How To Use Erudite In A Sentence

  • Even through his harsh cruel manner of treating servants and others alike, he was smart, erudite, but also wise.
  • I know that there is some stiff competition in the house and I will have to be at my most erudite and witty best to get one over on some of these lads and lasses I will be entombed with.
  • Such preoccupations rarely seem to have troubled the solitary beings who inhabit the clamorous pages of her witty, erudite and anecdotal - if inconclusive - study.
  • The author's revered mother was a descendant from the latter venerable name, united with that of the brave and erudite race of Adamson, of farther north. The Scottish Chiefs
  • A rather erudite book club. Times, Sunday Times
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  • But it is the love of the critics that gratifies Cooper the most, such as when the Daily Mail eruditely weighs in on one of his choicest works: "In one hilarious snap the moment he mocks a dog trapped behind the glass of someone's front porch is taken with almost human-like humor. ARTINFO: Is This Cat a Great Photographer? The Seattle Art Scene's Feline Phenomenon
  • There are elements of autobiography in these acute, erudite, elegant and amusing essays. Times, Sunday Times
  • The preface to the reader made it abundantly clear that it was aimed not at erudite ecclesiastical theologians but at ordinary people.
  • Cricket is often cited as an example of sporting language that is witty and erudite. Times, Sunday Times
  • Wander our surviving early 18th-century streets and look at the finely wrought brick window arches, the mellow brick and precise pointing or the well-cut stone, and the erudite door surrounds, the miniature porticoes leading into the sacred environs of the home. British architecture: Georgian
  • It's like, I'm sure my life would be better if I ate only dandelion greens and listened to Buxtehude (if only I could toss off the word "Buxtehude" in casual conversation, which is (a) very erudite and (b) really fun to say), but right now I'd like to eat pork chops and watch "Glee. SFGate: Top News Stories
  • Indeed, I reserve the rest of the piece until I can obtain admission to the Bannatine Club, 13 when I propose to throw off an edition, limited according to the rules of that erudite Society, with a facsimile of the manuscript, emblazonry of the family arms surrounded by their quartering, and a handsome disclamation of family pride, with HAEC NOS NOVIMUS ESSE Chronicles of the Canongate
  • A connoisseur's erudite choice ups the ante vastly. Times, Sunday Times
  • Here is some fine Nanowrimo manuscript-padding advice in convenient and easy-to-digest Tweet form (a part of us just died as we wrote that) from Famous Writers, courtesy of the very erudite staff of Inkwell Bookstore Their blog is mad fab also. Motivate is Spelled B-L-O-V-I-A-T-E
  • Many children with verbal processing difficulty go on to be-come gifted interpreters of literature or become erudite in philosophy or social sciences.
  • As well as being erudite, witty and utterly shameless, his autobiography shows he was capable of great mercy. Times, Sunday Times
  • He once wrote of me as "lunkheaded" in an erudite Mark Twain-referencing critique The Washington Note
  • Mount is at his most erudite when discussing the causes of the mutiny that followed. Times, Sunday Times
  • Confluentia," whose threads of liquidity are eruditely, yet romantically, intertangled to represent the confluence of the Rhine and the Moselle; and "The Headless Horseman," a masterpiece of burlesque weirdness, representing the wild pursuit of Ichabod Crane and the final hurling of the awful head, -- a pumpkin, some say. Contemporary American Composers Being a Study of the Music of This Country, Its Present Conditions and Its Future, with Critical Estimates and Biographies of the Principal Living Composers; and an Abundance of Portraits, Fac-simile Musical Autographs, and
  • To prove it, the researchers first measured the specific heat of both the unfilled and filled skutterudite.
  • We present evidence of a relatively high dimensionless figure of merit in a polycrystalline skutterudite partially filled with ytterbium ions.
  • Sooner than such an inversion of social order, I would welcome even Turkish bondage; for surely utter ignorance is infinitely preferable to erudite unwomanliness.
