The Muhammed Ali one is pretty subtle
Just like Muhammed Ali, TEd Rem. He was so fast, some of his opponents were out on their feet before they knew they'd been hit.*
On second thought, "the loess said about it the better" is the best in the field, so far.
M-W: Main Entry: loess
Pronunciation: 'les, 'l&s, 'lO-&s, 'l&rs
Function: noun
Etymology: German Löss
: an unstratified usually buff to yellowish brown loamy deposit found in No. America, Europe, and Asia and believed to be chiefly deposited by the wind
- loessˇial /'le-sE-&l, 'l&-, lO-'e-, 'l&r-/ adjective
* Muhammed Ali was "the greatest". But you're coloessial!
BTW subtlety is like the fine print in a legal contact.
Actually, Dr. Bill [wwh] just sent me this recollection from "Amos and Andy", the popular Radio Show of the 40's(?):
At one point they [Amos and Andy] were in the insurance business. A client complained when a claim was refused. So Andy replied with a quip I have always remembered:
"The large print giveth, but the fine print taketh away."