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Lionel Trilling took on the task in "Sincerity and Authenticity, " a series of Harvard lectures published in 1972.
WSJ: Book Review: Sincerity
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According to Trilling, sincerity was eventually elbowed aside by the need for authenticity, "a more strenuous moral experience" that responds aggressively to received moral opinion.
WSJ: Book Review: Sincerity
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Jewish intellectuals like Lionel Trilling adopted the mannerisms of Oxford dons.
ECONOMIST: The WASP in the ointment
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But the song's musical arrangement sounds tacky and hastily put together - some of it wouldn't be out of place trilling away in a lift or supermarket.
BBC: Syrupy debut for Pop Idol's Rik
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In Trilling's account, the focus on sincerity arose in the 16th century, with the Protestant Reformation and its emphasis on individual conscience rather than institutional ritual and doctrine.
WSJ: Book Review: Sincerity
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He opened the coop and stuck his hand in toward the fierce creature inside, eyes yellow, beak sharp as a cat's claw, trilling a warning so low it was almost a growl.
NPR: Excerpt: 'The Prince of Frogtown'
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Little did Papa realize that morning that he was never to see us or hold us again, nor would he ever again harken to the meadowlarks of Yell County trilling a joyous anthem to spring.
NPR: Excerpt: 'True Grit'
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No one who saw her as the oddball heroine of "Annie Hall" can forget her trilling "La de da, la de da, " chasing lobsters around a kitchen or singing "Seems Like Old Times" shakily, and endearingly.
WSJ: Keaton Turns Formula Into Feeling
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Blackmur, Kenneth Burke, and Lionel Trilling.
NEWYORKER: What She Said
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In addition to its beginning-of-the-world astonishing beauty, expect two active volcanoes, tens of thousands of Southern Elephant Seals (biggies with really big noses), Antarctic and Sub Antarctic Fur Seals, predatory Leopard Seals, the rarer, slender and pale Crabeater, the plentiful Weddell Seal, and the rare, small, sort-of-sexy Ross Seals famous for their trilling and siren-like sounds.
FORBES: Connect
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The large grey-feathered birds, known for the bright red skin above their eyes, a loud trilling call that can be heard up to a mile away, and a wingspan of up to 7ft, travel around 350 miles a day from Texas, Oklahoma or Mexico to stop in Nebraska on their way to their breeding grounds, which are spread across the northern United States and Canada.
BBC: Nebraska��s awe-inspiring crane migration