  • His pedantic freakish oration and the inerudite suppositions of his talk made my jaw drop! WordPress.com News
  • He always carried a list of erudite subjects to dinner to talk about if conversation should flag. Times, Sunday Times
  • He is one of the most erudite scholars of Islam in modern times.
  • Don't you just LOVE analysts who use words like "harangued" (pretending to be erudite and sophisticated) and, in the same sentence, leave out the simple, basic preposition "of"? MacDailyNews
  • A deeply soulful and erudite man who genuinely loved the theatre. The Sun
  • But it was gripping and clever and fantastically erudite, and people became a little obsessed.
  • Aiming to be the most comprehensive source of vodka information on the Net, iVodka.com is the site for the erudite alkie.
  • He's the author of an erudite book on Scottish history.
  • As a teacher, while he could not be called erudite, he was uncommonly interesting and inspiring. Biennial Report of the Superintendent of Public Instruction of North Carolina, for the Scholastic Years 1898-'99 to 1899-1900
  • Through practice and "a series of erudite experiments," Huysmans writes, "Des Esseintes would drink a drop here, another there, playing internal symphonies to himself, and providing his palate with sensations analogous to those which music dispenses to the ear. Do They Taste of Trumpets?
  • Thor, your whole "I'm too erudite to wallow in the sty of mediocrity with the rest of you pigs because I read * serious* books in third grade" schtick is seriously underwhelming me here. Little Kids Can Write Books Better Than You
  • Bond-like hero than erudite belletrist, alluding as nonchalantly to Rage Against the Machine and Bart Simpson as he does 19th century radical French mathematician évariste Galois and René TIME.com: Top Stories
  • As well as being erudite, witty and utterly shameless, his autobiography shows he was capable of great mercy. Times, Sunday Times
  • The default setting of the England rugby fan is knowing condemnation fading to erudite contempt. Times, Sunday Times
  • ROBERT GILDEA, Oxford University's fearsomely erudite professor of modern history, has chosen a large canvas—and a wonderful title.
  • These are two thoughtful performances in a carefully understated film that has a number of erudite lines without ever becoming preachy.
  • He was charming, erudite and civilised. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was a highly erudite man, meticulous about language, and a very thoughtful comic writer and performer. Times, Sunday Times
  • Several erudite readers, invoking Joycean fragments, have in recent months suggested ways of rehabilitating my wonted usage, for which I am grateful.
  • The matter of UK versus US English continues to provoke erudite and informed opinion.
  • The power of his book lies not in prescription, but rather in his acute, erudite and provocative historical analysis.
  • But it is the love of the critics that gratifies Cooper the most, such as when the Daily Mail eruditely weighs in on one of his choicest works: "In one hilarious snap the moment he mocks a dog trapped behind the glass of someone's front porch is taken with almost human-like humor. ARTINFO: Is This Cat a Great Photographer? The Seattle Art Scene's Feline Phenomenon
  • And this discussion, no matter how robust, is not ‘flaming’ - logically and eruditely exchanging differences of opinion is what sets us apart from 4chan or YouTube commenters. So there.
  • So, nonny naughty mouse: Now let's see you defend YOUR view about all this in an article for HB in elegant, erudite, and knowledgeable language ... with a few reputable facts to support your view along the way. Writing for the Horn Book: Field Notes
  • The most interesting work experience was having to be a discussant for three erudite papers the afternoon that I landed in Budapest.
  • He was a highly erudite man, meticulous about language, and a very thoughtful comic writer and performer. Times, Sunday Times
  • Victor Allen Crawford III, perhaps better known as the erudite Lord Breaulove Swells Whimsy, lives his life in miniature. by Brian James Kirk The Clog
  • Sitting at the same table where Greenspan and Geithner had held court with their erudite (but nauseating) remarks, Malkin went on to claim that the Tea Baggers and those who are currently disrupting town hall meetings represent grassroots "counterinsurgencies" against President Barack Obama's health care agenda. Joseph A. Palermo: More Orly Taitz!
