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How To Use Brazen In A Sentence

  • Had I known my ample posterior would have caused such a stir I would gladly have done anything to be less brazen.
  • Each evening, before retiring, the careful wife sees that a hocho, or kitchen knife, is laid upon the kitchen floor, and covered with a kanadarai, or brazen wash - basin, on the upturned bottom of which is placed a single straw sandal, of the noiseless sort called zori, also turned upside down. Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan Second Series
  • From the dark streets of the city, whether lit by a single streetlamp or brazenly flashing neon signs, to the desolate coastline, where Marlowe is first blackjacked by an unknown assailant, there is no safe haven from disorder and danger. Caught in the Crossfire: Adrian Scott and the Politics of Americanism in 1940s Hollywood
  • From the Rushmorean cover portrait of Bush (which over the headline 'An American Revolutionary' was such a brazen and transparent effort to recall George Washington that it was embarrassing) to the 'Why We Fight' black-and-white portraiture of the aggrieved president sitting somberly at the bedside of the war-wounded, this issue is positively hysterical in its iconolatry. "What kind of a maniac puts eagles in a Christmas tree?": James Wolcott
  • Honestly, is there no end to the brazen behaviour of banks? Times, Sunday Times
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  • I won't be surprised if the striking ‘colonels’ have been generously compensated for their brazen defiance of military norms.
  • Along with brazenly ridiculing government and society, Ko began to incorporate short comedic skits into the band's sets.
  • Professing not to know that his nubile young companion on one particularly debauched evening was a call girl is even worse than knowing, and then trying to brazen your way out of it.
  • The earl is the vera soul of honour, and cares nae mair for warld's gear than a noble hound for the quest of a foulmart; but as for his son, he was like to brazen us a 'out -- ourselves, Steenie, The Fortunes of Nigel
  • You were under the influence of a violent and controlling man, but you have shown no remorse - you brazened the trial out.
  • Bordered by nine countries, its mineral wealth is brazenly plundered, made possible by an infernally weak state in which corruption, violence and lawlessness are rife.
  • Of course, Carole was ignored, the brazen hussy!
  • But the young ones are naturally quite brazen. Times, Sunday Times
  • Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, spoke out Tuesday against what Alexander called the "brazenness Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • The charges portray a pattern of deception, of brazenness, and of greed.
  • How can the dapper little bureaucrat be so brazen? Times, Sunday Times
  • At one time, diabolical machines were devised for torture: from the brank, the brazen bull, and the breaking wheel to the heretic's fork, the instep borer and the iron maiden. Russ Wellen: What Is It with Men and Torture?
  • Atop a government building, it is an act of brazen humiliation.
  • Still, the king kept his fair head high and brazened it out, and Father and I went and stood on either side of him, and all my brothers stood behind us, and no one can deny that we are a handsome family, or at the very least tall, and the thing is done, nobody can now deny it. The White Queen
  • Some may be brazen enough to ask bluntly if they could borrow it for a family holiday when you're not using it. Times, Sunday Times
  • No Wasp patriarch would have dared to defy democratic sensitivities so brazenly. IN DEFENCE OF ARISTOCRACY
  • Washington trying 'to dictate its rules' By Dalila Mahdawi Daily BEIRUT: Hizbullah on Tuesday lambasted what it called brazen American interference in Lebanon's Star staff Monday, June 01, 2009 - Powered by ... WN.com - Articles related to Hudson will return to Chicago to film ABC special
  • Of course, if we had brazened it out a bit more people might hardly have noticed.
  • There would be a reputational risk - but they might choose to brazen it out. Times, Sunday Times
  • The man was convicted in open hearings and remains brazenly unrepentant.
  • There are bums and crazies everwhere, some giving brazenly bad performances on instruments they can't play, hoping to gain some coin.
  • The Con-Lib coalition was accused of systematically and brazenly making itself less accountable yesterday when it emerged that a review of government crime statistics published today would reduce the need for the police to measure anti-social behaviour and other serious crimes. Crime statistics masked by 'year zero' reset, claims Labour
  • Macho characters portrayed by Marlon Brando and James Dean were fleshed out with brazen working-class energies in their American T-shirts, until then seldom worn uncovered save by laborers. The English Is Coming!
  • Here we had the choice of 100 tables covered in starched white cloths - brazenly bare. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the latest bit of right-wing lunacy on health care reform, RedState. com writer "hogan" brazenly compares health care reform bills to Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 -- inanely adding that if health care reform passes, you can "say goodbye to freedom. AlterNet.org Main RSS Feed
  • Quote a Latin tag at him by mistake and he will examine his shoes or smile brazenly back at you.
  • Each time P. would try to apply a layer within paw's reach Cindy would swat at the tube as if to say, ‘No human of mine is going out looking like a brazen hussy.’
  • Is anyone in this Government prepared to take political responsibility for what has occurred or are they simply going to brazen it out as normal?
  • Not brazened-it-out, or wrapped-himself-in-pridefulness (the surest sign of struggle), simply free, by what conjunction of insight or ignorance I am still at a loss to imagine, from the universal misery of fitting-in - the-body. Two Poems
  • I mean, my standards weren't set too high as I knew her acting ability was probably limited to playing a brazen hussy with a deep voice, but still.
  • They were the works of philosophers of the middle ages, such as Albertus Magnus, Cornelius Agrippa, Paracelsus, and the famous friar who created the prophetic Brazen Head. The Birthmark
  • Quote a Latin tag at him by mistake and he will examine his shoes or smile brazenly back at you.
  • The earl is the vera soul of honour, and cares nae mair for warld's gear than a noble hound for the quest of a foulmart; but as for his son, he was like to brazen us all out -- ourselves, Steenie, Baby Charles, and our Council, till he heard of the tocher, and then by my kingly crown he lap like a cock at a grossart! Sir Walter Scott (English Men of Letters Series)
  • That's so delightfully brazen - and small-bore, given that the kid is gonna drive 1,500 miles across the country - that I think I might actually donate 10 bucks.
  • It was a decade when copious talk of universal human rights mingled abhorrently with the most brazen crimes against humanity.
  • It was clear that she was trying to brazen it out, but it wasn't entirely working.
  • The snake-head, Chelone glabra, grew close to the shore, while a kind of coreopsis, turning its brazen face to the sun, full and rank, and a tall dull red flower, Eupatorium purpureum, or trumpet-weed, formed the rear rank of the fluvial array. A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers
  • Truly unaware, some brazenly buttoned their flies as they walked out of the lavatory into the corridor.
  • For example, MGM brazenly touted its club – “Tabu” – byway of sexually-implicit adsthat featured ayoung stud offering up a cherry to a sexy lady-of-the-night who posed in a seductive reclining position. CineVegas Film Festival…George Michael in Concert. Busted in Vegas? Not! « Julian Ayrs & Pop Culture
  • The government is short of cash and will likely brazen it out.
  • The thing that really alarms me about all this is the utter brazenness with which the loot is being divvied up now.
  • It's more brazen, more shot through with the raw ache of relationships and the nakedness of emotional experience.
  • A brazen fanfare erupted from the royal minstrels, and whole ranks of armor-clad young noblemen stepped forward.
  • There's a scene in the finale that is quite brazen. The Sun
  • From the first page on, there's a blunt, blatant, even brazen certainty in this work.
  • If you are caught simply argue that "everyone does it" and brazen it out.
  • In a brazen and nearly unbelievable move, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) headed by warlord Masoud Barzani has prevented voting by Assyrian (also known as Chaldean and Syriac) Christians of the Nineveh Plain in northern Iraq. Your Right Hand Thief
  • We got to see vintage big Bill again this summer as he saw his uxorial partner in political brazenness lose to a rookie. Michael Jones: Getting Away With It
  • Page view page image: ages, such as Albertus Magnus, Cornelius Agrippa, Paracelsus, and the famous friar who created the prophetic Brazen Head. Mosses from an Old Manse
  • Was his brazen disregard for my mother's feelings due to the fact that he felt justified because she had committed the original sin? Times, Sunday Times
  • In the circuit of the wall are 100 gates, all of brass with brazen lintels.
  • But, nevertheless, considering what they had done, they neither deserved, nor did they seem to care for commiseration, holding up their brazen faces as if they had been taking a pleasure walk for the benefit of their health, and the poukit hens, that dangled before them, ornaments of their bravery. The Life of Mansie Wauch tailor in Dalkeith
  • Some may be brazen enough to ask bluntly if they could borrow it for a family holiday when you're not using it. Times, Sunday Times
  • Many Americans were dreaming of "the brazenness of Bill Clinton," Zuckerman continues. Michael Takiff: Bill Clinton, Still the Biggest Dog in Town
  • And he grew alarmed as she became increasingly brazen about her habit. The Sun
  • They are impudent children, brazen-faced, and cannot blush.
  • She prefers to brazen it out rather than admit defeat.
