I suppose my bodily proportions are quite flattering. I'm ripped, doing something I wouldn't normally do with my body, or having done to it, involving Watson.
But if you caught my informant,' said Achilles, 'why in the world would Chamrajnagar—or Graff, if it was him—launch the shuttle anyway? Was catching me doing something naughty so important they’d risk a shuttle and it’s crew just to catch me? I find that quite… flattering. Sort of like winning the Nobel Prize for scariest villain.
I thought I recognized you. " Really? He remembered me looking like Swamp Thing? How flattering.
I always wear my sweater back-to-front; it is so much more flattering.
Keep your jacket buttoned. Always. It's just really flattering—it will take pounds off you.
I find it flattering to be compared to Tige
To be told you've won a MacArthur fellowship is very flattering and gratifying personally.
Mostly, it's flattering to meet fans. As long as it's in a planned, professional meeting, rather than, say, someone dropping by my home, which is not as pleasant.
I find the whole concept of women screaming at me so odd. It's very flattering, but I don't think I will ever consider myself to be a sex symbol.
I always find it flattering when somebody recognizes me.
Bridget Jones is part of literary lore now and actually to be a part of it is enormously flattering.
My fashion advice is to have a flattering mirror and then forget about it.
A lot has been said about single mothers. Most of it has been less than flattering.
The encomium of one incapable of flattery is indeed flattering.
Cautious age suspects the flattering form, and only credits what experience tells.
Action is consolatory. It is the enemy of thought and the friend of flattering illusions.
It was very flattering when Manolo Blahnik named a shoe after me.
On one hand it's very flattering to be compared to a big success, and then sometimes it's very frustrating because you want people to see the movie that you're making and not be continually comparing it to something that it's not. So it goes both ways.
Not to sound egomaniac or anything, but just to get under people's skin like that, and for them to believe in you and believe strongly enough to write. . . it's flattering and it helps you during the day.
To an American writer, I should think it must be a flattering distinction to escape the admiration of the newspapers.