I hope that other copies were not marred by such features.
Like his first essay, this one is often marred by impossibly obscure language.
However, the book is marred by important passages that could not survive such a translation.
The volume suffers from a paucity of maps, and two or three chapters are marred by inexcusably obscure language.
But it is unfortunate that the very last sentence is marred by an egregious slip.
However, the book is overly long, and is marred by a considerable amount of repetition of both the theoretical argument and policy-relevant material.
Not smooth but rather marred by dense, small pockmarks; its par ticulate inclusions are finer and denser than those of any other obsidian sources.
Developments within nationalist politics and pedagogies dictated that his second local tour would be marred by disappointments and disillusionment.