How To Use Finesse In A Sentence

  • She showed finesse and rosy-faced sophistication.
  • One of these fellows (now the highest financial officer of the land!) it seems had even "erred" (then endeavored to finesse the audit, then paid up just prior to ordering his new federal office furniture) in reporting his income tax, as did several other presidential nominees for high offices of trust. Hope and Trust in Obama, or Renewed Vigilance?
  • The drawings share some of the sculptures' rough and uncouth qualities: the line is generally neutral, even unmodulated, and acquires power through repetition rather than finesse.
  • At the Kennedy Center, during "Le Corsaire" 's opening marketplace scene, we saw a stageful of distinct characters, all telling their individual "stories" with wit, finesse and flair, but never play-acting hollowness. Bolshoi Embraces the Pre-Soviet Past
  • Why does the mention of the word finesse incite so much anger inside an NFL locker room? Sports News : CBSSports.com
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  • I am an icon of style, a staple of urban finesse.
  • At trick ten, declarer led his singleton club and finessed dummy 's ten. Times, Sunday Times
  • This is a wine that you could start to consider keeping, the rich, highly concentrated fruit has wonderful mid-palate weight and sits within a tannic structure of great finesse.
  • If it loses you are going to need the club finesse and one ruff in the dummy. Times, Sunday Times
  • Positions painted as vital and sometimes "finessed" to advance specific political agendas now all the time. The Moderate Voice
  • Kumar's diplomatic finesse wins him high marks from the board.
  • The other is the complete lack of finesse necessary to drive it.
  • MyDynamo, with Jody Petty in the leathers, took the immediate lead and repelled all challengers as he sailed with finesse and precision over the first two miles of National fences.
  • And I learnt from my Parsi connections through marriage that death and sorrow can be handled with so much finesse, so much dignity.
  • She rejected the assertion that South Africa had "finessed" its position. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • Georgi's brilliant interpretative finesse in skilful performance is a delight throughout.
  • It appears that the administration will attempt to finesse this problem by the blatant expedient of pretending the borrowing never happened.
  • I have about as much finesse when it comes to romance as a lumberjack has when cutting down a tree.
  • I'm fairly convinced that the contests would show the strength, intelligence, artistry and finesse of the American game and players are superior.
  • The adroit prosecutor arranged his questions with admirable finesse.
  • What he may lack in finesse or cunning, he makes up for in raw firepower.
  • A finesse is an attempt to win a trick with a card, when the opponents have a higher card. Times, Sunday Times
  • He is more of a finesse, position-and-sustain blocker but has the quickness and movement skills to fire off the snap on pulls and traps. Draft's O-line talent is rich only at the top
  • A finesse is an attempt to promote a card when the opponents have a higher card in that suit. Times, Sunday Times
  • There's a certain finesse required for pulling off unforgettable sci-fi movies and I really hope Neil has it - I don't want a story with potential like this one becoming the next Jumper. Shia LaBeouf Cast in Alan Glynn's The Dark Fields « FirstShowing.net
  • It was a rare lapse for a banker who prides himself on his networking finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • You next lead low to the nine to set up the finesse position against East. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their great finesse and qualities of ensemble were displayed in works ranging from Elizabethan consort music to the Hungarian avant-garde.
  • Her work is about illustrating, yes, but also about the art of drawing - mark-making - in which she achieves great finesse.
  • Still, dealing with a complex issue such as this one requires a great deal of diplomatic finesse.
  • The roast fillet of lamb with herb crust to follow is a classic dish, presented by Clayton with great finesse.
  • I then paid her the most extravagant compliments; her senseless chatting I described as unrestraint tempered by finesse, her pretentious exaggerations as a natural desire to please; was it her fault that she was poor? The Confession of a Child of the Century — Complete
  • Tony Jaa is an utterly brilliant fighter, whose resilience and finesse as a martial-arts master is put to the test in this funny and punch-packed feature.
  • There is an inherently satisfying quality to sharing the gratification of skill, finesse and excitement with a substantial number of individuals.
  • If it loses you are going to need the club finesse and one ruff in the dummy. Times, Sunday Times
  • A shrewd diplomat must be a master of finesse.
  • She crossed back to hand and took another ruffing club finesse and now had enough tricks. Times, Sunday Times
  • The frantic guitar strum, filtered through a wah-wah pedal, is irresistible and carries this song with speed and finesse.