  • The Tea Party candidate represents the worst species of brazenness, brainlessness, knavery, and hypocrisy since the Know-Nothings of the 1840s and 1850s, a party driven by popular fears that the country would be taken over by German and Irish Catholic immigrants, hostile to Anglo-Saxon values. Robert Brustein: Reviling Obama
  • Stung by recent publicity, the Home Office now seems to be trying to brazen this issue out.
  • How can such brazen defiance of health and safety regulations be tolerated?
  • At the heel of that brazen din, the bullhorn sounded again - the fishing boats scattered enough that the ferry could squeeze along the length of the pier.
  • This brazen act of infidelity with Britain had them wondering if the Alpine air had gone to her head. Times, Sunday Times
  • Here we had the choice of 100 tables covered in starched white cloths - brazenly bare. Times, Sunday Times
  • He believed her to be simply a vulgar, interfering, brazen-faced virago. A dollop from Trollope | clusterflock
  • he spoke brazenly
  • One especially brazen blag at an art exhibition (entered through charm, obviously) somehow resulted in a catalogue signed and personally dedicated by the artist.
  • The anti-hero this time around is Lord Zetta, a brazen, arrogant jerk of an overlord who inadvertently destroys his own netherworld and ends up getting trapped inside a book.
  • Cleon is worsted not by an upright and dignified man but by an illiterate and brazen cynic who beats him at his own game.
  • She knew she could either admit the truth or brazen it out.
  • He then sidles brazenly up to Dusty and Recondo who are monkeying around with a GI Joe bike.
  • They showed a brazen disregard for user's privacy.
  • Add to that the brazen lie that these cameras save lives and it really does begin to smell. The Sun
  • Fulvo-aeneous: brazen, with a touch of brownish yellow [brown pink]. Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology
  • The most brazen sophistry could not dignify by the name of "loan" the coin contemptuously flung to a beachcomber who slept on the bare boards of the public market. Cabbages and Kings
  • But for the present, brazenface, leave off your grimaces, and listen well to what I am going to tell you. Stories by Foreign Authors: Spanish
  • So he made up a brazen lie. Times, Sunday Times
  • He's mostly tickled by the "brazenness" of the companies while my joy is derived from making the lawmakers look silly. Outside The Beltway | OTB
  • The first movement is full of blistering winds and brazen sounds, as from an ancient, pagan army.
  • But the young ones are naturally quite brazen. Times, Sunday Times
  • Erebus knew her brother well; she perceived that she was confronted by what she called his obstinacy; and though his brazen-faced admission had raised her to the very height of amazement and horror, she uttered no protest. The Terrible Twins
  • While child abduction is nothing new, the perpetrators are becoming bolder and more brazen.
  • He also knows that if you are prepared to stand firm and brazenly insist that you have always acted in good faith and done what you think is right, you can hope to con your way out of it.
  • She brazened through the accusation from the witness stand.
  • He refutes any view that the games were somehow freer from the lust for lucre than their modern, brazenly commercial counterparts.
  • I stretch out my finger and a brazen parakeet sidles onto it, inclining its head so I can gently stroke its chalk blue ruff, so downy tender that it feels almost moist.
  • Instead of soft clouds of sweetly sour fruit tucked beneath a comforting blanket of biscuity pastry, the tatin brazenly displays its wares, stickily caramelised and decadently buttery, on the outside – the humble base reduced to a mere vehicle for the apples in their sugary finery. How to cook perfect tarte tatin
  • David asked, hoping to make himself sound brazen as he returned the phone to his ear.
  • But the only man she was concerned about stood bold and brazen in front.
  • The dark-eyed, black-haired, modestly-attired, and even sober-looking girl, who put out her hand with a very simple movement, and spoke, with considerable self-possession truly, but certainly not with an impudent air, bore but scant resemblance to the "brazen hussey" who had haunted The Golden Shoemaker or 'Cobbler' Horn
  • The brazen birds are becoming bolder by the year, encouraged by litter from takeaway meals and thoughtless people who throw them food.
  • How ironic, then, that Bush's deceptive subtlety has enabled her to investigate the kind of subject matter even the most brazen hip-hop queen would baulk at covering, such as paedophiliac desire, incest, cradle-snatching and, in the blackly humorous "Heads We're Dancing", the quandary of a woman who realises she's been dancing with Adolf Hitler. The Independent - Frontpage RSS Feed
  • He learns bucket-loads of information, including the brazenly anti-union pitches made by the various nations.
  • As a politically aware intersexual, I felt it was my duty to be as brazenly androgynous, as visibly hermaphroditic as possible.
