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"Listen, not everyone is an entrepreneur," she answered allusively.
Two German performances proved similarly secretive but more allusively mysterious.
Both types of stories confront (allusively or directly) the realities and contradictions of Israeli life.
He spoke allusively, hoping his sister would not gather the full impact, but she understood enough "Is he in danger of prison'?
Later I felt as though Poe was watching me allusively from his photograph on his headstone."
Characters talk elliptically and allusively.
Gandalf's name is occasionally used allusively to indicate a wise mentor or wizard-like advisor.
All of this is presented in an allusively freewheeling first-person narrative that provides exhilarating evidence of an impressive intelligence at work and play.
The Independent allusively brings the subject full circle, because of the swastikas, studs and chains that appear in some of Mapplethorpe's portraits.
He began to produce his knowledge of the world for her benefit, jerkily and allusively, and with a strong, rank flavor of "savoir faire."
The incorrect blazon is usually used anyway, to preserve the reference to the thirteen original colonies, and this form is occasionally imitated allusively.)
"The Americans" sealed his reputation and influence for three reasons: It is a subtly, poetically, allusively sequenced work that adds up to much more than its parts.
But it knew what it was doing, because the Luxembourg Council, on 13 December, has just welcomed, again allusively, a proposal, which has just been made.
The phrase English as she is spoke is nowadays used allusively, in a form of linguistic play, as a stereotypical example of bad English grammar.
The term is also used allusively, for a person who gives advice and instructions about what he or she is not responsible for, and may not well understand.
Dame Edith Sitwell referred to her allusively in "Hornpipe", a poem in the satirical collection "Façade".
However, Cernat believes, Baconsky, like his fellow disillusioned communist Paler, refused to record his disappointment in writing other than allusively.
Later in his career, the human figure would appear again, if only allusively, in the many views of Paris that he quickly sketched out in paint on small wood panels.
In a tentative way information was supplied; she spoke allusively of her school, of her examination successes, of her gladness that the days of "Cram" were over.
The entry for "Mintie" in a major Australian dictionary defines the phrase as "... widely current ... used allusively as an emblem of solace".
But actually, not everything has failed: what ultimately saves the day (I say this allusively, avoiding spoilers) is venerable consumer-grade technology of the sort that helps thousands of civilians daily.
They were named allusively by the United Kingdom Antarctic Place-Names Committee (UK-APC) in 1987.
Writing for the radio, he has indicated a new power for poetry in the use of the word in action, without props or settings, the allusively spoken word and the "word-excited imagination."
In this film, he had the audacity to show, albeit allusively, the 1989 Tiananmen massacre (as well as its emotional fallout); as a result, the Chinese government banned him from making films for five years.
"Berryman's Sonnets" - here retitled "Sonnets to Chris" (1947 and 1966) - consists of 117 Petrarchan sonnets that allusively document the turbulent history of an adulterous affair.