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How To Use Inartistic In A Sentence

  • Old portraits and any kind of inartistic picture or print were brought forth to gratify the eye unaccustomed to such monotony. Social life in old New Orleans : being recollections of my girlhood,
  • They are unintellectual and inartistic: hobbits, in a word - no wonder The Lord of the Rings is said to be their favourite novel.
  • His literary style was influenced by that of Isocrates, but he is a much less careful writer, being often negligent in the matter of hiatus, and inartistic in the composition of his sentences.
  • The document of the 21st May 1930 cannot be regarded as other than inartistic, and may appear repellent to the trained sense of an equity draftsman.
  • As the era's most vocal horticulturist, Robinson decried one of the favourite tricks of architects, the clipping and aligning of trees, as ‘barbarous, needless, and inartistic.’
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  • What is remarkable, by contrast, is how unsympathetic and inartistic his spouse and offspring appear to be.
  • Why are other magazines so successful in filling up their copies with lucrative advertising and this one only attracts a few inelegant, inartistic, advertisers?
  • In fact, for him to die elsewhere would be inartistic and insincere. The Gold Hunters of the North
  • These are not illegitimate pressures, even if they may seem inartistic, in a business that has never offered itself as simply an art.
  • Whatever their source, there was, either in the composition itself or in his mode of playing, not a little of the inartistic, that is, the lawless. Mary Marston
  • The balopticon the projector he used to project his photos onto his canvas that he would then trace is an evil, inartistic, habit-forming, lazy and vicious machine! Wray Gunn
  • Apart from the occasional strimming and on some of the roundabouts, an economical and inartistic planting of annuals, no signs of care are evident.
  • It's not that his life was barren, nor was he uncreative, blank, and inartistic.
  • She was painfully inartistic, as Mr. Hofstram was happy to constantly point out to her. Slice Of Cherry
  • Timon changes from benevolence to sour misanthropy with a many inartistic abruptness, many readers feel. Archive 2009-11-01
  • He announced the next song they were going to be playing, and it was another one of those typical, inartistic songs where this guy was in love with this girl who was in love with someone else who was - well, you get the idea.
  • It is impossible to entirely acquit this otherwise excellent conductor of the charge of an undue and very inartistic exaggeration for the sake of effect.
  • But it was not quite time for that yet: it would be inartistic to suggest that just a couple of weeks of hatlessness had produced so desirable a result. Queen Lucia
  • Advertising takes art's ‘human expression’ and exposes it to a mass audience and spins in the sometimes harsh and inartistic intent of increasing product sales,’ said Coleman.
  • The gruff man had pointed to the back of the store, past the mostly empty shelves, behind the dilapidated and rusted freezer that didn't work, and next to the storage room roughly marked ‘STOOREAGE’ in an inartistic graffiti style.
  • Riegl was thus enabled to explore and validate the esthetic structures of periods and kinds of art which were not supposed to have any - which were dismissed as ‘decadent’ or simply as inartistic.
  • For all their "Kultur" Germans are gross, and to the last degree inartistic. A War-time Journal, Germany 1914 and German Travel Notes
  • Every personal soul, however "inartistic," is an artist in this sense; and every personal life thus considered is an effective or ineffective "work of art. The Complex Vision
  • His best stories, essays, and poems went begging among them, and yet, each month, he read reams of dull, prosy, inartistic stuff between all their various covers. Chapter 28
  • Whether they ought to be called inartistic or not, we will leave time to decide, if it has not done so already; the Russian and other Slavonic composers, who are now coming more and more to the front, seem to be little in doubt as to their legitimacy. Frederic Chopin as a Man and Musician
  • Now that the poles, to carry the overhead wires for the distribution of electrical current, have been erected, the streets of the town are a forest of poles - and inartistic poles at that.
  • Emphasis in gesture is just as inartistic – and therefore ineffective – as emphasis in tone or language. The Art of the Story-Teller

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