  • Add to that the brazen lie that these cameras save lives and it really does begin to smell. The Sun
  • Some may be brazen enough to ask bluntly if they could borrow it for a family holiday when you're not using it. Times, Sunday Times
  • The challenge is to win the fight to be ordinary - not to be forced into the role of camp court jesters or brazen sapphic hussies.
  • That bit of our heritage was a brazen statement about the promise, and the pig sty, that is democracy - that only a completely open society, tolerant of all views, would thrive. MarketWatch.com - Top Stories
  • And I suppose that's the girl Maco tupped so brazenly at Buta's funeral. Analog Science Fiction and Fact
  • This brazen act of infidelity with Britain had them wondering if the Alpine air had gone to her head. Times, Sunday Times
  • The book is subtitled ‘bold females and their brazen acts.’
  • KABUL — Taliban militants wearing explosive vests launched a brazen daylight assault Monday on the center of Kabul, with suicide bombings and gunbattles near the ... Democrats Look At Bypassing Senate Health Care Vote
  • Divorce lawyers say clients are furious that neighbors are combing through the details of their cases (and are even brazen enough to discuss them with them).
  • [2] All his squires were equipped as he was, with scarlet tunics, breastplates of bronze, and brazen helmets plumed with white, short swords, and a lance of cornel-wood apiece. Cyropaedia
  • There was no danger of her beauty telling any tales; and besides, she could put on as brazen-faced a swagger as the most impudent dog in town.
  • But I think JM jumped the shark when he brazenly "embraced" dubya and agee. ABC: Obama Overtakes Hillary Among Super-Delegates
  • What appalls is the brazen lack of concern for those his position charged him to protect: all Americans. Think Progress » Brown: I’m the Victim
  • Churchill brazenly lied to the House of Commons and the public, claiming that only military and industrial installations were targeted.
  • Bordered by nine countries, its mineral wealth is brazenly plundered, made possible by an infernally weak state in which corruption, violence and lawlessness are rife.
  • He mimed adults sneaking stares at him from behind menus in restaurants, little kids brazenly trying to pull off his harlequin's mask, or drivers doing double-takes as they passed in cars.
  • Never since I was born did I ever see such brazenfaced impudence! The Life of Mansie Wauch tailor in Dalkeith
  • She was talking too loudly, brazening it out, but since she wouldn't talk about what was really bothering her, there wasn't anything I could do.
  • Depending on your age, morals and various points of view, she was either the sexiest piece of work around or a brazen hussy or both.
  • The interesting thing is that beneath this brazen and rather crude exterior he is a quite a sensitive soul isn't he?
  • But the shift from lampooning celebrities to flattering them was another thing entirely, a brazen case of poacher turning gamekeeper.
  • She was quite brazen about pulling the stunt, too. The Sun
  • She was quite brazen about pulling the stunt, too. The Sun
  • In this respect, globalisation as an institution arises from the failure of those policies pertaining to the enforcement of geography (for example, monopoly control of money issue, trade and migration policies, etc) to meet the criteria for end-independence, thus forcing private agents to innovate around these legal rules by brazenfaced rule breaking. Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • As for weaselling out of tough situations, stupidity covers well for brazenness.
  • He told me a brazen lie.
  • The brazen response of some was to smirk, for beating the system-any system-was a legitimate aspiration.
  • Musa Sadulayev/Associated Press GRUESOME SCENE: Special forces combed the scene of a bomb blast at Chechnya's parliament Tuesday in Grozny, Russia, after militants carried out a brazen suicide raid that left six people dead and 17 wounded. Photos of the Day: Oct. 19
  • Modernisation is by no means overdone, or rather, when it is overdone, it is brazenly clever.
  • They could be doing more, especially to stop brazen looting and rampant lawlessness that has added terror to the tragedy in the city.
  • Here you cannot ignore, barefaced and brazen, the meaning of a ruinous global orthodoxy.
  • Cruising the streets in his flash sports car before approaching the student - in her school uniform - is brazen behaviour. The Sun
  • It might have been brazen but it was the only way you could get things like cigarette cards back then, and cigarette cards, along with glass marbles, were staples of the small child's barter system.
  • If you are caught simply argue that "everyone does it" and brazen it out.
  • A lot of it's just effrontery, sheer brazen nerve, and a sort of monstrous cockiness.
