Bits with a " hot nun " who flirts salaciously with her interrogators tonight and potential cannibalism in a future episode are all set up with not enough follow-through.
12.
A grown woman, one who should have been thinking more about soccer game schedules than Nichols'level of attractiveness, salaciously described him as " easy on the eyes ."
13.
The curtains parted, the trumpets trumpeted, and if what ensued was not sin made cinematic, it was deliciously, salaciously Southern, a white-trash Bacchanalia with a leitmotif of utter destitution.
14.
For example, the House impeachment prosecutors talk high-mindedly and long-windedly about the Constitution, just to get President Clinton by any means, constitutional or not, but salaciously if possible.
15.
Yes, the man who created the colorful, outrageous spectacle of can-can girls gyrating salaciously to a disco beat in " Moulin Rouge, " which reaped eight Oscar nominations, is trying to keep his wits about him in the hubbub.
16.
On the Incidents board . . . to try and get the situation looked at, after Leyasu's ban ended, he returned, salaciously attacking me personally on the incidents board, creating defamatory lies . . which had absolutely no relevance to the situation at hand.
17.
Turkish atrocities were to remain a recurrent theme in 19th-century painting, especially in former Ottoman territories escaped from the declining empire ( often pre-rape scenes treated rather salaciously ), and general anti-military sentiments, previously mostly found in prints, were also to emerge regularly in large oil paintings.
18.
The only things required to create this work's seamy world are a couple of ladders, some black chairs ( salaciously used by the female chorus in the ways Fosse made famous in the film of " Cabaret " ), Ken Billington's moody lighting and performers who know how to strut their stuff.
19.
Huntley remarked that Jigsaw's voice recordings operated for a specific purpose as part of Jigsaw's M . O . Huntley stated that it allowed Jigsaw to be present there not as " a participant or even a spectator but instead as a referee, observing the rules pertinent to that particular subject rather than salaciously enjoying the'victim's agony'."