How To Use Dilettante In A Sentence

  • I have become "dilettante" literate in the difference, say, between Hayek and Keynes over the last 2 years or so. The Case for Killing Textbook Macro, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • His family, the Barwoods, had been from the earliest times a race of shrewd and driving New England storekeepers, the very antipodes of sentiment and dilettanteism. Stories by American Authors, Volume 1
  • A gentle aesthete and a shambolic dilettante, he was extraordinarily widely read, but shrewd and critical as well as omnivorous.
  • Idling above the world in a fat leather seat, snacking on a pastry and talking about the mile-high club, I wonder if we are less modern philanthropists, more latter-day dilettantes?
  • Garman for the nonce was the courtier, the artistic idler, the dilettante in the art of luxurious living; and Payne, conscious of his dirt-smudged overalls, envied him the elegance with which he played the rôle. The Plunderer
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  • The reality is that many of our youth have gone beyond that grammar school education so suited to the dilettantes of long-time European metropolitan salons.
  • I'm a dilettante, a dabbler, and it was easy for many years to let that keep me on the sidelines.
  • Pankaj is like those dilettantes one reads about in Somerset Maugham, who fear boredom more than old age, death, poverty or mendicancy.
  • Either he will become a dilettante, which is the French way, or he will take to drink and mystical nihilism, a career very popular in The Open Secret of Ireland
  • He became a symbol, I believe, to Al Smith of the shallowness of the American people, a shallowness that had hurt him so badly in '28 and had now elected this fop, which dilettante, which is how he perceived FDR. Empire Statesman: The Rise & Redemption of Al Smith
  • But the more ravishing the beauty which seemed offered through perfect realization of this knowledge, the more blighting would be its effects, if entertained in the spirit of a selfish dilettanteism. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 71, September, 1863
  • Though on the surface they might seem only to be dilettantes, I admired the drive within them as they met failure and would go on to spend millions once again in another attempt.
  • Pointedly, the book vilifies the usurper Eve but saves its most caustic bitchiness for the bland dilettante-housewife Karen.
  • Journalism depends on uncredentialed losers, outsiders, dilettantes, frustrated lawyers, unabashed alcoholics - and, yes, creative psychopaths - to keep its blood red.
  • A good many people in my own class are impatient of them, and think of them as harmless recreations; I fall back upon a few like-minded friends, with whom I can talk easily and unreservedly of such things, without being thought priggish or donnish or dilettanteish or unintelligible. At Large
  • She differentiates between authentic naives and Sunday painters, dilettantes and epigones at adult art class level, none of whom is represented in her collection.
  • In the available literature on film studies, dabblers and dilettantes abound.
  • It is easy to accuse books, and bad ones are easily found, and the best are but records, and not the things recorded; and certainly there is dilettanteism enough, and books that are merely neutral and do nothing for us. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 01, No. 03, January, 1858
  • But it will be remembered that he recognises the holiness of marriage and family life, and if he thinks virginity and coenobitism a higher life, has no mercy for the dilettante asceticism of a morbid or indolent "incivisme. NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works
  • Petrarch, even more truly than with the kindly Boccaccio, that the purely literary life, and that dilettanteism, which is the twin sister of scepticism, began. Among My Books Second Series
  • We are all dilettantes and pretenders by comparison.
  • Bush, George W., as heeder of invisible bugles, 64; Oedipal complexity of, 64-66; goading laughter of, 66; as frustrated dilettante, 66; as lover of backfiring cars, 66; blessedness of, 66; foreordination of, 128 Who's Who
  • The innocent corruption of scheming, out-of-control teens will always be more compelling than all those witty rewrites of the lives of jaded middle-aged dilettantes who really have no excuse to be so soulless.
  • Or does he impinge on our current consciousness as a dandified dilettante admired by his own period but of utter irrelevance to ours?
  • Likewise, to the dismay of us linguists, National Grammar Day will mostly just result in prescriptivist dilettantes coming out in full force, tossing around ignorant grammatical proclamations with gusto, like so many dimes at a dime toss. National Grammar Day 2009: Ten Common Grammar Myths, Debunked « Motivated Grammar
  • This all-too-short book is for anyone interested in opera, from the dilettante to the fanatic.
  • As we discussed earlier, I'm a dilettante at best when it comes to dance, so I'm just going to be open about my ignorance.
  • Idle speculation leads me to postulate some of the following; that there might well be an established colony of such birds released from captivity by well meaning 17th century dilettantes.
  • ‘No, the word dilettante did not accord with that face, the expression of that face, those eyes ....’ Dream tales and prose poems
  • The innocent corruption of scheming, out-of-control teens will always be more compelling than all those witty rewrites of the lives of jaded middle-aged dilettantes who really have no excuse to be so soulless.
  • The Editorial Page is consistently an embarrassment, the Opinion Page hasn't updated their contributor rolodex in decades and the paper carries a gaggle of inside-the-beltway dilettantes who almost never add anything of substance to the debate (you know: Broder, Milbank, Kurtz and the other regurgitators of cocktail party prater on the WP payroll). The Bias That We Fight...
  • Being in advance of one's time is generally the excuse of the mediocrity, the creator of second or even third rate work, the moderately talented dilettante who has no cultivated skill with which to communicate with a contemporary world.