  • I’m sure there’s a good way to pull off that kind of brazenness while still making it fit in with her character. Superhero Nation: how to write superhero novels and comic books » Trollitrade’s Review Forum
  • brazen painted faces
  • When the wife lifts high the blushless front and brazens out her guilt; when the child, with loud voice, throws off all control and makes boast of disobedience, -- man revolts at the audacity; his spirit arms against his wrong: its face, at least, is bare; the blow, if sacrilegious, is direct. Lucretia — Volume 02
  • Among the Barcaeans there was a skilled worker in brass who took a brazen shield and, carrying it round within the wall, applied it here and there at places where he thought the workings might be.
  • And how could they have been so brazenly hornswoggled?
  • Broadway musicals in the 21st century are a pastiche, a mixture of rock and roll revivalism, fan friendly stalwarts, campy film to footlight adaptations, and brazen experimentation.
  • It is a brazen-faced fraud against the local taxpayers.
  • From the Rushmorean cover portrait of Bush which over the headline "An American Revolutionary" was such a brazen and transparent effort to recall George Washington that it was embarrassing to the "Why We Fight" black-and-white portraiture of the aggrieved president sitting somberly at the bedside of the war-wounded, this issue is positively hysterical in its iconolatry. The Red Cross Knight
  • Hanuman was brazenly dressed in his formal cetic's robe; atop his head was a orange satin toque. THE BROKEN GOD
  • Honestly, is there no end to the brazen behaviour of banks? Times, Sunday Times
  • But anyone with a friend or relative in the US, and an inclination to do so, will blithely continue to brazen it out with the traffic law enforcers.
  • This brazen act of infidelity with Britain had them wondering if the Alpine air had gone to her head. Times, Sunday Times
  • But it was brazen in its attempt to shore up his own position. Times, Sunday Times
  • So he made up a brazen lie. Times, Sunday Times
  • Stubbornly self-righteous and willful, Higgins demonstrates his ideals in his brazen disregard for the Victorian rules of conduct.
  • No Wasp patriarch would have dared to defy democratic sensitivities so brazenly. IN DEFENCE OF ARISTOCRACY
  • A lot of it is just effrontery, sheer brazen nerve, and a sort of monstrous cockiness.
  • I cannot believe the brazenness of the District Attorney in Jena.
  • They are surprised into open-mouthed silence at suddenly finding the brazen interloper trespassing within their domestic domain.
  • Spanning two decades, his dispatches read as freestyle, brazenly subjective walks on the wild side, haunted by the ghost of gonzo reportage and often installing the author as a third-person player in the drama.
  • The alternative is to brazen it out and relish the impact you make.
  • The brazen hussy (as Mrs. Chadwick fondly refers to her) then strolls off in search of a stiff drink.
  • For two hours he spoke below the brazen sky — the sky which, he cried, is daily profaned and violated by the Yanqui spy planes, “to destroy which,” he demanded, “who of us is not ready to die?” Fidel Castro
  • They would go past the outer court and the brazen altar and the brazen laver and into the Most Holy Place, where the table of showbread and the golden candlestick stood, as well as the altar of incense, which represented the prayers of the saints. FROM THE CROSS TO PENTECOST
  • A thief brazenly stealing a pistol at an Elvis exhibit at Presley 's Graceland estate.
  • She knew she could either admit the truth or brazen it out.
  • He then committed several acts of brazen effrontery.
  • Critics described him as a brazen-faced charlatan and a pious rogue.
  • Black-cab drivers should beware after a serial fare-dodger escaped a prison sentence last week, despite the brazen cons he pulled on trusting cabbies.
  • Yet we continue to seek and affirm the message that offers a short-term bandage for our gaping spiritual wounds, all the while knowing at a deep level that what we're hearing is, at best, not the whole truth, and at worst, a brazen lie. Christian Piatt: When Preachers Become False Prophets
  • For an audience filled with professional headbangers, waiting to get their rock and rolls off with their favorite brand of brazen electrical cacophony, this is a risk of monumental proportions.
  • He was being called dangerous, brazen and shameless.
  • He was brazenly running a $400,000-a-month drug operation from the prison.
  • Elisha said a single word; the tolerance of high places, teraphim and betylia; the offering of incense for centuries to the brazen serpent destroyed by Hezekiah; the occasional glimpses of the most startling irregularities sanctioned apparently even in the temple worship itself, prove most decisively that a pure monotheism and an independence of symbols was the result of a slow and painful course of God's disciplinal dealings among the noblest thinkers of a single nation, and not, as is so constantly and erroneously urged, the instinct of the whole Semitic race; in other words, one single branch of the Evolution of Theology: an Anthropological Study
  • And it proved that if you are prepared to put in a bit of legwork and be brazen enough to ask, you really can get some reasonable bargains.