  • There's no finesse about this one. The Sun
  • All he needed was a political education; tutoring in the use of protocol, political finesse and style. THE HITLER-HESS DECEPTION
  • Some interpreters attempt to finesse the problem, claiming that it is irrelevant.
  • His skill and finesse in collecting and preparing specimens made this effort fruitful.
  • Perhaps your social skills lack finesse. The Sun
  • Tiger has tilted the playing field from one based on finesse and shotmaking to one in which power is paramount.
  • Although he had irked her so, she had to admit he handled her with such finesse that aroused her admiration.
  • Q for a ruffing finesse, planning to discard? Times, Sunday Times
  • It was a disappointing performance which lacked finesse.
  • Wheel and deal for new players and finesse tactics until the trophy cabinet groans. Times, Sunday Times
  • It takes a measure of artistic fortitude to lovingly depict the ordinary, and ample skill to finesse it into quietly seductive works of art.
  • It is a word that implies finesse and expertise, if not actual art, and it is a chilling unconscious effort to normalize and cosmeticize the awful and gross reality of real-world torture. Daniel Menaker: Boehner's blunder
  • If it loses you are going to need the club finesse and one ruff in the dummy. Times, Sunday Times
  • A finesse is an attempt to promote a card when the opponents have a higher card. Times, Sunday Times
  • His frantic attempts to finesse the withdrawal failed, and have been shown up as cynical attempts to gain political advantage for himself when he should have been trying to help the country instead.
  • And left another light on other cheek bright li’en: I fain finesse my chiders when they mention him, The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • The expanded orchestra, with added bass trumpet, contra bass trombone, special Wagner tubas and five harps which give this work its distinctive timbre, at turns scintillating and louring, played with admirable finesse.
  • Declarer won in hand and saw no alternative for his 13th trick to the heart finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • One face is very elegant and fine, close to Roman é e-Conti in finesse; the other side is more abrupt, monastic even. Searching for Perfection
  • It was a rare lapse for a banker who prides himself on his networking finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • This week's featured deal is not so much about avoiding a finesse altogether; rather about into which opponent to finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • You now need to cross to dummy to finesse? Times, Sunday Times
  • There's no finesse about this one. The Sun
  • You now need to cross to dummy to finesse? Times, Sunday Times
  • But skill and finesse and touch? Times, Sunday Times
  • I described as unrestraint tempered by finesse, her pretentious exaggerations as a natural desire to please; was it her fault that she was poor? The French Immortals Series — Complete
  • Declarer won in hand and saw no alternative for his 13th trick to the heart finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • a clumsy thing compared to the finesse of a neatly-turned French calembour. The Days Before Yesterday
  • With 12 top tricks, declarer hoped to set up a long club to avoid having to take the heart finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • With 12 top tricks, declarer hoped to set up a long club to avoid having to take the heart finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • All he needed was a political education; tutoring in the use of protocol, political finesse and style. THE HITLER-HESS DECEPTION
  • That way you'll have a little wiggle room to finesse each screw into its respective hole and get it threaded.
  • Lambie had moulded a side of experience and finesse and they were far more impressive than in recent weeks.
  • Their paintings have no hidden sides to them, no allegorical finesse.
  • Advocates were either unaware of the magnitude of possible complications or had their perception thereof narrowed and/or finessed by ideologically driven a priori beliefs, and so on.
  • Here, the favourable heart layout will see the finesse win. Times, Sunday Times
  • At home, it is true that he has usually been a risk-averse leader who would rather finesse a tough choice than make it.
  • We know now that, during his fifty years of virtual isolation, Darger had been constructing his own unique imaginary world, a world which he drew and described with mesmeric finesse.
  • Wheel and deal for new players and finesse tactics until the trophy cabinet groans. Times, Sunday Times
  • Yet when I went around the locker room asking Saints players why hearing the word finesse next to their team name upset them, it only seemed to ignite them. Sports News : CBSSports.com
  • The whole ballet is made with great finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • Can you see an alternative to the ruffing heart finesse? Times, Sunday Times
  • She lacked tact and the finesse it took to write something beautiful.
  • Fox promos try to finesse her beauty with the word "adorkable. NYT > Home Page
  • The drawings share some of the sculptures' rough and uncouth qualities: the line is generally neutral, even unmodulated, and acquires power through repetition rather than finesse.