  • In the novel, the poem's been torn out of a college textbook and treasured by Bruno, the murdering, sociopathic boozehound dilettante who exists, leech-like, on his mother's allowance.
  • Derby is often viewed as a dilettante leader who would rather have been racing his horses at Newmarket than taking part in debates at Westminster.
  • This is strong language, but it is time, and more than time, that sickly dilettanteism should be left behind, and this gross libel on the The Doctrines of Predestination, Reprobation, and Election
  • And those who would be our allies need to buck their ideas up; there’s been too much dilettante faffing about for too long – it’s no wonder trans people are disengaging from the debates. Will the last trans person to leave feminist Blogdonia please turn off the lights?
  • Media pundits can be opinionated dilettantes, but they can also possess the kind of knowledge that provides real insights into the subject under discussion.
  • It's harder to defend the property rights of those who are perceived to be dumb-ass dilettantes.
  • Is there really so little talent in the whole Liberal party that they gave the Communications job to a complete dilettante?
  • An eclectic essayist is necessarily a dilettante, which is not in itself a bad thing. Memoirs on a rainy day
  • The real generalist is sometimes known as a dilettante and needs an independent income. The Volokh Conspiracy » Palin, Ignorance, and Stupidity Revisited
  • I suppose your Slav and your Anglo-Saxon have no prejudices, and that they share their Venetian with a dilettanteism quite modern. The French Immortals Series — Complete
  • The baroness is a wealthy American Quaker brought to 19 th-century Paris by her husband's business dealings, trying to make the best of it as a cultural dilettante.
  • 'No, the word dilettante did not accord with that face, the expression of that face, those eyes ....' Dream Tales and Prose Poems
  • Since Woodbury does not think abstinence to be the cure of intemperance, could he not justify his practice by a higher principle than self-indulgence, lay it on a deeper foundation than dilettanteism? The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 75, January, 1864
  • Dilettante’ is not a word with a positive connotation in most circles, whereas ‘purist’ is, I think.
  • Haddon Channing might have been described as a dilettante radical. Love's Pilgrimage
  • For most of his career, Bronfman, who is married to a striking Latin American aristocrat, has endured withering criticism and was generally dismissed as a rich-kid dilettante. For Sale By Owner?
  • When the cup of human life is so overflowing with woe and pain and misery, it seems to me a narrow dilettanteism or downright charlatanism to devote one's self to petty or bizarre problems which can have no relation to human happiness, and to prate of self-satisfaction and self-expression. Woman Her Sex and Love Life
  • This version of humanity doesn't mind dilettantes at all.
  • Meanwhile, although artillerists were usually civilian contractors (the art proved too complex for the dilettantes commissioned because of their nobility), that field gradually became a military function.
  • Borrow has resuscitated a literary form which had been many years abandoned, and he has resuscitated it in no artificial manner -- as a rhythmical form is rehabilitated, or as a dilettante re-establishes for a moment the vogue of the roundel or the virelay -- but quite naturally as the inevitable setting for a picture which has to include the actors and the observations of the author's vagabond life. Isopel Berners The History of certain doings in a Staffordshire Dingle, July, 1825
  • The question that we should all be asking ourselves is: who are the real dilettantes?
  • The sleuth bridges a number of formats and styles while always emphasising ingenuity, deduction and a dilettante's approach to crime-solving.
  • As these letters show, Brown was an active participant in Severn's career, advising him on prices and patrons, encouraging and applauding him; he was conscious that by comparison with his own dilettante talents, Severn was, like Keats before him, the genuine article, a true creative artist. 32 But if in some ways Severn stood as Brown's proxy for Keats, there was also a genuine sympathy between them. New Letters from Charles Brown to Joseph Severn
  • In Rupert Brooke the inspiration of the call obliterated the last trace of dilettante youth's pretensions, and he encountered darkness like a bride, and greeted the unseen death not with a cheer as a peril to be boldly faced, but as a great consummation, the supreme safety. Recent Developments in European Thought
  • Far from playing the dilettante, the author shares his in-depth knowledge of the area's religion, history and politics with the reader.
  • You are a highly seasoned professional committed to the cause while they are half-hearted dilettantes who are very likely to crack under pressure.
  • But it requires a mind entirely free to give one's self up to the charm of historical dilettanteism which cities built upon the past conjure up, and although Julien prided himself, not without reason, on being above emotion, he was not possessed of his usual independence of mind during the walk which took him to his "human mosaic," as he picturesquely expressed it, and he pondered and repondered the following questions: The French Immortals Series — Complete
  • This is a woman who neglected her family, suffered the scorn of fellow journalists who considered her a glory-seeking dilettante and could be easily manipulated by those keen to point her in the wrong direction.
  • Tena, my sense is this: That one piece of info was saved as "ammunition" because your voice is powerful - and they're trying to diminish it by making you out to be some kind of dilettante condescending wealthy lady whose words should be ignored. Election Central Morning Roundup
  • The look may suggest dilettante, cavalier and swashbuckling and that is partly his style with bat in hand, but he is cussed and determined.
  • But he was inspired by the enthusiasm of a man who feels with extreme ardor, and when he was met by the partly ironical dilettanteism of Dorsenne he was almost pained by it, so much the more so as the author and he had some common theories, notably an extreme fancy for heredity and race. The French Immortals Series — Complete
  • The word dilettante derives from the Italian dilettare, meaning to delight in. 21 DOG YEARS

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