extravagance造句(61) In any case, all his works deal with the extravagance and excessiveness of the artist in search of his image.
(62) It's the last extravagance we'll be able to indulge in this year.
(63) Despondence, which is manifested in the disordered and disrupted rim vestured by darkness, sets off and contradicts to the extravagance behind it.
(64) In this way, people will naturally dismiss egoism, desires for material wealth, extravagance and wastage.
(65) Extravagance and overindulgence are not a cure if you're feeling sorry for yourself.
(66) Economy the poor man's mints; extravagance the rich man's pitfall ─ Martin Farquhar Tupper.
(67) He had bold flights . He had humour . He had extravagance.
(68) And all of this talk of extravagance ignores Abramovich's unparalleled fleet of yachts, some of which typically winter in the harbor not far from his oceanfront estate.
(69) His income allows of no extravagance in his way of living.
(70) Emperor of Rome (37-4) who succeeded his adoptive father, Tiberius. After a severe illness, he displayed the ruthlessness, extravagance, and megalomania that led to his assassination.
(71) Michael Todd, her third husband, gave her a Cartier set of rubies and diamonds and a $25, 000 tiara, trinkets for the life of Hollywood extravagance to which he had introduced her.
(72) Lavishment , ostentation and extravagance, banquet, all these are to fulfill personal selfish desire, power and battle.
(73) Something in her responded to his extravagance and his exuberant manner.
(74) But bloating, laxity, conceit, extravagance and inertia are to be found in certain degrees.
(75) Although the stars and the paparazzi went through the usual red-carpet routine, there was less extravagance and a smaller contingent of film-buyers than usual.
(76) Sponging and taking more than one's share and extravagance and waste on the part of cadres must be banned.
(77) The American people with one consent gave themselves to an amazing extravagance of land speculation.
(78) She never came without reporting some fresh instance of Wickham's extravagance or irregularity.
(79) Extravagance began to be in vogue, traditional moral ideas collapsed little by little.