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After a long time, he pulled back and, rather unromantically, checked his watch.
"A wedding," she unromantically observed, "is the only time you collect."
After all, their marriage is described as unromantically routinized.
"I wanted to present the Service unromantically as a way of life, men going daily to their office to earn their pensions."
Morgan finds her and again proposes marriage unromantically.
Often unromantically sited in the big toe, gout is gross, not refined.
'We needed the money,' he said rather unromantically.
Nelly lives unromantically with her out-of-work husband, taking dull and arduous jobs to make ends meet.
Nurse Hopkins said unromantically, "You've got to be as strong as a horse, remember!"
The decision was unromantically commercial.
I have a most unromantically bruised stomach!'
Equally confused, Rose turns towards the camera and unromantically says: "Oh b*llocks!"
Sid unromantically proffered the opinion that Uncle Tom had died of fright.
'We're loused out with nightingales this year,' said the Warden, unromantically.
What we unromantically grapple with, it seems, is our solitary selves, and love, far from being the condition of self-fulfillment, may be its great saboteur.
'Poor security' she said unromantically.
Hudson had discovered the plateau and unromantically christened it "Landing Site Alpha."
"It's not a cello," Mr. Viñoly, the architect, said unromantically.
At first they look awkward and unromantically vulnerable, then substantial and resilient, then admirable - valorous, even.
Mr. Knapp's techniques are unromantically prosaic.
My misgivings about bunking in this unromantically familiar billet increased exponentially when I learned that a room cost $300 a day, demi-pension.
The truth is, Beth and Cesare are both rather unromantically squeamish about sacrificing what they have for what they want.
The self-satisfied Leander is unromantically perceived as Dis, god of the Underworld, greedily contemplating his gold.
Because such unions don't produce children.... To put it as unromantically as possible, people who have children should be stuck with each other, sharing the responsibility.
Mr. Hall does not mention any intended ironic parallel with the romantic attitudes young Oxfordians were carrying to the trenches that unromantically butchered them.