His hubristic nature made proving him wrong doubly satisfying.
He was an intriguing combination of hubristic brashness and youthful vulnerability, and while neither of these qualities alone would have interested me, together they were irresistible.
She knows how to imply that someone is stupid or hubristic with a witty retort, instead of stating it outright, which allows her the satisfaction of telling people off, without the social repercussions.
It depends on whether the statement is a complete sentence or not. If the quoted statement is a complete sentence, you would use a period. If the quoted statement is within a larger sentence, you would use a comma.
she lost her virtue in the city.
Plato is a name, so you use it in a manner consistent with how you would use any other name. As in, "Plato wrote a sentence."
The workers expressed their discontent with the new company policies by organizing a strike.
She sat by the lake to contemplate her future.
According to Merriam-Webster, "hubris" is defined as "exaggerated pride or self-confidence." Hubris is a noun, and the adjective being "hubristic." Noun: The hubris of that man
No. The adjectival form is "hubristic."
egotistic, conceited, bumptious, imperious, hubristic
haughty
i do not know how to use embalming in a sentence. (there is the sentence)
So- you are asking when to use 'when' in a sentence. When you are asking how to use when in a question, you are already using when in a sentence, because a question actually is a sentence. I like to use when in a sentence whenever I like.
How do you use sedition in a sentence
use contingency in a sentence?
use adainty as sentence
use aver in a sentence
Can you use abstemious in a sentence?
use ize in sentence