How To Use Brashness In A Sentence

  • Confident to the point of brashness, intelligent and quick-witted - all key attributes for an MC - he's a product of his surroundings.
  • His performance is extraordinarily multifaceted, combining American brashness with a creepy, lethal mysteriousness.
  • The politeness of the elderly was in marked contrast to the freshness, sometimes brashness, often deliberate, of the young, seen even in their responses to the questionnaire.
  • He contrasted her brashness unfavourably with his mother's gentleness.
  • Stuck in Troy's apartment and unwilling to face the brashness of Broadway on a snowy February night in the heart of Manhattan, I instead surfed the internet and trawled through New York City's real estate turnover.
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  • While most teachers disliked Rebecca quite strongly for her sharp tongue and offensive brashness, Mr. Lively found it entertaining, and she had quickly become one of his favorite pupils.
  • Although one hears in the symphony's first and third movements the now-familiar brashness and "muscularity" with which Schuman would always be identified, his compositional approach toward the second movement was different, though he had also used it in the chorale in Part II of the Third Symphony. NewMusicBox
  • He is famously modest and well behaved, especially for an athlete from a country that has made a national virtue out of what is politely called "brashness" -- he claims, in fact, not even to keep track of how many world records he holds. Firing The Thorpedo
  • And the sight never failed to fill you with excitement that soon you would be caught up by the city's noise, energy, brashness, ebullience, smartness and wit.
  • I like the brashness of youth, particularly when counterpointed by the underlying futility of it all.…
  • Rivera's brashness is less pronounced in real life than it is on TV, and it dissipates even further over time, especially when he's with his family. Being Geraldo
  • For I have realized that it is the city's very boldness and brashness that clearly identifies it as truly Chinese.
  • I have no idea what you're talking about, Angus ... but your brashness is always fun. McCain passes the ABR test
  • Vietnamese also honor reserve and modesty, attributing loudness and brashness to immaturity and vulgarity.
  • Their brashness is real enough, but they accept their packaging as the price of being published. Writer Unboxed » Blog Archive » Pink Ghetto
  • There was once a brashness about Norman, signified by those garish shirts and the trademark wide-brimmed hat.
  • Victory has brought Armstrong fame, wealth and softened some of the brashness he displayed as a young rider.
  • The tree is typically Carioca in its brashness and audacity, but despite the city's fondness for it, Rio is not famed for its yuletide.
  • I love New York for the very qualities of bigness, boldness, and brashness that some seem to despise.
  • Pop's brashness, its refusal of painterliness, its scale and its willingness to work with even the most degraded elements of consumer culture all found a responsive echo in his subsequent painting.
  • The brashness is gone; there seems to be more patience, as long as it's not about his other love — horse racing. USATODAY.com - No disguising Steinbrenner's interests in winning
  • But whereas other hip-hop stars tend to wear labels as an exercise in brashness and bling, West exudes a sense of refined taste. Kanye West: Mister Perfection is stylishly reinventing the rules of rap
  • He was a typical showman with a brashness bordering on arrogance.
  • And the sight never failed to fill you with excitement that soon you would be caught up by the city's noise, energy, brashness, ebullience, smartness and wit.
  • So full of ego and brashness, Stu finagles his way around town, pumping up his clients and manipulating anyone who can get him one step further in life.
  • He terrified her with his brashness and the multiple phones on his desk and the way he would bark, ‘Hello, is that Tokyo?’
  • As played by Mercedes Cechetto, Sabine has an undeniable brashness, but her adventures feel scripted rather than natural and her sullen pout gets old very fast.
  • There's also a notable kitsch factor about the place -- the trashy menu, the lowbrow drink selection (Mad Dog and brands of beer you swore you'd never drink again), the neon band-logo signage and the retro tuneage -- that has prompted some detractors to grumble that the brashness is a little Westword | Complete Issue

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