  • But he is also very erudite, scholarly, and has lots of fresh ideas.
  • Your level of education is exemplified by your opening sentence in your post #605 as follows: "Dude - I didn't say that …" Now, that's what I call erudite - or not. Think Progress
  • To read it is like spending hours with an erudite conversationalist who is disposed to amuse you.
  • At such times the talk might be rambling but it was always erudite and sparkling with ideas. Times, Sunday Times
  • An equally erudite body of experts has argued that fluoride can trigger bone deformities and stain tooth enamel, and has poured scorn and doubt on its worth as a preventer of tooth rot.
  • Hence every inerudite person, who wished to pass for erudite, maintained that opinion for his own reputation. Dionysius the Areopagite, Works (1897)
  • Accelerating violence and horror eventually hit maximum velocity and warp into nonsense, no matter how erudite the script.
  • In it, Laurel got to show off her newest series of paintings, ink and watercolor drawings, sculptures and other works - all of which have been described as erudite, evil, haunting, mysterious, beautiful and charming (read an interview of Laurel in the DCist here). Charlottesville Blogs
  • The speakers in translation are erudite, witty, informed, expert.
  • Many children with verbal processing difficulty go on to be-come gifted interpreters of literature or become erudite in philosophy or social sciences.
  • Which of these is good for nickel: kernite, kutnahorite, kullerudite, kieserite? About.com Geology
  • The preface to the reader made it abundantly clear that it was aimed not at erudite ecclesiastical theologians but at ordinary people.
  • Here is a man unafraid to be highly intellectual and erudite but also populist and practical. Times, Sunday Times
  • The support and services of erudite scholars must be mobilised so that the manuscripts could be brought out in the form of books.
  • Seeking deeper inspiration, the erudite Masson turned to the somber, chthonic Greek myths.
  • It is full of moral speechifying and erudite detail and has a convoluted plot replete with melodramatic deaths and wonderful recoveries and coincidences.
  • A rather erudite book club. Times, Sunday Times
  • That isn't an articulation of an argument, it's an inerudite schoolboy's idle doodle. I don't know how even to articulate an argument that it's constitutional to give a vote to a D.C. representative in the House.
  • The Clinton debate was, it turned out, an unusually erudite discussion.
  • His teacher was the history he lived through and participated in, his friends the generation of revolutionaries surrounding him - erudite autodidacts of the times.
  • This explains the litany of septuncial lettertrumpets honorific, highpitched, erudite, neoclassical, which he so loved as patricianly to manuscribe after his name. Finnegans Wake
  • His erudite book also casts in relief the less enthralling aspects of the contemporary Games. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Where am I going to go now to get all those arty, cultured links that make me appear much more well-read and erudite than I really am?
  • he talked eruditely about Indian mythology
  • The name skutterudite comes from the locality of Skutterud, Norway.
  • The essays are erudite, but also gently humorous. Times, Sunday Times
  • In person he is neither deranged nor canine, but softly spoken and erudite. Times, Sunday Times
  • The money that comes from media exposure can blind even the most erudite scholars.
  • A deeply soulful and erudite man who genuinely loved the theatre. The Sun
  • Thor, your whole "I'm too erudite to wallow in the sty of mediocrity with the rest of you pigs because I read * serious* books in third grade" schtick is seriously underwhelming me here. Little Kids Can Write Books Better Than You
  • The first doctor, an erudite man, was happy but the second seemed unconvinced it was worthwhile. Times, Sunday Times
  • And Jacobi is, well, Jacobi, which is to say erudite, charming, and perfectly at ease in both of his roles. DVD Verdict
  • The preface to the reader made it abundantly clear that it was aimed not at erudite ecclesiastical theologians but at ordinary people.
  • The ongoing debates over memorials, memoirs, and the diminishing possibilities of authentic memory are given erudite, expressive, and eloquent treatment.
