| 31. | What the book does not lack is derisive descriptions of other public figures.
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| 32. | Watermelon, if it's possible, gets even more derisive treatment.
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| 33. | First-name familiarity has its derisive uses, too, of course.
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| 34. | The movie dares you to feel a derisive superiority.
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| 35. | A friend from Virginia called them tulip magnolias, with a derisive sniff.
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| 36. | Or will it be with derisive cheering, as they did with Irvin?
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| 37. | He often asks derisive, confusing or repetitive questions.
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| 38. | The screening audience greeted some of the lines with hoots of derisive laughter.
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| 39. | This earned it the derisive nickname of " Cornacchia di Esopo"
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| 40. | As a result, he earned the derisive nickname " Jon Contract ".
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