Patch and cover up of a confidence trick that beats Sub Prime and Bernie Madoff for sheer temerity!
No biographer before Tucker has had the temerity to say the kite experiment should be added to this list.
Mr Kato was relegated to the sidelines by Mr Obuchi for having the temerity to challenge him for the leadership.
Over the course of time, contrarian thinking has, in many instances, paid off handsomely for those with the required audacity and temerity.
Our worst short pick was energy drink company Hansen Natural: It had the temerity to rise 40% since we called it a loser.
President Obama expressed indignant anger that Senator McCain and others have had the temerity to question White House accounts of Benghazi causes and events.
FORBES: Mainstream Media Caught In Snarl Of Tangled Benghazi Yarns
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano has done her overbearing best to discredit even elected officials with the temerity to ask questions about it.
The resignation call comes because Joaquin Almunia, the EU competition commissioner, has had the temerity to suggest some of these banks-cum-political organisations might have to be "liquidated".
It has the temerity to out-profit the profit-above-all model.
He is an internationally renowned expert on the former Soviet Union who had the temerity last week to accuse the Russian government on the NBC TV program "Dateline" of murdering Alexander Litvinenko.
To the shock of anyone who has taught millennials, they (and their parents) think nothing of excoriating a professor with the temerity to give them a "bad" grade (as in, less than an "A").
And, yes, they do have the temerity to ask for something in return for their engagement and loyalty, not to mention the effort of balancing on stilettos and walking from store-to-store for hours on end.
When women have the temerity to marshal power on their own behalf, the response is much more negative, and one can't always tell the difference between those who resent women and those who resent power.
First comes Giovanni Punto, an 18th-century Bohemian who became the subject of an aristocratic fatwa requiring the removal of his front teeth when he had the temerity to leave his boss Count Joseph von Thun's employment without permission.
Or at least flat to one decimal point, which is as many as the chancellor has previously had the temerity to mention. (He might, just, be able to say it has fallen as a share of GDP - but that, too, would depend on the number of decimal points, at which point things start to get a bit silly).
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