  • He once wrote of me as "lunkheaded" in an erudite Mark Twain-referencing critique [thankfully no longer on the internet] of something I had written about him involving the words "incipient" and "imminent. My Fault: Apologies to David Frum!
  • The era of the erudite, intelligent thriller, it would seem, is upon us.
  • When approved by the Supreme Leader to run for president, the erudite and friendly cleric from Yazd was considered a no-hoper—but useful in providing a patina of democracy across a broader political spectrum. Let the Swords Encircle Me
  • You can maintain a clever, astute and erudite persona whether you're adolescent or octogenarian.
  • Forty-eight square miles of good sound fame your not inerudite correspondent can conscientiously lay claim to; and although there is, with regret I admit it, a considerable portion of the square superficies alluded to, waste and uncultivated moor, yet I can say, wid that racy touch of genial and expressive pride which distinguishes men of letters in general, that the other portions of this fine district are inhabited by a multitudinity of population in the highest degree creditable to the prolific powers of the climate. The Emigrants Of Ahadarra The Works of William Carleton, Volume Two
  • This erudite and thought-provoking book provides an ideal meeting ground. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Speaking eruditely, with a pained, hangdog expression, Mr. Kumar described his descent from the pinnacle of the business world to become a self-admitted felon aiding Mr. Rajaratnam. Motive for Stock Leak Can Be Respect, Love
  • Third, they can be very dynamic and persuasive, even erudite and intellectual.
  • Likewise, Maurice-Quentin de la Tour's monumental pastel portrait of the magistrate Gabriel Bernard de Rieux, who looks up from reading in a book-strewn study as a clock keeps time behind him, is the essence of the erudite professional whose industriousness has merited him his elite stature and surroundings. With All the Time in the World
  • Christopher Hitchens, a polemicist whose tone is that of an erudite straight - talker , does not.
  • This publication matches its subject and thematic pitch: erudite, well-wrought, 'sumptuous'. The Times Literary Supplement
  • In person he is neither deranged nor canine, but softly spoken and erudite. Times, Sunday Times
  • This was not the only reason the erudite scholar refused to engage in a debate with Norris.
  • Accelerating violence and horror eventually hit maximum velocity and warp into nonsense, no matter how erudite the script.
  • But we would rather hand them down to some erudite and kindred soul.
  • In this case there have been endless erudite discussions about the advantages or otherwise of the long flowing trace for plaice fishing.
  • Even erudite eggheads can't be expected to know everything!
  • He had that same erudite quaver that suggested madness or brilliance and probably both.
  • In person he is neither deranged nor canine, but softly spoken and erudite. Times, Sunday Times
  • The first doctor, an erudite man, was happy but the second seemed unconvinced it was worthwhile. Times, Sunday Times
  • The magazine's erudite, elegant editor encouraged all sorts of arcane and experimental ruminations from his reviewers.
  • The crystal is a combination of antimony and cobalt known as a skutterudite.
  • To listen to the erudite and cosmically conscious Monsieur Joly explain the tenets of biodynamics, the system of holistic agriculture based on the teachings of Austrian theosophist Rudolph Steiner, while walking the rolling hills of his vineyard on the north bank of the Loire, it's easy to be convinced that conventional agriculture is pernicious and that biodynamics is the future, if not necessarily to understand it in rational terms. Singing of France's Unsung Chenin Blanc
  • Mount is at his most erudite when discussing the causes of the mutiny that followed. Times, Sunday Times
  • When approved by the Supreme Leader to run for president, the erudite and friendly cleric from Yazd was considered a no-hoper—but useful in providing a patina of democracy across a broader political spectrum. Let the Swords Encircle Me
  • It is erudite, intimate music, not without violinistic fireworks. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's a splendid, erudite book. Times, Sunday Times
  • I fully expect to read a far more erudite explanation of our use of the word recalibrate by William Safire any week now. Liz Neumark: Have you used the word recalibrate this week?
