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How To Use Audacious In A Sentence

  • A six-time Grammy nominee (talk about frustration), Elling has released six albums of audacious vocalese that trumpet his daring range and intellectualism.
  • Surely he would win with this audacious plan. Times, Sunday Times
  • This must have been owing to her recollection of the audacious stranger in the neighbouring turret at the Fleur de Lys; but did that discomposure express displeasure? Quentin Durward
  • But Eddie's audacious comments about penalty do not stand up to scrutiny.
  • A brilliant strategy is, certainly, a matter of intelligence, but intelligence without audaciousness is not enough.
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  • The only difference between audacity and recklessness is whether or not you win, and in this case a clever Union officer tricked Lee into making an audacious move that ultimately became a reckless endeavour. A Sorrowful Tale of High Velocity
  • Early in the race, she launched an audacious attack and set about gaining a lap on the rest of the field. Times, Sunday Times
  • This thrilling new series charts audacious prison escape attempts. The Sun
  • It's a shocking, audacious moment - one of the few times the film makes you sit up and take notice.
  • During my brilliant and audacious performances, my family constantly remarked that they thought I sang like Shirley Temple, only way better and a lot more adorably, and that my dancing made hers look contrived and boring. Roseanne Archy
  • The audacious Wood stormed through the game and even managed an attempt at a drop goal in the second half.
  • Having just completed an audacious leap from aircraft into the jaws of death, five hundred feet above Munsan-ni, against a numerically superior and fanatical force, we were ready to return to K-2 Airstrip at Taegu. Lafayette Keaton
  • She audaciously leaves home to take up a job as an assistant on a literary magazine in New Delhi.
  • On the first of October all was ready for this audacious squibbing of the hornet's nest, and the fleet of investment (which kept its distance according to the weather and the tides) stood in, not bodily so as to arouse excitement, but a ship at a time sidling in towards the coast, and traversing one another's track, as if they were simply exchanging stations. Springhaven : a Tale of the Great War
  • It was an audacious bid from the man who admitted that he was lucky to be alive after a serious cardiac condition in January. Times, Sunday Times
  • The opposite of victims, second wave feminists audaciously did something and, in the frontier spirit of American self-reliance, claimed responsibility for their own lives and happiness. Pamela Haag, Ph.D.: Remember When Liberals Were Feminists?
  • He is audacious, showing such wilful disrespect to the past that one wonders if it ever existed!
  • Her unnerving clarity and audacious style reveal an intellect and imagination capable of a major work.
  • A lewd audacious action cntcrpriz'di Into the fair, with women mixM, li Arm'd with a huge two-handed milium. The Works of the English Poets
  • Apparently, organized crime in France is getting to be pretty audacious.
  • He opened with a seven-minute monologue in which he guaranteed—for the third straight year—that the Jets would win the Super Bowl, a moment of rote audaciousness that seemed designed to pique people's interest. The Allure of Playing for Rex
  • The second was in this rather audacious attempt to claim the mantle of the trade unions. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then he did something audacious, if not outright impolitic.
  • They dubbed their hirsute trio the Full Silkwood, after a typically audacious punch line from the show. Undefined
  • The second was in this rather audacious attempt to claim the mantle of the trade unions. Times, Sunday Times
  • Captain Valentine paused before he scolded Wesley for his audaciousness.
  • I would think that people would be all over this as a violation of property or vandalism or sign of the degeneracy of Europeans, but instead, we're going to argue about the "audaciousness" of a white canvas, without even knowing what is on the other two canvases that form the rest of the painting. "When I kissed it, I thought the artist would have understood."
  • Now London is making an audacious bid to seize the crown as promoters plan to hold a rival fringe festival at exactly the same time. Times, Sunday Times
  • His denunciation of my research is an audacious bluff, believable only by those who have never opened my book.
  • With every new book she got more and more audacious, trying out new ways to surprise us.
  • From any perspective it was an audacious bid. Times, Sunday Times
  • The highly acclaimed six-piece ensemble fuses the wild gypsy rhythms of eastern Europe with hot club swing and jazz, audaciously combining Hungarian, Russian and Romanian gypsy styles with tango, swing, klezmer and French musette.
  • Upon this occasion the "chaw" created such a disturbance that (on audacious demand) leave was granted to the Duffer and John to capture the offender. The Hill A Romance of Friendship
  • But in reality it was audacious, surprising and rather splendid. Times, Sunday Times
  • This compendium of utter bollocks is a treasury of audacious fibbing, featuring the boss who claimed to be Emma Thompson's secret lover and a part-time ambulance driver, the Dad who once kicked a football so high it landed on a cloud, and the mate who reckons ninjas can go out in a rainstorm and not get wet cos they're "that fast". Internet picks of the week
  • Only someone really audacious would take such a risk.
