jaw-jutting
English
Alternative forms
Adjective
jaw-jutting (not comparable)
- Having one’s lower jaw protruding forward; (figuratively) determined, dogged. strong-willed, defiant.
- 1954, Lars Lawrence (pseudonym of Philip Stevenson), Morning, Noon, and Night, New York: Putnam, Part III, Chapter 9, p. 147,
- What he called her “genius” for diplomacy, her tolerance of the precious sensitivities of intellectuals, was as useless in his rough-and-tumble relations with goons and jailers as his jaw-jutting aggressions would be in her mannered and scrupulous artistic circle.
- 1980, Anthony Burgess, Earthly Powers, London: Hutchinson, Chapter 43,
- Up on the Gianicolo the Jewish stallholders sold metal replicas of St. Peter’s and Romulus and Remus and jawjutting pictures of the Duce.
- 2011, Peter Travers, “A Dangerous Method,” Rolling Stone, 21 November, 2011,
- The actors give it their all, especially Knightley, whose jaw-jutting, heavily accented and unfairly criticized portrayal gives the film its fighting spirit.
- 2016, Gary Kemp, “Drama’s pause célèbre,” GQ, February, 2016,
- 1954, Lars Lawrence (pseudonym of Philip Stevenson), Morning, Noon, and Night, New York: Putnam, Part III, Chapter 9, p. 147,
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