  • The Principal Secretary on the occasion also felicitated erudite poet and versatile litterateur Mr. Arjun Dev Majboor and illustrious Kashmiri musician and artist Mr. Krishan Langoo. Muslim-Pandit brotherhood, harmony intact:, Young Pandit artists showcase Kashmiri culture
  • Adam Mars-Jones's review … was at once erudite, attentive, killingly fair-minded and viciously funny. Review of The Hours author's latest book wins inaugural hatchet job award
  • The default setting of the England rugby fan is knowing condemnation fading to erudite contempt. Times, Sunday Times
  • I, by the bright light of noon, would like to reveal the most learned and erudite of my studies.
  • These are two thoughtful performances in a carefully understated film that has a number of erudite lines without ever becoming preachy.
  • At the other pole are specialist intellectuals who are involved in erudite discussions with other intellectuals.
  • If Ms. Singh truly believes that plagiarism took place, why was there not a single reference to a line, paragraph or ‘whole chunks’ as she so eruditely puts it?
  • His great folio is still consulted by serious philologists, and though many of his etymologies are comic, he often anticipates the conclusions of the most erudite modern research. On Dictionaries
  • She could turn any conversation into an erudite discussion.
  • Daryl Hannah plays an earthbound angel, while Anthony Edwards is her erudite cohort and British thespian Robin Sachs is the master angel.
  • An erudite, doting wife, Eileen, who calls him darling in lovely, wartime tones, completes the cosy mirage.
  • It is a shame that this lively and erudite book is undermined by episodes such as this. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Cricket is often cited as an example of sporting language that is witty and erudite. Times, Sunday Times
  • -- Callimachus, more erudite, more scholastic, was what is termed a neoclassic, which is that he desired to treat in a new way the same subjects that had been dealt with by the great men of ancient Initiation into Literature
  • The good burghers of the Ayrshire town fancy themselves as an erudite bunch and in the club's round-up page in their matchday magazine showed this is no idle boast.
  • I admire the erudite and public-spirited members of the Montgomery County Board of Education. Why do great school systems fear charters?
  • In large part, this is because Athos is a place where myths, and versions of myth, have superimposed themselves to form a virtually impenetrable conglomerate; where erudite references and cartographic measurements are barnacled—unprizably—onto what, originally, may have been little more than local hearsay. A Fossil With Flesh
  • Throughout his period of invalidism, McEldowney became an erudite and self-taught reader and writer.
  • This monograph, representing the revised dissertation of the author, is an extensive and erudite commentary on the extant fragments of the Roman annalist L. Calpurnius Piso Frugi.
  • Here is a man unafraid to be highly intellectual and erudite but also populist and practical. Times, Sunday Times
  • There are elements of autobiography in these acute, erudite, elegant and amusing essays. Times, Sunday Times
  • In comparison with her, a woman, I might have been called erudite and well-informed. Recollections Of My Childhood And Youth
  • These will include highly respected Croydonian Erudite Nick Drew witty City Unslicker and Ed. Do pop in for a splosh of egg nog if you cannot resist ,6.30 PM 1-3 Tooley Street, Southwark, London, SE1 2PF The Stars Come Out
  • an erudite professor
  • Elizabethan schoolboys were taught adoxography, the art of eruditely praising worthless things
  • I was waiting to see if my school intended to renew my contract, and not concerned if they did not, for I really felt it necessary to swap my 'hotchpotch' Chinese speaking for something more erudite. Magic-city-news.com
  • They were erudite, charming, aloof and slightly scary. Times, Sunday Times
  • Those who are more "erudite" have more "erudite" visitors and commenters who are less likely to engage in useless "fighting". "Many blogs have developed successful communities of commenters, with many very interesting and substantive contributions and discussions."
  • Dons in uniform like R. W. Chapman and John Sparrow, when they weren't cracking codes at Bletchley Park, exchanged erudite aperçus about textual minutiae in Trollope's novels.
