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How To Use Grotesquery In A Sentence

  • Now, whats-her-face is a cheap art exhibit of grotesquery. Media Moratorium: 3 Things I Don't Want to Hear About Anymore
  • Just the flat-out most bizarre -- though grotesquery is not neccesarily out of the question. Boing Boing: January 11, 2004 - January 17, 2004 Archives
  • He mimicked the dance with camp grotesquery. Indian Balm - Travels in the Southern Subcontinent
  • In the fleeting glimpse he caught of it, Smoke wondered if he had ever seen a Dore grotesquery to compare. THE RACE FOR NUMBER ONE
  • It's a magnificent, ridiculous song, equal parts grotesquery, sentiment and melodrama.
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  • In addition to the strong cast members mentioned above, standouts included Heather Engebretson as the Chinese daughter Li, bass Aubrey Allicock as the Grand Inquisitor, Karen Vuong as Zhou, a Red Guard, and Meredith Lustig, Laura Mixter and Rachael Wilson as the Andrews Sisters trio, who also operated dancing puppets, adding an additional layer of comic grotesquery to the moment. Young and Committed to Their Causes
  • I don't have time here to discuss this section right now, but you've already had some encounter with the incredibly impressive level of ingenuity and grotesquery in this remarkable passage.
  • To balance out the multiple deaths and brutality, we got a whimsical helping of grotesquery thanks to original scenes written specifically for the HBO series. Houses Collide: Game of Thrones Discussion — Tyrion's Brutality and Wait, Renly Is Gay?
  • For all her flash and grotesquery, she means to be a steadying force, not a revolutionary. Joe Vogel: Lady Gaga's "Born This Way" Falls Short of Predecessors, Hype
  • His works, full of realism, irony, tragedy and grotesquery, represent the complex, colorful and dramatic life of the contemporary Russians.
  • Also, in his depiction of zombies as humans devoid of intellect who now only pursue their relentless, unquenchable hunger, I think Romero presents again an image right out of Dante's Inferno - not just for the grotesquery, but for the idea of sin as mindless repetition and desire. Tom Morris: Interview with a Philosopher: Zombies Are People, Too

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