For Clinton, the decision to negotiate his book contract privately with Knopf avoids the publicity and rigmarole of a formal auction.
32.
Normally, there would have been a drawn-out rigmarole to go through before I was allowed out of the house.
33.
As far as I can tell from the legal rigmarole filed in court, the school board also is suing its own school district.
34.
For example, the more organizational rigmarole involved in adjusting to changing conditions, the more employees will delay in reporting the changing conditions.
35.
:I assume by " non-competitive " you mean that you do not want to go through the grant-writing rigmarole?
36.
Still, and sorry about the truism, no matter what rigmarole is in place the best hedge against bad pork is good elected officials.
37.
"He's just been chugging along at his own pace and not gotten too involved in the rigmarole of fashion ."
38.
He felt that Lessing presents Alice as " an unquestioned rigmarole of reactions and prejudices ", which leaves no room for any further interest.
39.
"Good Sam has made a big difference for us, because we don't have to go through a big rigmarole,"
40.
Rigamarole, which added a syllable to the 1736 rigmarole, means " incoherent harangue; a lengthy, meaningless procedure or tale ."