All 29 Uses
incidental
in
The Bourne Ultimatum
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- Incidentally, Alex, a "I've got it-Peter.†
incidentally = of something that comes with something else, but is less important than it
- Without a jar of makeup, incidentally.†
- I proved that, too, over the last twenty-odd years, incidentally.†
- And considering the fact that the aircraft in question had a Four Zero government classification, which, incidentally, in my letter to the attorney general I so specified, I think I've earned my ten thousand dollars.†
- In that serpentine mind of yours-Cactus's description, incidentally-conjure up the worst scenario you can think of and shove those bastards against another wall, one they can't get away from unscathed unless they follow your instructions down to the letter.†
- ...Incidentally, I've doubled the patrols on the road and the beach.†
- Open the gates, incidentally.†
- I've also got to figure out a way to seal up the whole place without using anybody from Langley, and, not incidentally, keep the Pentagon at bay just in case someone among those twenty-odd thousand people wants to reach Swayne, and that includes his office and probably a couple of hundred buyers and sellers a day in procurements.... Christ, it's impossible!†
- The kennel people are coming for the dogs around seven in the morning, incidentally, so don't make the seals too tight.†
- I'll get a doctor right away-our friend Ivan, incidentally-but if you can, tell me what happened while I move you to the floor and look at the damage.†
- Incidentally, the grammar-school notebook you grabbed from the gunslinger in Manassas has some interesting things in it.†
- His company, incidentally.†
- But then, in the recesses of his analyst's mind, by profession and training a warehouse for both essential and incidental data, an alarm went off.†
*incidental = something that comes with something else, but is less important than it
- And you're not playing melodramatic games, secrecy for secrecy's sake-an old dodge for inferior doctors, incidentally-but you're really concerned, aren't you?†
incidentally = of something that comes with something else, but is less important than it
- Incidentally, I'm in the same suite at the Ritz that you were in when I came to see you.†
- The Coeur du Soldat is part of that question, incidentally.†
- Frank gave me the key, incidentally.†
- This old, old man here will have my name in the Deuxième files the first chance he gets, and as the notorious Jason Bourne knows if he has even a nodding acquaintance with the Deuxième, several profound questions are raised-once raised by my sister, Jacqueline, incidentally.†
- What is that parade, incidentally?†
- Yours is far more personal than mine, incidentally.†
- "Up to a point," agreed Alex, "but not when stolen information can lead to the loss of life-on both sides, incidentally.†
- The story DeSole heard was that this trash Bourne-that's not his real name, incidentally-was actually trained by the Agency to pose as an international assassin for the purpose of drawing out a killer they call the Jackal.†
- Incidentally, don't tell Marie.†
- Incidentally, you have a two-bedroom suite at the Metropole on the Marx Prospekt.†
- Incidentally, you ingrate, you'll find your weapons in your bedside table drawers.†
- Incidentally, give our people the name and address of your physician in the United States.†
- In case of an American attack, incidentally.†
- Incidentally, how far are those islands from here?†
- ...Incidentally, the man with the boat, he won't be dealt with too harshly, will he?†
Definitions:
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(1)
(incidental as in: an incidental expense) something that comes with something else, but is less important than itsometimes in a specialized sense, including:
- incidental expenses or when in context, just incidentals -- minor expenses not budgeted or not specified
- incidental music -- music in a play, television program, radio program, video game or some other form not primarily musical. (The term is less frequently applied to film music, with such music being referred to instead as the film score or soundtrack.)
- (2) (meaning too rare to warrant focus)