Those seated nearest him ducked away with a wince that was also a smile, half apologetic.
He says the things that thin-skinned corporate bosses wince at and headline-hungry reporters drool over.
Part of me continues to wince when artistic heroes get sucked into the marketing machine.
Anything to make the vasectomy--surely among the most angst-filled and wince-inducing male surgical procedures--more palatable.
Anyone seeking a bid on a high yield bond had to be prepared to wince.
The near universal reaction to a pile of yarn labeled "dog hair" is a wince.
WSJ: Knitting and Weaving Artisans Embrace 'Chiengora' Yarn From Dog Hair
Special interest groups may wince at the other measures that the budget deal will introduce.
The challenge is getting adequate upload and download speeds without paying prices that would make even large organisations wince.
In effect, the brain flinches when it sees someone in pain in the same way that we might wince.
They consistently cheer on UK tech companies and wince each time one sells out, usually to an American firm.
This is a stiff test that some big rowing individuals might wince at.
Anyone who has boys in the house (or used to be one) will find plenty to wince at here.
When Penn smiles, there's always pain there -- it's almost a wince -- and he smiles a lot here.
Brazil's currency, the real, has already soared to levels that make manufacturers wince.
Julia Kristeva is sleeping and her calm face seems an Assyrian mask until, with a very slight wince of discomfort, she wakes.
Those who recall his dealings over freedom of information with David Clark, the unassuming public services minister, still wince at the memory.
You may wince a little bit at the induced nostalgia and melancholy.
For the first hour you wince involuntarily every minute or so.
FORBES: Off the Beaten Track: Kaziranga National Park, India
Bulas was flush enough (wince, I know, terrible pun) to have a personal residence which included a house, a garage, and a guesthouse.
The sorts of failures that, by his own admission, made him "wince" when he read about them in the Wales Audit Office report?
While that might make consumerists wince, there's been no opposition so far from the Texas Public Utility Commission or the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
You might expect him to wince at the very mention of the Austrian club, who then went on to lose to Everton in the final.
"That doesn't mean that bankers don't wince" at things he's said.
Middle-class New Labourites tend to wince at the idea of compulsion.
Years of filming surgery has left me fairly unsqueamish, but I imagine some people might find wince at having the fillers injected deep under the facial skin.
But it is the wrong way to maximize happiness, because every time you drive down your magnificent block and pull into your extremely short driveway, you'll wince.
Dealers said both houses may have been guilty of pricing their offerings too high to woo potential sellers, only to see potential buyers wince during the sales themselves.
WSJ: Sotheby's Choppy Sale Buoyed by Casino Magnate's $41.5 Million Picasso
Even Europhiles wince as ministers struggle to justify their about-turn.
ECONOMIST: The dangerous appeal of a semi-detached status for Britain
Deborah Wince-Smith, former Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Technology Policy.
Once you see The Sopranos or a baseball, football or basketball game in high def, filling a big, sharp screen, you'll wince at having to go back to fuzzy regular TV.
应用推荐