0 a very slight difference in meaning, appearance, sound, etc -- нюанс
These categories were given to the interviewer to bring nuance to answers that could otherwise have been missed by them.
She is alive to its nuances and is able to set it in a broad intellectual context.
The latter have usually been defined as merely 'political', but recent research has made it possible to nuance that definition.
The writer argues that there is a need among learners for a heightened critical awareness of web-source nuances.
There was no room in his production for the nuance of postwar modernism.
Paradoxically, then, although the difference between invalidation and nonvalidation may seem but a nuance, it matters greatly.
It is a view based, in the first place, on a misleading oversimplification of the nuances and complexities of different political ideologies of the time.
The focus upon gendered cultural flows, rather than static socio-economic positions, gives nuances to the contributions that deal with political, economic and social issues.