How To Use Unexpressive In A Sentence
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International judges, while impressed by his quads and other athletic moves, found him too stiff and unexpressive.
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His pointy, simpery, unexpressive features look like a cross between those of an 11-year-old boy and a death mask.
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It was an oddly unexpressive face, and although the man had met his eyes as they shook hands, his own had given nothing away.
DEATH SPEAKS SOFTLY
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Hey, husband, my boss is a silent, unexpressive block of concrete, and you are almost as bad.
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He is shy and unexpressive and is often bullied at school.
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The other looks like the plaything of a singularly unexpressive individual, a billionaire from nowhere near London.
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Frequently, the tone of their speech is flat and unexpressive.
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A week after she began treatment, my client called me, her voice no longer an unexpressive monotone, to tell me that 'the cloud had moved away'.
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Like Greta Van Suseren, the lips are so tight and unexpressive trying to read them is like lipreading a Clutch Cargo cartoon.
"As was the case with Chavez's tendentious present, Ortega's speech was intended as a slap."
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Emotionally expressive individuals are perceived as more visible, more attractive, and more likeable than unexpressive individuals.
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This is a guy whose appeal is that he's an everyman, a standard-issue schmoe, and his voice is flat and unexpressive.
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Frequently, the tone of their speech is flat and unexpressive.
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My guess is that someone might conclude she's oddly unexpressive and a little strange - but likeable.
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Saddling their story with such an unexpressive director is just plain mean.
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She has often interpreted the unexpressive and disinterested look on my face to mean I don't care about her - when that is not true.
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He is a guy whose appeal is that he's an everyman, a standard-issue schmo, and his voice is flat and unexpressive.
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& odq; I had noticed that she was much changed, & cdq; Mr. Wentworth declared, in a tone whose unexpressive, unimpassioned quality appeared to Felix to reveal a profundity of opposition. & odq; It may be that she is only becoming what you call a charming woman. &cdq;
The Europeans