  • Despite the hammering and sawing, the dirt and the dust on Sunday, one could see that this is not a hollow claim because the structure is indeed audacious.
  • Instrumentally, it's audacious, with trumpets, bouzoukis, violins and music-boxes weaving unpredictable paths through the guitars and drum programmes.
  • Of course it helps to have days like this, where one of Microsoft's most audacious business opponents finally capitulated.
  • Intercutting long, engrossing musical sequences with images of revolutionary protest, the resulting film is a flawed but audacious counterculture landmark. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now London is making an audacious bid to seize the crown as promoters plan to hold a rival fringe festival at exactly the same time. Times, Sunday Times
  • Samuel crossed and Solano's audacious volley screamed just past the post.
  • Now London is making an audacious bid to seize the crown as promoters plan to hold a rival fringe festival at exactly the same time. Times, Sunday Times
  • His poetry is neither traditional, nor audaciously experimental, but lyrical and contemporary in themes.
  • Resplendent in his uniform and medals, [Forest] Whitaker's Amin is a gloriously mad and grandiloquent figure, conceived by screenwriters Peter Morgan and Jeremy Brock as a Day-Glo Shakespearean monster, with audacious hints of Othello and even Titus Andronicus, a monster for whom they have written boldly extended dialogue scenes of unabashed intelligence and theatricality," writes the Guardian's Peter Bradshaw. GreenCine Daily: Baftas. Nominations.
  • CIUTTI: No he visto hombre I have never seen a man de corazón más audaz; with a more audacious heart ni halla riesgo que le espante who never finds a risk he fears ni encuentra dificultad nor finds a single problem que al empeñarse en vencer he'll not attempt to vanquish le haga un punto vacilar. or that makes him halt a moment. Don Juan Tenorio
  • Tebow's autobiography, audaciously written when he was merely a 23-year-old second-string quarterback most critics called a miscast running back, came out in June. USATODAY.com News
  • Political consultants would have abandoned welfare reform as unworkably audacious and politically suicidal. The Debt Ceiling and the Pursuit of Happiness
  • First of all, his work made dear what an audacious venture poetry still could be.
  • WORD CORRECT PRONUNCIATION alma mater _alma mater_ apparatus _apparatus_ apricot _apricot_ attaché _attasha'_ audacious _audashus_ ballet _bal'la_ blasé _blaza'_ blatant _blatant_ chasten _chasen_ Practical Grammar and Composition
  • Inventiveness, bite and enthusiasm keep it ahead of the pack and the intuitive Glass epitomizes those qualities, sending staff into raptures on a weekly basis with news of his latest audacious scoops at editorial meetings.
  • Was this audacious accounting, or the kind of thing that at first glance seems like clear misrepresentation?
  • The job the crew carries out is the audacious theft of a mafia safe full of gold they just about get away with, after a fairly thrilling chase through the canals of Venice.
  • Inevitably, exposure awaits, and often exposure which will damage innocent people who will be besmirched, so audacious is the extent of the crime.
  • Similarly I read Joe Lansdale's Vanilla Ride which has no SF elements, other than sheer audaciousness gonzo-ness and realized that I was absolutely the target audience for that title. MIND MELD: The Best Genre-Related Books/Films/Shows Consumed in 2009 (Part 2)
  • an audacious interpretation of two Jacobean dramas
  • It was an audacious plan. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was a man with whom it was impossible to imagine the most audacious student venturing to take a liberty.
  • His poetry is neither traditional, nor audaciously experimental, but lyrical and contemporary in themes.
  • It did so with a stunning range of creativity and a solidly audacious grace.
  • Nor did it seem unlikely that a city which styled itself 'the nurse of Artemis' should also claim the less audacious title of 'sacristan' to this same goddess. Essays on the work entitled "Supernatural Religion"
  • An audacious attack in broad daylight on the fortified U.S. consulate after months of relative quiet.
  • And so it is with his audacious, wildly imaginative and boundlessly thrilling adaptation.
  • It is still an audacious work of art after all these years.
  • His useless jostling composed no escape in the least, setting the audacious Risaku up to get mercilessly slaughtered by this fiend.
  • I am just shocked at such blatant acts of audaciousness.
