| 41. | Harris appears to be having a good time as the foppish, naive, and, ultimately, duplicitous King Charles.
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| 42. | But on the witness stand Wednesday, he wore clothes more befitting a carpenter on the job than a foppish union boss.
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| 43. | "And yet he almost makes us look ridiculous, " one of the film's foppish characters observes.
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| 44. | There's Oscar Wilde the world-renowned wit and elegantly foppish, self-impressed man-about-London.
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| 45. | In a garden, a young woman walks her exotic pet dog, pretending not to notice the foppish samurai warrior nearby.
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| 46. | Something about Mike Myers'foppish caricature of swinging London has struck a chord, particularly in the new-media community.
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| 47. | Colm O'Neill ( Barry McEvoy, who also wrote the script ) is a cheerful, slightly foppish young Catholic.
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| 48. | A 1939 version starred Louis Hayward in the dual role of the foppish, arrogant Louis and the dashing and just Philippe.
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| 49. | I don't disagree with the foppish though .-- Ballchef 15 : 27, 24 September 2005 ( UTC)
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| 50. | He begins with a studied, nasal, almost foppish delivery and ends as if he's out for Claudius'blood.
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