  • His erudite book also casts in relief the less enthralling aspects of the contemporary Games. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Let's do the TV news channel thing and get him to fill airtime by eruditely describing the atmosphere, shall we? Florida primary campaign: Romney up, Gingrich down - as it happened
  • He would stare dumfounded at the erudite personage at the head of the class; Leander's bare feet were always carefully adjusted to a crack between the puncheons of the floor, literally "toeing the mark"; his broad trousers, frayed out liberally at the hem, revealed his skinny and scarred little ankles, for his out-door adventures were not without a record upon the more impressionable portions of his anatomy; his waistband was drawn high up under his shoulder-blades and his ribs, and girt over the shoulders of his unbleached cotton shirt by braces, which all his learning did not prevent him from calling "galluses"; his cut, scratched, calloused hands were held stiffly down at the side seams in his nether garments in strict accordance with the regulations. The Moonshiners At Hoho-Hebee Falls 1895
  • But neither the antiquarian interest of the seventeenth-century erudites nor the philosophic concerns of the great eighteenth-century historians, such as Montesquieu, Voltaire, Gibbon, HISTORICISM
  • This comic playlet aspires to be nothing more than an erudite pantomime.
  • They were erudite, charming, aloof and slightly scary. Times, Sunday Times
  • None was funny or erudite or told amusing anecdotes. Times, Sunday Times
  • They are the product of complex histories that the writer eruditely recounts with an enviable lightness of touch.
  • Such is his erudite, adversarial nature that any big winner has the coincidental benefit of focusing attention on unwelcome issues. Times, Sunday Times
  • But even Schluchter's erudite typology of stances to the world of religious virtuosi fails to incorporate the full range of variation within the ecclesia afforded by the inclusion of women.
  • He once wrote of me as "lunkheaded" in an erudite Mark Twain-referencing critique thankfully no longer on the internet of something I had written about him involving the words "incipient" and "imminent. Steve Clemons: My Fault: Apologies to David Frum!
  • The Principal Secretary on the occasion also felicitated erudite poet and versatile litterateur Mr. Arjun Dev Majboor and illustrious Kashmiri musician and artist Mr. Krishan Langoo. Muslim-Pandit brotherhood, harmony intact:, Young Pandit artists showcase Kashmiri culture
  • Nor is a rigid systematic approach to leader development the right answer, as the authors eruditely demonstrate.
  • None was funny or erudite or told amusing anecdotes. Times, Sunday Times
  • I tried to go back to my posting at that point and correct a mistake made inadvertently but it was too late to amend my error so there it is and, perhaps, there it should stay because my error is illustrative of what we are discussing - Rex most eruditely - regarding slang based on identifying any minority group whether racially, economically or politically motivated. Page 2
  • This erudite and thought-provoking book provides an ideal meeting ground. The Times Literary Supplement
  • “The river-nymphs, as daughters of Oceanus, and thus of immortal parentage, are bound to possess organs of more than mortal keenness; but, as you say, the song was not so bad — erudite, as well as prettily conceived — and, saving for a certain rustical simplicity and monosyllabic baldness, smacks rather of the forests of Castaly than those of Torridge.” Westward Ho!
  • None was funny or erudite or told amusing anecdotes. Times, Sunday Times
  • If my memory fails me, no doubt one of your erudite readers will enlighten me.
  • Lovers of sensitively erudite pop will surely succumb to this refreshingly ache-ridden brand of awe struck tuneage.
  • Despite the work's jerry-built appearance, it exuded an internal order that is both erudite and sophisticated.
  • It's a splendid, erudite book. Times, Sunday Times
  • Full of my usual razor sharp wit and acerbic commentary coupled with pithy, erudite and provoking insights into the unfolding world about me.
  • But rather than chronologically write about this search, Giscombe eruditely riffs back and forth across time and terrain.
  • ‘I believe I am a Unitarian in the traditional and modern senses of the word,’ says the even-tempered, erudite 41 year old.