  • The wild creator of the "_Robbers_," drunk with liberty, and audacious against all restraint, becomes the champion of "Holy Order," -- the denouncer of the French republic -- the extoller of an Ideal Life, which should entirely separate Genius the Restless from Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 54, No. 334, August 1843
  • Ktowever, what ihe with - held from the infant, ihe beftowed with the utmoft profufenefs on the poor unknown mother, whom ihe called an im - pudent flut, a wanton huffy, an audacious harlot, The History of Tom Jones: A Foundling
  • But this is just an audacious bid to promote races on their tracks. The Sun
  • But this is just an audacious bid to promote races on their tracks. The Sun
  • Andre could pull off the frosted feathered hair, neon colored shirt audacious thing for one reason and one reason only: IT WAS THE EIGHTIES.
  • And I realized: the unapologetic nature of my musical omnivorousness owes a great deal to Michael Jackson, to the ubiquitous success of Thriller, to the fait accompli integration of MTV, to the demonstration that, even in the hyper-capitalist (and subtly discriminatory) wonderland of the Reagan 80s, sheer audacious talent could refuse to be marginalized. Archive 2009-06-01
  • But this is just an audacious bid to promote races on their tracks. The Sun
  • Tucking in behind his rival on the rainswept circuit, he audaciously out-braked him on the inside of the final bend to steal ahead and win.
  • But that thou mightest, reader, both know, and with equal indignation abhor, the snarlings and virulency of these men, take it in their own words, although I cannot without infinite reluctancy allege what they with all audaciousness have uttered. From the Talmud and Hebraica
  • You are extremely audacious to steal a purse in broad daylight!
  • audacious visions of the total conquest of space
  • The second was in this rather audacious attempt to claim the mantle of the trade unions. Times, Sunday Times
  • There's little scope for middle ground here: this will either be a work of audacious daring or an almighty flop. Times, Sunday Times
  • You are extremely audacious to steal a purse in broad daylight!
  • Fiction audiences have often had appetites for young, audacious male writers and their attendant alter egos and mirror images. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's an audacious bit of dialogue for a cheapo skin flick starring some of the most naturally chesty gals you'll ever see in your life.
  • Your plan of going abroad is an audacious decision.
  • This would be an audacious move even for someone as bold as Schwarzenegger.
  • Others have vehemently disagreed with the ruling as an audacious attempt to redefine marriage. Christianity Today
  • Until the original Doric column was conceived and built, all temple pillars had been trees, and the fluted stone, with its foliate embellishment below the roof, audaciously mimicked them. Wildwood
  • Even when they're rifling through your bins, abducting your children or conducting audacious raids on privately owned pic-a-nic baskets.
  • Audacious tunesmiths were taking American popular music in exciting new directions.
  • It was an audacious plan. Times, Sunday Times
  • WORD CORRECT PRONUNCIATION alma mater _alma mater_ apparatus _apparatus_ apricot _apricot_ attaché _attasha'_ audacious _audashus_ ballet _bal'la_ blasé _blaza'_ blatant _blatant_ chasten _chasen_ Practical Grammar and Composition
  • Every so often you see what can only be described as an audacious and genius piece of parking.
  • There is the courage to pursue audacious goals, to empower and to trust your colleagues.
  • There's little scope for middle ground here: this will either be a work of audacious daring or an almighty flop. Times, Sunday Times
  • Winamp często jest wybierany przez użytkowników Windowsa ze względu na prostotę (choć tutaj chyba lepszy jest Foobar2000), natomiast pod Linuksem chyba jedynym sensownym odpowiednikiem jaki do tej pory znałem był Audacious, który obsługuje nawet motywy znane z windowsowego Winampa. Qmmp - Winamp dla Linuksa
  • Professor Paul Emanuel, to wit, never lost an opportunity of intimating his opinion that mine was rather a fiery and rash nature — adventurous, indocile, and audacious. Villette
  • Early in the race, she launched an audacious attack and set about gaining a lap on the rest of the field. Times, Sunday Times
  • From any perspective it was an audacious bid. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their audacious move will force a new round of budget talks - which some fear could cause the entire agreement to collapse. The Sun
  • Burke's phrase of "the swinish multitude," applied to mobs, was then in every body's mouth; and, accordingly, after my brother had recovered from his first astonishment at this audacious mutiny, he made us several sweeping bows that looked very much like tentative rehearsals of a sweeping _fusillade_, and then addressed us in a very brief speech, of which we could distinguish the words _pearls_ and _swinish multitude_, but uttered in a very low key, perhaps out of some lurking consideration for the two young strangers. Autobiographical Sketches
  • Others have vehemently disagreed with the ruling as an audacious attempt to redefine marriage. Christianity Today
  • It's one of those two-woman talk show sketches in which the double entendre is audaciously outrageous. Tom Shales reviews tonight's retrospecial,'The Women of "Saturday Night Live"'
  • In another audacious move he sent envoys to the Crusader leaders in Acre asking for safe passage and the right to purchase supplies.
