obsequiousness
IPA: ʌbsˈikwiʌsnʌs
noun
- The quality of being obsequious; servile compliance.
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Examples of "obsequiousness" in Sentences
- My approach to the City is not one of hostility, or of obsequiousness.
- Great player that he is, the obsequiousness towards Tendulkar can grate.
- And—being human—we responded in kind, seeking out dogs for their obsequiousness and unconditional devotion.
- This hagiographical obsequiousness suggests that we are to be conducted through a treasury of sacred relics.
- Public support can urge Republicans to repel policy and political risks of inaction and obsequiousness to Tea Party agendas.
- Finally, Noam Chomsky gives his take on Obama's pro-Israel hawk appointments and his unprecedented "obsequiousness" to AIPAC.
- He says the last Labour government "made mistakes", but it wasn't mistakes it made by adopting its ideological obsequiousness to big business.
- Didas 'instructions were for the time being to insinuate himself by every kind of obsequiousness into Demetrius' confidence and intimacy so as to be able to draw out all his secrets and ascertain his hidden sentiments.
- He explains that "it is sometimes difficult for the reader less obsessed with [Hartman's] texts than the author is even to derive a clear sense of what Hartman was talking about," and he proceeds to worry that an essay caught between "obsequiousness" and "assault" against one's teacher "begins to suggest unpleasant things about life in graduate school."
- Here’s how brazen Mr. Rumsfeld was when he invoked Hitler’s appeasers to score his cheap points: Since Hitler was photographed warmly shaking Neville Chamberlain’s hand at Munich in 1938, the only image that comes close to matching it in epochal obsequiousness is the December 1983 photograph of Mr. Rumsfeld himself in Baghdad, warmly shaking the hand of Saddam Hussein in full fascist regalia.
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