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oddish

ADJECTIVE
  1. somewhat strange

How To Use oddish In A Sentence

  • Jeppesen's Fru Von Everdingen, the rich widow who falls for the cloddish brother in Kermesse, was beautiful and stuck-up, but also vulnerable.
  • David Berkowitz, in contrast, went right for the red devil, not just unpredictable but purely mad, a quiet, cloddish man wandering the night streets like a monster. Grand Fury
  • These cloddish white appropriations of hip-hop, drum ā€˜nā€™ bass and dancehall are dis-spiritingly, missing-the-point funkless and morosely male.
  • In addition, we get the fiery, lovable Irish minister, some cloddish humor, and an ending that tries too hard.
  • Edgar spares us the spectacle of a make-believe Lamour, it's studded with other vignettes and dubious representations of historical figures: a charm-free Ginger Rogers, a blank-slate Charles Lindbergh, a cloddish Robert F. Kennedy and an appallingly crude approximation of Richard Nixon. 'J. Edgar': Hoover's Life, in a Dramatic Vacuum
  • Most of the minor characters are well played, except for the crucial Miller, whom the cloddish Olek Krupa flubs.
  • Crude, uncalled for: but Kershaw knew when not to rise to his Sergeant's cloddish humours. PASSION IN THE PEAK
  • Sometimes her balancing is cloddish (as deliciously cheesy as it is, her snap 'n b spin on Foreigner's "I Want To Know What Love Is" feels like a forced union of Old Mariah and New Mariah), and sometimes it's acrobatic. Fourfour:
  • Do not have inurbane conversation with the person that challenges you to work, no matter the other side has how cloddish, how is utterance had provoke a gender.
  • How could anyone fail to conclude that compared with Riemenschneider, Rodin is a cloddish show-off?
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