Is a bandage in food inartistically more disgusting? ❋ Steve Carper (2007)
Many early contracts of this sort, judging by the facts in the cases, were “inartistically drawn.” ❋ Lawrence M. Friedman (1985)
But the externals of the scene, which are briefly and inartistically described, soon disappear, and we plunge abruptly into the subject of the dialogue. ❋ Unknown (2006)
The girl had been caged most inartistically, but despite her imprisonment she managed to create a fine work of art. ❋ Unknown (2005)
For example, not to know that a hind has no horns is a less serious matter than to paint it inartistically. ❋ Unknown (2002)
This, in some cases, may lead him to make of a somewhat inartistically designed jewel a beautifully proportioned one. ❋ George Frederick Kunz (N/A)
As a matter of fact Croft, who had been very interested in the boy-poet and had collected from his relations and those with whom he had lodged in London all they could possibly tell him, wrote the letter himself and included it rather inartistically among the genuine Hackman-Reay correspondence. ❋ Thomas Chatterton (N/A)
_Huon de Bordeaux_ (_chanson de geste_), epic and romance combined inartistically in, 37, 53, 314-317 ❋ W. P. Ker (N/A)
In consequence, as sketch No 28 hints, a head seen from the side frequently appears, if not idiotically, very inartistically, proportioned. ❋ Dorothy Quigley (N/A)
"How silly," said Auntie, as she forced a cigarette inartistically into ❋ Joan Conquest (N/A)
Even when the Brussels influence was most direct the flowers and sprays were placed inartistically, while the scroll copies of the early Flemish schools can only be termed the imitative handiwork of a child. ❋ Emily Leigh Lowes (N/A)
When these colours are laid on, they present a brilliant appearance to the eye even although they are inartistically applied, and as they are costly, they are made exceptions in contracts, to be furnished by the employer, not by the contractor. ❋ Vitruvius Pollio (N/A)
His theories are not only inartistically prominent, but are worthless and immoral. ❋ Bayard Tuckerman (N/A)
Sometimes an episode is so inartistically introduced as to be almost clumsy. ❋ Unknown (1917)
This real poetic element in Byron -- I refer to something over and above his plangent rhetoric -- arrests us with all the greater shock of sudden possession, for the very reason that it is so carelessly, so inartistically, so recklessly flung out. ❋ John Cowper Powys (1917)
The American fondness for sizefor pure bignessneeds explanation, it appears; we care for size, but inartistically; we care nothing for proportion, which is what makes size count. ❋ Unknown (1914)