For example, having experienced the obvious success of the chain-driven bicycle for decades, it is tempting to attribute its success to its " advanced technology " compared to the " primitiveness " of the Safety Bicycle.
32.
Concurrently, the mainland Chinese economic reform changed the connotation of " mainland China " to one of " primitiveness, nativeness, and raw cultural material for economic gain ", as well as condescention because of Taiwan's comparatively advanced economy.
33.
Early biologists used the concept of " age " or " primitiveness " of the groups in question to derive an order of arrangement, with " older " or more " primitive " groups being listed first and more recent or " advanced " ones last.
34.
In the opening notes to the program for her solo exhibition at the Butler Institute of American Art in October 1966, Charles Burchfield described Burchfield's watercolors as having " an unspoiled, innocent freshness about them; lyrical in character, with also a tinge of primitiveness.
35.
The missionaries and orientalist scholars attempted to justify the need for colonial rule of India by attacking " Murti " as a symbol of depravity and primitiveness, arguing that it was, states Tanisha Ramachandran, " the White Man's Burden to create a moral society " in India.
36.
Get a wide range of sounds that are supposedly pleasing because of their primitiveness and find out whether people from a diverse cross section of human societies find the sounds to be pleasing ( and it would be best if you would include a hunter-gather society in the mix for an accurate sampling ).
37.
Its primitiveness is suggested by the retained paraconids on the lower molars . " Eomorphippus ", a Mustersan notohippid, was moderately hypsodont, Deseadan genera such as " Thynchippus " and " Eurygenium " were very high-crowned, and Santacrucian genera had acquired cementum on the crowns similar to equids.
38.
Much of the poetry also demonstrates the influence of oral forms of poetry, especially in range and density of images and the address of the voice to an implied audience, which follows from Mapanje's endorsement of the sophistication of the oral mode of literature against the presumption, prevalent in the early 1970s, of its primitiveness.
39.
Grudging respect began to emanate from the international press : towards the end of 1951 the opinion appeared in Germany's recently launched " Auto, Motor und Sport " magazine that, despite its " ugliness and primitiveness " " ( " H��lichkeit und Primitivit�t " ) ", the 2CV was a " highly interesting " " ( " hochinteressantes " ) " car.
40.
After becoming a very popular in the times of " �pera flamenca ", his singing was later disparaged by many artists and flamencologists of the " �poca de revalorizaci�n " ( the period of revival of flamenco orthodoxy from the 1950s to the 1970s ), which considered that the primitiveness of Gypsy singing was more orthodox and pure than the virtuosity and mellowness characteristic of Marchena and other singers of the �pera flamenca: