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Those at the top of society have not helped matters by their tendency to inverted snobbery.
This sounds a bit like inverted snobbery from a wealthy artist.
"There's a sort of inverted snobbery amongst working people in England.
Perhaps, he admitted, there was inverted snobbery in this.
I have regretted this act of stupidity and inverted snobbery ever since.
It is still referred to as a tournament rather than a championship, which reflects a kind of inverted snobbery.
And it is this inverted snobbery that seems to lie behind admiration of Cook's daubings.
A form of inverted snobbery, I suppose.
It is really distasteful all this inverted snobbery.
Put it down to inverted snobbery.
He really must get rid of the inverted snobbery that, with its opposite, is ingrained in so many of the English!
To deny them that opportunity on the grounds that those things are "elitist" is inverted snobbery.
I sense a bit of inverted snobbery in Mr Bradshaw's review: ha!
I love the inverted snobbery redolent in this sentence; clearly 'the streets' are for working class people only!
I know that Geraldine was going through a phase of socialism, and inverted snobbery, almost, to put it unkindly but accurately.
This thread has thrown up a nice strain of inverted snobbery it seems....
It was inverted snobbery.
There's no inverted snobbery.
This is inverted snobbery.
Pure inverted snobbery.
'Or are you guilty of inverted snobbery?'
I'd call that inverted snobbery.'
Inverted snobbery."
I think there's an inverted snobbery - and a suggestion of bad logic - in being proud of the fact that one's poems sell very badly.
Saying all British low budget films / arthouse are unwatchable is wrongheaded inverted snobbery.