  • 'niaiserie'; or almost infantine simplicity; but this only threw people the more off their guard, and made her finesse the more sure in its operation. The Memoirs of Napoleon
  • As a measure of character, also consider how he finessed the problem of appeasing tree-huggers while avoiding offence to countrymen whom the accords would have thrown out of work.
  • How about good, clean, hard-hitting hockey that displays skill, speed and finesse?
  • He sponged up meanings for finesse, rubber and dummy. Three-handed Bridge
  • Q for a ruffing finesse, planning to discard? Times, Sunday Times
  • The elegance of the juxtapositions, presented with utmost tact and finesse, allowed associations to seep into our minds almost unbidden.
  • They stalked their prey with the same skill and finesse with which many of them had hunted wild game before the war. THE HUNTING OF MAN
  • While we're on the subject, though, let's finesse a few points about cheating / extramarital crushes.
  • The finesse of his shaping of its bittersweet nostalgia collided with constant extreme changes of tempo and direction, making its emotional fragility palpable. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's crunch time - finesse or drop? Times, Sunday Times
  • Did I say that Crouch lacks finesse and refinement?
  • In Pauline this finesse was partially concealed by a languor and indecision of manner and an occasional assumption of 'niaiserie'; or almost infantine simplicity; but this only threw people the more off their guard, and made her finesse the more sure in its operation. Complete Project Gutenberg Collection of Memoirs of Napoleon
  • This dire, occasionally damnable predictability undermines the painterly finesse with which the film's director arranges his ravishing images.
  • Those heartfelt melodic lines and brilliant instrumental textures were born to be played with character and finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • A calm surface favors the finesse of a dogwalker, and a riffled surface suggests the increased commotion of a chugger or a slush-type plug rigged with propellers.
  • Receding hairlines and a casual composure on stage showed that this was a band with an obvious level of maturity demonstrated by their musicianship and vocal finesse.
  • AJ finesse position in case South held? Times, Sunday Times
  • No heavy-handed security asking the crowd to push back, make way - everything was handled with awesome expertise and finesse.
  • Cute dogs: Ford is fine at the start, as a shark, but once he becomes a saintly dumdum he loses his finesse and his subtlety. You Need This Movie Like . . . ..Mr.-
  • When is the earliest you can take a finesse? Times, Sunday Times
  • But it's a key to the flavor of his work that these share the unlabored look of the just-made pictures, which, in turn, have the intellectual complexity and material finesse of a long-term project.
  • The finesse with which he skewers the right wing morons of blogland is a joy to behold.
  • Whether it was the stinging backhand pass down the line, the finessed drop shot, or the intelligently placed first serves that arched in towards her opponent's midriff, her tactics and execution could hardly have been bettered.
  • Russian nationalism had grown in the 1930s, but had been handled with some finesse.
  • A finesse is an attempt to promote a card when the opponents have a higher card. Times, Sunday Times
  • Increasingly, our decision to buy is finessed, manipulated, and controlled by forces we are only dimly aware of. Lighten Up
  • According the Chinese culture ‘colourful clouds’ stand for auspiciousness, happiness, finesse and hope.
  • Obama is truly the great finesser: he has finessed his way through life. Be Like Bush
  • He should have spurned the finesse and settled for down three. Times, Sunday Times
  • Partly it was the delightful imagination and finesse of his tricks. Times, Sunday Times
  • None has been so determined to finesse the difficult realities of the post-cold war world.
  • He then led the king of clubs for a ruffing finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • To do its job, a test needs to be absolutely fair and rigorous, incapable of being finessed, and externally moderated.
  • She was peppy, bouncy, upbeat, and made up in energy and attack what she lacked in finesse.
  • In their campaigns, new political groups have replaced the term "secular government" with "civil government" to try to finesse the issue. Reuters: Top News
  • All he needed was a political education; tutoring in the use of protocol, political finesse and style. THE HITLER-HESS DECEPTION
  • She knew it was too heavy to swing with any great skill or finesse, but holding it ready brought her a greater sense of comfort.
  • She crossed back to hand and took another ruffing club finesse and now had enough tricks. Times, Sunday Times
  • Those harsh wartime experiences deeply affected her playing - reviewers noted it had lost its polish and finesse - and she resolved to regain it.
