i like his impudence!

  • 81brass — /bras / (say brahs) noun 1. a durable, malleable, and ductile yellow alloy, consisting essentially of copper and zinc. 2. a utensil, ornament, or other article made of brass. 3. Machinery a bearing, bush, or the like. 4. the group of musical… …

  • 82MIRACLES — SECTION PREMIÈRE.     Un miracle, selon l énergie du mot, est une chose admirable; en ce cas, tout est miracle. L ordre prodigieux de la nature, la rotation de cent millions de globes autour d un million de soleils, l activité de la lumière, la… …

    Dictionnaire philosophique de Voltaire

  • 83infinite — infinite, eternal, sempiternal, boundless, illimitable, uncircumscribed mean having neither beginning nor end or being without known limits. Infinite especially as applied to God or his attributes implies immeasurability or an incapacity for… …

    New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • 84rat —    In modern times this is nearly always a term of contempt, though ‘you rat’, like most insults, can be turned into a covert endearment in the right circumstances. When a woman calls her lover ‘Rat!’ in The Philanderer, by Stanley Kauffmann, it… …

    A dictionary of epithets and terms of address

  • 85Amelia Bingham — Amelia Swilley Bingham (March 20, 1869 September 1, 1927) was an American actress from Hicksville, Ohio. Amelia Bingham, Actress Is Dead , New York Times, September 2, 1927, pg. 17.] Her Broadway career extended from (1896 1926). [http://www.ibdb …

    Wikipedia

  • 86arse — /as / (say ahs) Colloquial (taboo) –noun 1. the rump; bottom; buttocks; posterior. 2. a. the bottom, base or tail end of something. b. the seat of a pair of pants. 3. a. a despised person. b. a fool. 4. impudence: what arse! 5. one s body or …

  • 87burn — I. /bɜn / (say bern) verb (burnt or burned, burning) –verb (i) 1. to be on fire: the fuel burns. 2. (of a furnace, etc.) to contain fire. 3. to feel heat or a physiologically identical sensation: his face was burning in the wind. 4. Sport (of a… …

  • 88Highness, your royal —    The formal mode of address used to royal princes and princesses in Britain. Sarcastic use of this title to someone who is acting like a royal personage, or acting as if they are far more important than they are, at least, is fairly common. ‘We …

    A dictionary of epithets and terms of address