  • In 2009, the Arlington County Board of Supervisors filed an egregiously frivolous lawsuit against these federal and state agencies as well as officials in their personal capacities; even audaciously accusing those officials of civil rights violations for trying to advance a transportation solution. Cuccinelli accuses Arlington of playing 'dirty' with HOT lanes lawsuit
  • Its mix of rock riffage and chart-friendly pop/new wave struck some as audacious, others as opportunistic. Times, Sunday Times
  • We need to be more audacious in what we say and do.
  • Dirty Dozen, caper-movie line-ups, where the mission is so perilous and so audacious that only the scuzziest lowlifes recruited from every waterfront dive have any chance of pulling it off. National Review Online
  • He was widely recognized as a gifted deployer of men and materials and an audacious problem solver. Colossus
  • Some visions are so audacious, they can be expressed only as ironic jokes, lest the speaker be accused of pomposity or megalomania.
  • This can make them, in time, more audacious and bold. Times, Sunday Times
  • te 6 DreamThree Ten years before, the Modern Languages block had symbolized the College's audacious arrival in the space age. MUSIC FOR BOYS
  • Her general effect was of a plump bonniness that might yield agreeably to an audacious arm. The Collectors
  • Once again what audaciousness and ignorant these Democrats have! Subsistence-Fishing Alaska Senator Fights Fishing Citation
  • an audacious trick to pull
  • This thrilling new series charts audacious prison escape attempts. The Sun
  • From this dynamic leader's audacious vision has sprung a city that is breathtaking in scale and vision.
  • But in reality it was audacious, surprising and rather splendid. Times, Sunday Times
  • Enormous in magnitude, audacious in its execution and redolent of the most serious dishonesty.
  • This thrilling new series charts audacious prison escape attempts. The Sun
  • The strength of the British Constitution lies in its inherent absurdity, its audacious paradoxicalness. Without Prejudice
  • You are extremely audacious to steal a purse in broad daylight!
  • Audacious loops, bends and swerves are undertaken at astonishing speed and with awesome precision.
  • It makes no compromises, is concentrated, and is as cool as it is audacious. Hansa Latrava Faucet by Octopus Design
  • He began his audacious series of deceptions at the age of 17, when he was working in a lawyer's office with easy access to old parchment, deeds, and antiquated forms of writing.
  • He is too sweet, too nice, too inoffensive for the dig at hypocrisy to hit home, and many of the jokes lack the audacious punch of old.
  • It was an audacious bid from the man who admitted that he was lucky to be alive after a serious cardiac condition in January. Times, Sunday Times
  • Deprived of its underground in America, the German High Command resorted to audacious plans.
  • There is no longer any such article as a separate Scottish language, and, indeed, I am in some dubitation whether it ever existed at all, and is not rather the waggish invention of certain audacious Scottishers, who have taken advantage of the insular ignorance and credulity of the Baboo Jabberjee, B.A.
  • His mercurial career has already produced a scrapbook full of lasting images, not all of them pretty, many of which seem only to hyperbolize his brilliance, his audaciousness, his childishness.
  • Museum staff challenged them, the prize had to be abandoned and audacious theft turned to ignominious flight. Times, Sunday Times
  • It did so with a stunning range of creativity and a solidly audacious grace.
  • Fiction audiences have often had appetites for young, audacious male writers and their attendant alter egos and mirror images. Times, Sunday Times
  • The shocking story of an accomplished heiress who was tricked into marrying an Irish scoundrel by a fake duel, her wretched married life, her audacious escape and landmark legal battles, andmost staggering of allher abduction by her estranged husband from a busy London street, seemed like the stuff of fiction. Wendy Moore explains how she came to write Wedlock, the true story of the disastrous marriage and remarkable divorce of Mary Eleanor Bowes, Countess of Strathmore
  • An audacious attack on a heavily fortified base did far more damage than initially reported.
  • But the group was rejuvenated by a statement last week that Mr Green was planning to make an audacious and unexpected bid for the company.
  • The Wayward Cloud is hard going, but it is a distinctive, audacious and uncompromising piece of filmmaking.