  • And there I stuck till "stables" sounded, watching the affable sergeant outgeneral his opponents, and noting with some amusement the sulky look that grew more intensified on the heavy face of Hicks (as they called the man who had favored me with that peculiar stare) when Goodell finessed him out of two or three generous-sized pots. Raw Gold A Novel
  • The stitchers display dazzling skill and finesse, creating textured surfaces of petit point, needlepoint, beading, embroidery, appliqué, smocking and macramé.
  • And young Michael was the center of attention: he handled virtually all the lead vocals, danced with energy and finesse, and displayed a degree of showmanship rare in a performer of any age.
  • Here, the favourable heart layout will see the finesse win. Times, Sunday Times
  • Gergiev, his players, and his stable of Kirov singers are often ragged but what they lack in finesse or sheer lyrical beauty they more than make up for with gusto. Archive 2006-10-01
  • finessed" in my last, your compositor has transformed into Nuts for Future Historians to Crack
  • Q for a ruffing finesse, planning to discard? Times, Sunday Times
  • He then led the king of clubs for a ruffing finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • The problem of the legitimately dependent can not be finessed or argued away.
  • But the Bulldogs' goal-line defence was equally as impressive as their finishing finesse.
  • With 12 top tricks, declarer hoped to set up a long club to avoid having to take the heart finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • But skill and finesse and touch? Times, Sunday Times
  • Keith Pitts's semicircular set subtly evokes the Oval Office from which Nixon retreated in disgrace, and Mike Tutaj's rear-wall projections transport the viewer from place to place with discreet finesse. This Stoppard Is a Second 'Scoop'
  • It reduces subtlety and finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • She crossed back to hand and took another ruffing club finesse and now had enough tricks. Times, Sunday Times
  • Watch dated film of players pre-Laver, and the game seems so effete, but he brought in power and the use of topspin with a supreme combination of force and finesse.
  • Declarer played with the odds to take the club finesse but missed an extra chance. Times, Sunday Times
  • That's the kind of remark that requires finesse, and only someone like Sy could have pulled it off without getting physically hurt.
  • It would be unwise for West to lead from either of his 3x suits (not knowing that partner has the aces), and West hopes to take a finesse in cups later.
  • He took one simple plot and finessed it in very different ways within the chapters and, particularly, between the two halves.
  • What is unique to the art is that one did not use brute strength to overpower an opponent, but rather skill, finesse and flexibility.
  • The firm was successful but better known for engineering expertise than design finesse.
  • No finesse, no gimmicks. Just raw speed and pure acceleration.
  • Thomas Dolie conveys the humor of Papageno the birdcatcher with high spirits and musical finesse. Howard Kissel: Peter Brook's "A Magic Flute"
  • A8 finesse position over East's ten. Times, Sunday Times
  • I want you to listen to what he told his team earlier this week, because he finessed a clearly, clearly dangerous situation.
  • All were surprised to find a police head constable in uniform playing the classic with such finesse.
  • Though he was competent with a pick and a torsion wrench, he had none of the Stork's finesse or training. THE KILL CLAUSE
  • Not much variation here, not much finesse, delicacy, lightness, or the Exotic other.
  • Yet that kind of balanced lending is something which bankers who operate without market signals have yet to show much finesse for without clear direction from above.
  • As for "manipulative finesse," I find it enjoyable only when the chiropractor is putting my back into place. Pop Culture
  • There were many times it seemed like Brees could spell the word finesse twice before anybody came close to him. Sports News : CBSSports.com
  • It was a rare lapse for a banker who prides himself on his networking finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • And, on what could have been a difficult night, the Bulls proved they have many lines of attack and that they have skill and finesse to add to their undoubted power.
  • You carry yourself with finesse and are relaxed in groups.
  • The situation will call for the exercise of an exceptional degree of diplomatic finesse.
  • A perfect example of this new breed of finesse jigs is DaleSellers 'Lil' Cootie Bug. Three Pro Bass Fishermen with 28 Ways to Catchfish
  • The tradition of Richelieu has today been inherited by a republican canaille that is wholly lacking the finesse of the ancien régime.
  • The light pastel lacquer and subtly spaced designs lacked the finesse of Venetian lacquer, but the rendering of flowers and birds was worthy of an easel painting.
  • Incredibly concentrated and intense palate with explosive power of ripe citrus fruit, rich texture structure and over riding seem of purity, length and finesse.
  • They stalked their prey with the same skill and finesse with which many of them had hunted wild game before the war. THE HUNTING OF MAN
  • Dishes like pheasant braised with apple puree and covered in a bitter chocolate sauce are presented with such finesse that it almost seems a shame to eat them.
