He was a Roman Catholic . [ . . . ] He was a great economist, but would spend money as genteelly as any man occasionally.
12.
Sydney's outspoken Anglican archbishop warned Monday that the church in Australia could " fade genteelly away " if it does not open its arms to new immigrants.
13.
For centuries, women who traveled ( rather than genteelly " toured " ) were considered " eccentric, self-deluded and utterly dotty ."
14.
Gomes, gowned in cherry red, told more than 1, 000 seniors in genteelly ringing tones that called to mind a cross between a Shakespearean actor and the sitcom character Frasier.
15.
Even when it's accessible, riding it at rush hour sentences straphangers to levels of overcrowding that the Regional Plan Association describes genteelly as " elbow to rib ."
16.
Operating in New York City in the late 1840s, a genteelly-dressed Thompson would approach an upper-class mark, pretending they knew each other, and begin a brief conversation.
17.
On the other hand, performing a favor or acting genteelly before the high ranking characters of the game might result in promotion via social interaction without having to " level "-up.
18.
So far, with the red brick, worn carpets and genteelly peeling paint, the weekend was more an echo of the New England colleges we had attended than a New Age renewal experience.
19.
What follows is a series of genteelly choreographed encounters _ some of them knock down and drag out _ between husband and wife, wife and mother-in-law, mother and son.
20.
In " Sense and Sensibility, " based on her first ( 1811 ) novel, the genteelly impoverished Dashwood sisters, Elinor ( Emma Thompson ) and Marianne ( Kate Winslet ) are opposites.