How To Use Persiflage In A Sentence
-
'persiflage'; for silent gesticulations, which you would be most inclined to, would not be sufficient: something must be said, but that something, when analyzed, must amount to nothing.
Complete Project Gutenberg Earl of Chesterfield Works
-
These are the sort of longings lying semidormant in the heart of a man busy in the stratagems and persiflage of the art market.
Alan Hollinghurst On Michael Cunningham: The New York Review Of Books
-
The valve that kept us free of metaphysical persiflage, kept us sane and focused on what was really important in life.
DEAD LINES
-
Jeering at the White Logic, I go out to join my guests at table, and with assumed seriousness to discuss the current magazines and the silly doings of the world's day, whipping every trick and ruse of controversy through all the paces of paradox and persiflage.
Chapter 37
-
All clearly intended to be repellent, and, sadly, achieving its aim, in what seemed -- as it was meant to be -- an endless barrage of persiflage, bad poetry, and egotism, in which I, like the character played with immaculate restraint by David Hyde Pierce, cringed and prayed for flight.
Gwen Davis: La Bete
-
It is a note of ironic persiflage which is plainly indicated to the reader.
The Youth of Goethe
-
These two words connote at once a corporeal indwelling of the Divine (a Divine madness which is necessary for the making of sagacious, artistic utterance), and an empty, arrogant persiflage (as in being puffed up, or ‘blowing hot air’).
-
He was not one to mince matters, nor did he wrap up inconvenient topics in persiflage.
-
Fabulous diction, excellent vocabulary, I'm inspired to add "propitious" and "persiflage" into my daily rhetoric.
Easter Away!
-
When they look at academic discourse they see only persiflage: fancy words, convoluted syntax, and the pretentious invocation of authority.
-
He was clearly out-of-place, the only one in a tie, and as monosyllabic as a teenager during most of the persiflage.
-
According to etiquette, he should never have addressed her but in a vein of persiflage, and with a smile which indicated his perfect heartease and her bad taste.
The Young Duke
-
I could neither laugh with nor at the solemn utterances of men I esteemed ponderous asses; nor could I laugh, nor engage in my old-time lightsome persiflage, with the silly superficial chatterings of women, who, underneath all their silliness and softness, were as primitive, direct, and deadly in their pursuit of biological destiny as the monkeys women were before they shed their furry coats and replaced them with the furs of other animals.
Chapter 29
-
Valere is meant to be a street player lifted to societal acclaim by a deluded royal Joanna Lumley, who mistakes his endless persiflage for true poetry, and makes him the writer de jour, entertained and adored by high society.
Gwen Davis: La Bete
-
One hopes there will always be a "persiflage" like that of
Suspended Judgments Essays on Books and Sensations
-
I asked her if she really thought dangerous papist ideas were kneaded in with the bread, but she would not listen to my mild "persiflage," and went away rather anxious about my spiritual welfare.
Chateau and Country Life in France
-
I could neither laugh with nor at the solemn utterances of men I esteemed ponderous asses; nor could I laugh, nor engage in my old-time lightsome persiflage, with the silly superficial chatterings of women, who, underneath all their silliness and softness, were as primitive, direct, and deadly in their pursuit of biological destiny as the monkeys women were before they shed their furry coats and replaced them with the furs of other animals.
Chapter 29
-
Jeanie knew that there was a kind of persiflage – though she did not know the word nor yet what it meant – in which marriage was spoken of as bondage, and it was said of a man that he was going up for execution on his marriage-day.
Kirsteen: The Story of a Scotch Family Seventy Years Ago
-
Its all ephemera and persiflage, as we sit mocking in the plumes as political gadflies who tell the truth.