native wit造句
例句与造句
- People solved crimes through native wit and their perceptions about the workings of emotions.
- The girl had spirit, and native wit.
- His extremely well stored mind and ever-flowing native wit make conversation with him a perpetual delight.
- Sample has described Perham as a " seriously funny guy with a professionally honed native wit, which inevitably leaves his audiences weak from laughter ."
- By now I had expected my native wit and charm to thaw my father-in-law's heart and weaken his resolve not to acknowledge me as his married kin.
- It's difficult to find native wit in a sentence. 用native wit造句挺难的
- Though Karag鰖 always outdoes Hacivat s superior education with his native wit, he is also very impulsive and his never-ending deluge of get-rich-quick schemes always results in failure.
- There is also the suggestion that the educated bishop ( or abbot ) is not as wise as the uneducated brother ( or shepherd )-implying there is a " native wit " that is more valuable than school-book wisdom.
- The phrase was defined by E . Cobham Brewer in the 1894 edition of his Dictionary of Phrase and Fable as : " Native wit, a ready reply; the wit which ` our mother gave us .'In ancient authors . . . courteous but not profound ."
- The sentiments may have been obvious, but the treatment was fresh and amusing, the style uniquely his, with a humour and native wit, often barbed but never lethal, an observation of human nature that was shrewd and true, and a gift for rhythm and rhyme that made it all sound so natural .
- :" Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable " defines " mother-wit " as " Native wit, a ready reply; the wit which our mother gave us . In ancient authors the term is used to express a ready reply, courteous but not profound . " Shakespeare used the expression in " The Taming of the Shrew "; after much banter between Petruchio and Kate, she asks him " " Where did you study all this goodly speech ? ""
- To this prince Ormisda, who was standing near him, and whose departure from Persia I have described above, replied with native wit : " First, Sire, " said he, " command a like stable to be built, if you can; let the steed which you propose to create range as widely as this which we see . " When Ormisda was asked directly what he thought of Rome, he said that he took comfort in this fact alone, that he had learned that even there men were mortal.