10.His brutish handling of even mild critics is overshadowing more admirable policies, which include curbing the religious police, letting women drive and encouraging them to work.
11.Those consigned to the fields were the ones least willing or able to learn, the least energetic, the least honest and trustworthy, the most vicious and brutish.
13.Besides, the affection of some women for their children is, as I have before termed it, frequently very brutish; for it eradicates every spark of humanity.
14.This ordinary speech deserves the description which Hobbes gave to his " State of Nature, " that " it is solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short" .
15.Tomorrow, on the mainland, " the Free State lads are executing a couple of the IRA lads, " says a brutish policeman on Inisherin, a fictional island off Ireland's west coast.
16.The brutish, the animal instincts, as is often the case, had been developed earlier than the intellectual qualities, and the force of character, for which he was afterwards remarkable.
17.While we tend to think that the life of foragers were nasty, brutish and short, fossil evidence suggests that they actually had it pretty good: their bones and teeth are healthier than those of agriculturalists.
18.And in a moment she grew sick with fear, for a change came into the tree, and the tremulousness of life was in it; the rough bark was changed into brutish flesh and the twisted branches into human arms.
19.With a focus on cheap shots, low blows, eye gouges and fish-hooking, this is a technique of all out survival, and something that requires little more than brutish strength and an eye for striking at your opponent's most vulnerable areas.