  • This new audacious omni-integration strategy to leverage and tie Google's search dominance, search advertising monopoly with and to all of Google's omnifarious products and services that have already been anti-competitively leveraged and tied to Google's dominant search and search advertising, represents a "grand plan" to become the dominant one-stop web platform/destination where people come and never have to leave for any other web property or service. Forbes.com: News
  • Yet, this absurd selection of tracks appears to highlight some elements of this journey, with elements of punk, alternative rock or film music audaciously thrown in together, without apparent link.
  • “An excellent motion, my ingenious friend,” said Lascaris, which was the name of the other citizen; “but bethink you, shall we not be in danger from the missiles with which the audacious Latins will not fail to return the Greek fire, if, according to your conjecture, it shall be poured upon them by the Imperial squadron?” Count Robert of Paris
  • This can make them, in time, more audacious and bold. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was an audacious plan. Times, Sunday Times
  • But then he potted an audacious red to begin a run of 29.
  • With goggle-eyed disbelief, we follow the exploits of this audacious free-spirit, gifted with the ability of unflagging self-invention.
  • For all his audacious travels, Vollmann's feats never come across as exhibitionistic. Postmodernism
  • Today we look at a bold and audacious project that's bringing a fresh approach to the way we understand the ecology of this country.
  • Inevitably, exposure awaits, and often exposure which will damage innocent people who will be besmirched, so audacious is the extent of the crime.
  • He nonetheless seemed annoyed, and surprised by her audacious, nearly stupid words.
  • There was an audacious attack in broad daylight on the fortified U.S. consulate after months of relative quiet.
  • In one of the better TV comebacks in recent years, LeBlanc, who was nominated three times for Friends, audaciously satirized himself and the biz as a self-absorbed and well-endowed sleazebag. Emmys: TVGuide.com's Picks for Lead Actor in a Comedy
  • This can make them, in time, more audacious and bold. Times, Sunday Times
  • Cano de buonanotte a neri Diego Buonanotte (River Plate) vs. Boca Jrs 11.07 (This clip captures the backdrop to a legend: it was the cheeky Buonanotte gambeta in the previous November's clasico against hated Boca-audaciously nutmegging hard man Neri Cardozo at the touchline-that first hinted of this wisp of a lad's surprising competitive fires … not to mention his budding dramatic skills.) Soccer Blogs - latest posts
  • Their audacious move will force a new round of budget talks - which some fear could cause the entire agreement to collapse. The Sun
  • Wood's second audacious - and completely unsubstantiated - claim was that all the lunar highlands were made of the rock anorthosite.
  • Early in the race, she launched an audacious attack and set about gaining a lap on the rest of the field. Times, Sunday Times
  • Further experiments led this audacious physician to conclude that the symptoms produced by bufotenine coincided curiously with the conditions of the berserkus of Norse legend. The Serpent and the Rainbow
  • With goggle-eyed disbelief, we follow the exploits of this audacious free-spirit, gifted with the ability of unflagging self-invention.
  • Much has been written about the unusual challenge the Book of Job offers in its audacious questioning of the ways of God, but one never hears of the contribution of Job’s wife to the antidogmatic bent of the text. Wife of Job: Bible.
  • In this audacious raid, thieves knocked a hole in the shop wall before making off with equipment valued at about £11,000.
  • This move was audacious and well planned, but as it turned out involved little physical risk. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their imaginations are eager to go rather more than half-way to meet the audacious writer.
  • These Londoners were nuts to begin with - and they're only getting more audacious.
  • It makes it less audacious and less entertaining than the Eye, of course, except for the literary and dramatic reviews.
  • He recreates the 1960s in this true-life tale of a teenage runaway's audacious trail of trickery.
  • It had been an audacious notion, the idea that Wellesley would accept the hard-working little Jewish girl with the Cuban heels and the father in burlesque and the New York apartment (by then, there was a Latin Quarter in Times Square) that her mother had decorated in pale yellow and lavender brocade, “like a huge Easter egg.” The Uses of Enchantment
  • Sir, I am bound to admit that this audacious claim spoilt my wanderings up and down the pages of your excellent magazine, and I resolved that whenever I should find time I would write to you to revindicate the claims of the "Berkshire Lady" to be native born and entirely unconnected with the Countess Mary or Slains Castle. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 17, No. 100, April, 1876
  • All along, he was an audacious mountebank and a mendacious bully, who knew almost nothing about actual existing communism and who never identified a single Soviet agent.
