Mr. Gerber said.
|
|
He intuits that audiences grant comedians a leeway they don't to the stuffier professions.
|
|
Assurances notwithstanding, "Losing My Religion" is an open rebuke to the stuffier, more conservative corners of the church.
|
|
It was conceived by a Denver radiologist and mushroom-lover, Emanuel Salzman, as an alternative to stuffier mycological conferences.
|
|
But you'll be glad you bought the fan once you wander down the hall into the stuffier section of the building.
|
|
Then, as you emerge, you realize it was much, much warmer and stuffier in there than in the rest of the office.
|
|
One of the more fun aspects of legalization has been watching the stuffier institutions in Canada grapple with how to speak about it.
|
|
But every year there's a distinct sense that, in order for car enthusiasm to survive, these stuffier institutions need to be more open and accessible.
|
|
Both the wine and the conversation flow freely and the atmosphere has a more laid-back feel than any of the city's stuffier fine dining establishments.
|
|
How was the punk (for back of a better word) drag that was happening at Pyramid different from the stuffier, old-fashioned drag people were used to?
|
|
Some of those ready to desert Labour might be more inclined to vote for Mr. Farage, a down-to-earth, beer-drinking rabble rouser, rather than the stuffier Tories.
|
|
In hip-hop, a penchant for saying exactly what's on your mind on the fly is an admirable trait, not the liability it can be for people in stuffier job settings.
|
|
Among museums, grand institutions like the Museum of Modern Art in New York are seen as stuffier than the Kunsthallen, the not-for-profit municipal art galleries found in many German cities.
|
|
In 1975, presaging a flood of Hollywood remakes, Edwards and Sellers revived their creation in "The Return of the Pink Panther," with Clouseau now older and stuffier, and his accent even more garbled.
|
|
DC was stuffier; Marvel looser, ostensibly hipper and finally more in tune with the young adult audience than DC. A lot of this history has been covered elsewhere, as the book's bibliography indicates.
|
|
Multi-cams don't just offer a safe space to talk about political issues that have us at odds; through their stuffier and more artistically conservative format, they create a world where all sorts of ideas across the political spectrum can come into play and be considered by all sorts of people.
|
|
She was initially portrayed as a fun breath of fresh air in a group of older, stuffier women, but by the time she left the show last year amidst high-profile feuds with co-stars—her bad list including Lisa Vanderpump, Kyle Richards, Lisa Rinna, and Eileen Davidson; in season four, she made a racist joke at the expense of fellow Housewife Joyce Giraud, who is Puerto Rican—her combative personality had weighed heavily on her public perception.
|
|
The critic of the Times awarded it only one star out of five, whilst Nicholas Barber of the Independent wrote that "every one of Elliott's straining efforts to turn Easy Virtue into a zany, risqué farce only makes it seems stuffier and starchier". Stella Papamichael of digital spy added that British jazz renditions of "Car Wash" and "Sex Bomb" used in the film were totally distracting.
|
|
Some passages, particularly fast musical figures, are easier to execute on a valve trombone than on a slide trombone. Many players consider the tone of a valve trombone to be stuffier and less open. Therefore, it is not common in orchestral settings, though Giuseppe Verdi in particular made extensive use of the ability of the valve trombone to negotiate its way through fast passages. As the B tenor valve trombone uses the same fingering as the B trumpet, it is occasionally a doubling instrument for jazz trumpeters.
|
|
51 Faris comments that the satire perpetrated by Offenbach and his librettists was cheeky rather than hard-hitting,Faris, p. 176 and Richard Taruskin in his study of 19th-century music observes, "The calculated licentiousness and feigned sacrilege, which successfully baited the stuffier critics, were recognized by all for what they were – a social palliative, the very opposite of social criticism ...The spectacle of the Olympian gods doing the cancan threatened nobody's dignity."Taruskin, p. 646 The Emperor greatly enjoyed Orphée aux enfers when he saw it at a command performance in 1860; he told Offenbach he would "never forget that dazzling evening".
|
|
Matt arrives at Number 30 with Hilary, initially as a house guest and surprises Sharon, who is staying there, who was expecting him to be much older and stuffier. Matt quickly makes friends with Sharon and her boyfriend, Nick Page (Mark Stevens). Matt later attends Erinsborough High and agrees to help Nick out in a skateboarding competition against Nick's nemesis, Bruce Zadro (Myles Collins). When Hilary mentions Matt's father in a conversation, Matt, knowing that Hilary is his biological mother, presses her further and she reveals that she had given him up for adoption because she was young at the time.
|
|
During the series' early years, Ricky befriends "bad boy" Derek Taylor (Jason Bateman, seasons 1–2), smooth-talking "cowboy" J.T. Martin (Bobby Fite, seasons 1–2), and "nerdy" Freddy Lippincottleman (Corky Pigeon, seasons 1–4). They get into a lot of trouble and learn many childhood lessons along the way. Edward's original attorney was Leonard Rollins (Leonard Lightfoot), who departed after the first season, and was replaced by the aptly named business manager, Dexter Stuffins (Franklyn Seales), who was somewhat stuffier and more erudite than Leonard had been. Dexter remained through the rest of the series and was joined in fall 1984 by his hip, breakdancing nephew Alfonso Spears (Alfonso Ribeiro, seasons 3–5), who became Ricky's new best friend.
|
|