"If it seeks to discredit, in the eyes of the world, Rio's carnival _ that can be so beautiful _ through one or another indecorous or unacceptable scene, then justice should intervene for the common good,"
42.
Until you said what ( you think ) it means I guessed it was " foul indecorous ", which might well describe conduct that you pledge to abhor . & mdash; Tamfang 07 : 40, 15 May 2007 ( UTC)
43.
In their view the pared down and contracted manner of the work is due to a desire to " stress the solemnity of the event and its miraculous nature, van der Goes may have decided that material richness would be distracting and indecorous ."
44.
After a summer of indecorous squabbling among his supposed political allies, Chancellor Helmut Kohl of Germany was offered little comfort Tuesday from statistics showing unemployment at record levels, inflation increasing and evidence that eastern Germany is falling further behind the west in economic growth.
45.
Gingrich's edict banning indecorous references to Clinton on the House floor remained in effect, but one Republican lawmaker used a variation of the fable of the emperor's new clothes to make his point without once mentioning the president's name.
46.
The pope has categorized these forays into the forbidden as " unheard of, most indecorous, and highly preposterous, " adding that " these Abbesses had evidently overrated theor spiritual powers a trifle . " The Roman Catholic Church has around 200 abbesses at present.
47.
In 1991, he was fined $ 25, 000 by the NASD and suspended from the brokerage industry for 30 days . The next year, the NASD penalized him for " indecorous and abusive language " and violating a SOES trading rule 690 times.
48.
Early editions of the " Oxford Companion to Music " defined the cancan as " A boisterous and latterly indecorous dance of the quadrille order, exploited in Paris for the benefit of such British and American tourists as will pay well to be well shocked.
49.
Critics disparaged the indecorous range of Shakespeare's language, with Polonius's fondness for puns and Hamlet's use of " mean " ( i . e ., low ) expressions such as " there's the rub " receiving particular attention.
50.
Although the Pentecostal preacher who had immersed Wang tried to have him speak in tongues, Wang balked at making repetitive nonsense sounds, and he was repelled by the " indecorous behavior of some Pentecostals who'danced, clapped, and shouted wildly'during revival meetings ."