  • In the meantime, audacious scribblers arise, as from our own bosom, who not only obscure the light of sound doctrine with clouds of error, or infatuate the simple and the less experienced with their wicked ravings, but by a profane license of skepticism, allow themselves to uproot the whole of Religion. Commentary on Genesis - Volume 1
  • Long before the ladder arrived that was to succor him, he became the sworn ally of Melons, and, I regret to say, incited by the same audacious boy, "chaffed" his own flesh and blood below him. The Wit and Humor of America, Volume I. (of X.)
  • Their audacious move will force a new round of budget talks - which some fear could cause the entire agreement to collapse. The Sun
  • Winning sanctions audaciousness, which leads us to: The NFL: What You Need to Know
  • Today there's a new self-confidence: we're audacious, we're loud and we get things done.
  • Your plan of going abroad is an audacious decision.
  • Fiction audiences have often had appetites for young, audacious male writers and their attendant alter egos and mirror images. Times, Sunday Times
  • This move was audacious and well planned, but as it turned out involved little physical risk. Times, Sunday Times
  • This was such an audacious creative conceit that the painter was mistaken for a naïve dauber, where in fact he could create among his works psychogeographic masterpieces that captured the cultural murk of the postwar scene. This week's new exhibitions
  • I must be that inexplicably angry, obtuse, ill mannered, audacious, pompous blow-hard that writes insulting letters to The Peak!
  • an idea so daring and yet so audaciously tempting that a shiver of excitement quivered through him
  • It could have been a rebuff to what may have been perceived as the BBC's audacious judicial stance, but several of those organisations who refused have since had athletes banned or under suspicion.
  • The audacious ones stood in full view when she mounted the surrounding steps to a white marble sarcophagus.
  • It isn't exactly easy to conquer Hollywood with the kind of audaciously imaginative films that British-born Christopher Nolan makes. Evening Standard - Home
  • Most biographers have attributed her tenacity and audaciousness to the competitive, mercurial nature of an acting career in New York and Hollywood.
  • Museum staff challenged them, the prize had to be abandoned and audacious theft turned to ignominious flight. Times, Sunday Times
  • This statement may seem to be rather audacious, since the very next branch of biology, anthropology in the stricter sense, makes very little use of these results of anthropogeny, and sometimes expressly opposes them. The Evolution of Man — Volume 1
  • The audacious stunts often end up diverting attention away from the group's cause.
  • But the sales figures appear to show that Citroen are pulling off one of the more audacious moves of recent times. The Sun
  • The persistently audacious are helped along by a fearless temperament.
  • Perhaps the most audacious piece is ‘In Cleveland’, which begins with a bouncy disco theme (anyone for the twist, or perhaps the frug?).
  • Museum staff challenged them, the prize had to be abandoned and audacious theft turned to ignominious flight. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was the most unusual thing I've tasted in a long while, pretty typical I'd say, of his cooking which is audaciously different.
  • But I think the entire series of misdirection is itself indicative of a larger, more audacious slight of hand, one that most people overlook by the time the absolutely brilliant and insane last few scenes arrive. Seeing Double: April Fool’s Day / Happy Birthday to Me » Scene-Stealers
  • He made two audacious sidesteps on a 40-metre dash up the middle to releasing Mark Bowman, who was just held close to the line.
  • Something audacious and rather fun. Times, Sunday Times
  • Yes, the confluence of the culinary and cocktail worlds has been happening for some time now, evidenced by the vogue of homemade tinctures and bitters and bourbon washed in bacon fat, but no place has done it with such audaciousness and culinary precision. Raising the Bar
  • Something audacious and rather fun. Times, Sunday Times
  • But we're equally engaged by the audacious, staccato brushwork with which the artist, Giovanni Battista Moroni, conjured up those emblems of wealth, contrasting the stabbing marks of costume and gems with the smooth rendering of face and hair. See Their Worlds in Their Faces
  • What a match, what a turnaround and what a scintillating performance by this brave, audacious and talented Welsh team.
  • But the sales figures appear to show that Citroen are pulling off one of the more audacious moves of recent times. The Sun
  • Takayama was influential in the Yamaguchi-gumi's expansion into Tokyo, an audacious move that led to several shootings in the capital in 2007. Yakuza chief arrested in Japan
  • But he did so at lightning speed, with audacious fencing moves. Times, Sunday Times
  • But the sales figures appear to show that Citroen are pulling off one of the more audacious moves of recent times. The Sun
  • He described the plan as ambitious and audacious.

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