grace (expand with variations)
For all his bluster and zeal, however, Dave McGinnis has grace.
Tobin, it seems, was also a man of grace.
In football, we tend to assign the notion of grace only to players.
Anyone who has seen Lynn Swann catch a pass can bear witness to his physical grace.
. . . "But it is said that Gimli went also out desire to see again the beauty of Galadriel; and it may be that she, being mighty among the Eldar, obtained this grace for him.
Langford, in contrast, has grown up in public with dignity and grace.
My saving grace was that I was surrounded by the best people.
There but for the grace of God . . . The guy could have pulled the trigger and I wouldn’t be here today.” It has been widely, and inaccurately, reported that Kerry filmed this and other actions with an 8-mm.
Presented from overhead, the wings, and the stage, these passages capture the mix of craft and drive, and sweat and grace that distinguishes the dancer.
Later, Andrés will turn up again, only to explain to Don Quixote and his friends that things turned out “very different from what your grace imagines.” The boy explains that the master returned and flogged him all the harder, with each blow exulting in how he was making a fool of Don Quixote.
I was greeted and treated by virtually every Arab I met with the greatest courtesy and grace, even in the most trying and sometimes downright tragic circumstances.
With and without grace, they had all survived the radiation, chemotherapy, and in-hospital cable-television bingo games, with their bodies reasonably intact, only to resume their previously self-destructive habits.
As it was, she infused the role of housekeeper with every extra her very ingenious disposition could muster: diplomatic abilities, imagination, grace.
Coming from Milan, any city seemed blessed with particular grace, I mean from a physical point of view as Milan had little to recommend it that way.
He was about to deliver his coup de grace.
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