Very well; if you tell a German to send your trunk to you by "slow freight," he takes you at your word; he sends it by "slow freight," and you cannot imagine how long you will go on enlarging your admiration of the
expressiveness of that phrase in the German tongue, before you get that trunk.
A very intimate sense of the
expressiveness of outward things, which ponders, listens, penetrates, where the earlier, less developed consciousness passed lightly by, is an important element in the general temper of our modern poetry.
He was a man of about thirty, with a thin ugly face (May would certainly have called him common-looking) to which the play of his ideas gave an intense
expressiveness; but there was nothing frivolous or cheap in his animation.
It is a little impaired in its
expressiveness by his having a shut-up gape still to dispose of, with watering eyes.
The discriminating observer we have been supposing might, however, perfectly have measured its
expressiveness, and yet have been at a loss to describe it.
Ruskin; and the comparison was in Katharine's mind, and led her to be more critical of the young man than was fair, for a young man paying a call in a tail-coat is in a different element altogether from a head seized at its climax of
expressiveness, gazing immutably from behind a sheet of glass, which was all that remained to her of Mr.
It is divided into three main areas, Information gathering, Work condition and
Expressiveness.
In particular, the variety of Philippine hardwoods-molave, acacia, ipil, kamagong, langka and bamboo-found a native
expressiveness and eloquence never seen heretofore.
In both worlds Gruyaert is a deft street photographer, capturing a citizenry indelibly shaped by its environment while rarely relying on the
expressiveness of a face.
The company release said, Toyota designers 'strived to sculpt an urban-dwelling crossover that would effortlessly navigate tight, congested streets and stand out with an agile, dynamic
expressiveness. In the end, the C-HR happily finds itself a home in rush-hour traffic on Marine Corps Drive as it does on the open village back roads of Guam.'
Halberstadt, Cassidy, Stifter, Parke, and Fox (1995) defined
expressiveness as a persistent pattern or style in exhibiting nonverbal and verbal communications that often, but not always, appear to be related to emotion.