  • He expected declarer to repeat the finesse and a cunning plan was beginning to form. Times, Sunday Times
  • At trick ten, declarer led his singleton club and finessed dummy 's ten. Times, Sunday Times
  • But as he almost indicates to Cameron Crowe, Sherlock Holmes was supposed to be a movie that traveled to the core of Wilder's sense of himself as a veteran finesser of the truth. Nobody's Perfect
  • The tip it illustrates is: when your contract depends on a finesse, think 'endplay'. Times, Sunday Times
  • Wheel and deal for new players and finesse tactics until the trophy cabinet groans. Times, Sunday Times
  • With 12 top tricks, declarer hoped to set up a long club to avoid having to take the heart finesse. Times, Sunday Times
  • The actors assimilate the cringe-worthy lines with great skill and finesse, so that the audience laughs rather than groans.
  • So, at trick one she finessed in clubs. Times, Sunday Times
  • Those harsh wartime experiences deeply affected her playing - reviewers noted it had lost its polish and finesse - and she resolved to regain it.
  • The official says NDP Leader Jack Layton asked Broadbent to call Chrétien with hopes the two elder statesmen might finesse a deal for the two parties to defeat the minority government and form a coalition with support from the Bloc CBC | Top Stories News
  • Partly it was the delightful imagination and finesse of his tricks. Times, Sunday Times
  • But the circle doesn't allow room for notes on some finesse elements for these prepartions, such as mixing method, how much salt, what kind of leavening, possible variations. A Whole Lotta Nothing
  • Furthermore, this characteristic wailing traditionally punctuated a ritual eulogizing, sometimes in rhyming form that required a fair degree of literary finesse. Gutenber-e Help Page
  • The plain fact is that he should have gone to Shanghai personally to finesse the deal with the car makers.
  • With a little finesse, almost anyone can manipulate the header information on e-mail to disguise its true origin.
  • A finesse is an attempt to win a trick with a card, when the opponents have a higher card. Times, Sunday Times
  • You next lead low to the nine to set up the finesse position against East. Times, Sunday Times
  • With extraordinary promotional finesse, Buffalo Bill's Wild West heightened anticipatory excitement by plastering its tour route with colorful posters announcing upcoming show dates.
  • My father carries on talking in this gentle voice, and with the wisdom of hindsight, I can see now that he has prepared for this carefully, and is handling the situation with great finesse and delicacy.
  • A finesse is an attempt to promote a card when the opponents have a higher card in that suit. Times, Sunday Times
  • Pure Chardonnay Champagnes from the best vineyards of Oger have great finesse and all the true aromatic characteristics of the Chardonnay grape.
  • Needless to say he was suave, had great finesse, and a quiet sense of style.
  • Mr. Echenoz employs a similar finesse to particularize moments that are conspicuously irrelevant or ridiculous. A Window Onto Comic Tedium
  • It's a unique and remarkably good way to finesse suspense - because of the show's strict adherence to the unity of time, it forecasts in which episode you can expect events to happen.
  • He can go head to head and throw intellectual punches, or deliver rapier wit with ironic finesse.
  • Does he really think he can finesse his way around this minefield of conservative pit bulls (sacrificing those who voted for him in the process), with this sweet talk of empty bipartisanism? Obama and "Pre-Emptive Capitulation" as a Modality of Democratic Governance
  • A8 finesse position over East's ten. Times, Sunday Times
  • They stalked their prey with the same skill and finesse with which many of them had hunted wild game before the war. THE HUNTING OF MAN
  • Take a deep breath and finesse the ten. Times, Sunday Times
  • She approaches an emotion with the finesse of someone beating a carpet.
  • Play is better, and the computer follows set lines - finesse, cross-ruffs, drawing of trumps and so on - with dogged competence.
  • It might as well have been a million miles away from Stark's Park, where a strong swirling wind wreaked havoc on any attempts at finesse, and regularly carried players' frustrated words into the stands.
  • Barack Obama "finessed" himself right off the wall recently as did the senior Senator from California, whose name eludes me at the moment. Communicating Liberalism
  • The Chairman finessed his way through the newspapermen's questions.
  • Only a few top players are able to finesse a victory in such a situation.
  • Q for a ruffing finesse, planning to discard? Times, Sunday Times

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