Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
For succinctness, we write when are clear from context.
"The Met is in some sense the museum," he says with typical down-to-earth succinctness.
"Power," he responded, with a calm succinctness that was terrifying.
I could not have hoped to combine accuracy and succinctness so."
"Now that's what I like in a man, succinctness."
He claims artistic license was taken for purposes of clarity and succinctness.
Given its succinctness, it should have a better ratio of compelling dishes to pleasant ones.
She has a strong but understated sense of theater and, rare gift, a feeling for succinctness.
Tony took the lead, and with a succinctness that would certainly have satisfied any military man, said:
The succinctness of that is hard to beat.
Siegfried put it with his usual succinctness one morning.
This couplet's beauty is in its succinctness and multiple layers of meaning.
In fact, Indian English has many virtues, among them a certain logic and succinctness.
McVeigh praised it for its succinctness and called it "the best starting point".
This gearing towards understandability at the price of succinctness was not seen positive by all.
"When your shots falling, the basket looked like a tire," said Starks with succinctness.
For brevity, succinctness, and concentration, it is perhaps without its peer in the literature of murder.
He chose Hebrew as his literary vehicle for its succinctness and biblical imagery.
I agree about the need for succinctness.
Her one-paragraph descriptions of each artist are models of succinctness.
They are typically one-page only; their succinctness facilitates rapid decision-making.
It concludes by stating that some "articles are models of precision and succinctness.
The three other choreographers on the program could learn much from Ms. Blossom's succinctness.
Although still clearly the least telegenic of the candidates, he was speaking with more authority and more succinctness.
The award honors the eloquence, force of argument, and succinctness with which the writer presents his or her views.