Word: sarcasm
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Churchill once more pointed out that North Africa was Mr. Roosevelt's enterprise. With fine Churchillian sarcasm, he said: "It is indeed remarkable that the Germans should have shown themselves ready to run the risk and pay the price required of them by their struggle to hold the Tunisian tip. While I have always hesitated to say anything which might afterwards look like overconfidence, I cannot resist the remark that one seems to discern in this policy the touch of a master hand, the same master hand that planned the attack on Stalingrad...
...Party. There was truth in this sarcasm. Some of the Labor Party's leaders were deeply suspicious of an intellectual who had no respect for Party discipline. But they were eager to retain one of the most brilliant legal minds in England. They made Cripps a member of Labor's Executive Committee-following the age-old British rule that "when a man is a nuisance the best way to make him behave properly is to burden him with responsibility." It was no go. When Cripps disagreed with his fellows over an issue of principle he simply resigned from...
...sarcasm did not bite. But many a plain citizen re-echoed General Marshall's grim comment that the Senate was giving Hitler a welcome, whistle-blown "time...
...first day at his desk (TIME, Oct. 12), when the shock of returning from the open spaces to bureau-cramped Washington led the President to lash at Congress, the press and his own officials. Only for the press and radio did he reserve a few lingering words of sarcasm: "I can say one thing about our [military] plans: they are not being decided by the typewriter strategists. . . ." He served notice that his future trips would be veiled in the same censorship which the press had objected to in this...
...behind the scenes, Hedgerow spoke its lines from the center of the stage. To influential citizens all over the country went letters asking for testimonials to help "change the minds" of draft officials. No replies were announced, but the Philadelphia papers last week loosed on Hedgerow a flood of sarcasm and censure for getting too big for its Army boots...