  • He possesses a rich, warm, sonorous voice, betraying further evidence of his Englishness - a confident, erudite speaker, and yet punctuated with ums, ahs, and halting hesitancy.
  • We are a highly sophisticated and erudite population and we just seem to take everything on the chin.
  • When he was done barraging me with his senior thesis, he left this erudite comment.
  • Here is a man unafraid to be highly intellectual and erudite but also populist and practical. Times, Sunday Times
  • But, such debates could attract only limited number of people and erudite scholars.
  • Erudite and scholarly, Green was best known for his literary achievements.
  • On the erudite side, Said's claim that the Orientalists "essentialized" the Orient is itself exposed as an argument dependent on an "essentialized" portrayal of the West. Writings from the Middle East Forum and Middle East Quarterly.
  • Thermodynamically metastable skutterudite crystalline-structured compounds are disclosed having preselected stoichiometric compositions.
  • This erudite yet readable volume admirably meets the high standards set by the new series.
  • (Note however that Zhuangzi would not normally be classified as a ru erudite, Confucian or otherwise.) Xunzi
  • As well as being erudite, witty and utterly shameless, his autobiography shows he was capable of great mercy. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is full of moral speechifying and erudite detail and has a convoluted plot replete with melodramatic deaths and wonderful recoveries and coincidences.
  • He was charming, erudite and civilised. Times, Sunday Times
  • Where am I going to go now to get all those arty, cultured links that make me appear much more well-read and erudite than I really am?
  • Among themselves, ecclesiastics have become eminently sophisticated and erudite.
  • Ralph, SPERM is still hurting from the knowledge that their is an educated, erudite black man in the WH. Think Progress » Tancredo says Obama won because we lack a ‘literacy test before people can vote in this country.’
  • Look at these pieces: like all of his political writing, it's spectacularly well-informed and researched, eloquently and eruditely written, and advocates a unique opinion.
  • Such is his erudite, adversarial nature that any big winner has the coincidental benefit of focusing attention on unwelcome issues. Times, Sunday Times
  • The countryman went from ruggedly unsophisticated to casually erudite in one quick addition of something so simplistic as a pair of spectacles.
  • Despite the work's jerry-built appearance, it exuded an internal order that is both erudite and sophisticated.
  • Young, feisty Iris leaves her creaky, would-be suitor in the dust as they engage in the sort of witty, erudite repartee that exists only in films.
  • So I guess even if it took me three years to finally shake off my irrational fear of ecclesiastical authority, my inerudite lips still pay homage to the power of the institutionally bequeathed title, eh, Dr. W? I Think I Was Just Informed of My Pending Excommunication. | Mind on Fire
  • BTW, to prove that DLR/Diz Grace are both morons, erudite is an adjective, not a verb. David Lee Roth: Amtrak FM « BuzzMachine
  • Before joining the bench, the Judge was a law professor who was well known for his erudite criticism of legalized abortion.
  • More or less by antonomasia, an erudite word that I met only many years after and learned the meaning of ... José Saramago - Nobel Lecture
  • These knowledge filled stories are written and directed by erudite geniuses.
  • Just as every story needs a preface, a truly erudite narrative simply cannot do without an introduction.
  • At such times the talk might be rambling but it was always erudite and sparkling with ideas. Times, Sunday Times
  • In novel after novel, she would recreate the rarefied Oxbridge milieu, a world peopled by erudite lost souls relentlessly seeking wisdom and love.
  • A connoisseur's erudite choice ups the ante vastly. Times, Sunday Times
  • This erudite and thought-provoking book provides an ideal meeting ground. The Times Literary Supplement
  • He is an educated, erudite man who came home and never let the country get to him.
  • The matter of UK versus US English continues to provoke erudite and informed opinion.
  • As well as being erudite, witty and utterly shameless, his autobiography shows he was capable of great mercy. Times, Sunday Times

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