  • And he grew alarmed as she became increasingly brazen about her habit. The Sun
  • Otherwise we will consider each of them to be signatories to this brazen betrayal of trust. Times, Sunday Times
  • Its shape was a brazen imitation of the classic boxy Mini designed by Alec Issigonis 40 years before; and the fakery continued inside the car with a soup plate speedometer and toggle switches that self-consciously harked back to the Sixties. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • Then he took the brazen vessels and opened them, cucurbite after cucurbite, whereupon the devils came forth of them, saying, Arabian nights. English
  • He was brazenly running a $400,000-a-month drug operation from the prison.
  • She wanted to preserve the brazen fighting spirit the students had exhibited in their sit-in protests.
  • Then I com mended the Ifrits to shut him in a brazen vessel [FN#245] so they put him in a brazen cucurbite and sealed it with lead. Arabian nights. English
  • The Gulf of Mexico red drum fishery nearly collapsed-twice in the past quarter century-because of brazen, unapologetic commercial overharvest. Going After Big Red
  • If things seem more serious now it may be because the scale and brazenness of the lawlessness have stretched tolerance to the limits. Russia's Rebellious Mood
  • Roadside rubbernecking is passive when compared to folks who brazenly turn up at the scene of a crime or a tragedy and therefore participate somehow. Todd Greene: Irene In New York and Natural Disaster Rubbernecking
  • Heb. 9:12 tallies Christ's work with the atonement ritual in the Levitical code. His blood was shed on earth, which the brazen altar typified.
  • To attack a Beethoven sketch is brazenness in extreme, for the magical transformation from his rough draft to end product would be like an unknowing child trying to guess what the chrysalis or tadpole might become.
  • But the young ones are naturally quite brazen. Times, Sunday Times
  • As the credit cards pile up and the debt collectors gather, he finds himself reluctantly engaged to prim Marigold Flowers, while lusting for her sister, the brazen Daisy.
  • Police are warning residents not to confront a gang of brazen and aggressive thieves who have struck more than 50 times in Wiltshire, stealing power tools from vans.
  • How can the dapper little bureaucrat be so brazen? Times, Sunday Times
  • That was followed by their more brazen announcement this week of building plans for another ten enrichment plants. Times, Sunday Times
  • However, sometimes a brazen BFF is so bold, brash and fearless that her naughty behavior threatens to get you both in deep trouble.
  • His performance combines brazen ruthlessness with charm, wit, and clear human frailties.
  • Violence, less and less embarrassed by the limits imposed by centuries of lawfulness, is brazenly and victoriously striding across the whole world, unconcerned that its infertility has been demonstrated and proved many times in history. Alexandr Solzhenitsyn - Nobel Lecture
  • The senator ↗ brazened it out ↙ as the list of scandals grew.
  • Here, you can find traces of human residences, including a neglected paddy field, collapsed stone walls, and broken nickel silverware and brazen kitchenware.
  • If Choruss abandons the time-tested approach of licensing and relies instead on covenants not to sue, it will facilitate a brazen money grab by the major labels it represents, leaving songwriters, recording artists and music publishers empty-handed, and college students holding the bag. Warner Music’s Choruss, revisited
  • The most brazen sophistry could not dignify by the name of "loan" the coin contemptuously flung to a beach-comber who slept on the bare boards of the public market. Cabbages and Kings
  • Then he took the brazen vessels and opened them, cucurbite after cucurbite, whereupon the devils came forth of them, saying, We repent, O Prophet of The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • This is an extraordinary state of affairs; an Act of Parliament is barely on the statute book before the Government brazenly connives at preventing it from taking effect.
  • Honestly, is there no end to the brazen behaviour of banks? Times, Sunday Times
  • I will complain about the destruction of my 2nd Amendment Rights in this country, while I am duly being allowed to exercise my 2nd Amendment rights by legally but brazenly brandishing unconcealed firearms in public. Think Progress » Florida doctor tells Obama voters they are not welcome: ‘Seek urologic care elsewhere.’
  • brazen it out
  • Joan, the Wandering Jew, the decuman or tenth wave, the blackness of negroes, Friar Bacon's brazen head, etc. From Chaucer to Tennyson
  • Black-cab drivers should beware after a serial fare-dodger escaped a prison sentence last week, despite the brazen cons he pulled on trusting cabbies.
  • He was brazenly running a $400,000-a-month drug operation from the prison.

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