magisterially उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- Advertising photography long ago put a good face on object fetishism, turning perfume bottles and alligator purses into magical items of worship, as dramatically lighted, magisterially isolated and lovingly presented as Hollywood stars.
- Kazin writes, " is that he pursued his thought _ at first desperately, then more and more magisterially _ for readers and listeners who perhaps recognized his problems as their own ."
- What de Oliveira patiently and Piccoli magisterially capture, however, is a poignant sense of time taking away, and otherwise exerting effects on, a strong but sensitive individual and the world he knows.
- "Minus are a welcome blast of March-fresh air, their maelstrom of thrash guitars and magisterially tortured vocals enough to leave cheeks burning and throats gasping for breath an icicle sharp album " Q 4*
- Jon Dolan of " The Wire " was more critical, finding " a sense here of a group magisterially marking time, shying away . . . from any grand, rhetorical, countercultural purpose ."
- Bronte explores the culture clash between the heroine's English Protestantism and the Catholicism of the environment at her school in'Villette'( aka Brussels ) before magisterially pronouncing " God is not with Rome ."
- One was Nick Drake's " River Man, " a magisterially sad and mysterious song that he performed away from the piano, sitting on a stool, with Paul Meyers accompanying him on acoustic guitar.
- Those performances long ago are now a memory, and most of America has known Robards instead as a film actor with a deeply pebbled voice and a long, dark face that seemed to growl magisterially without even trying.
- In 1976, she was the first black woman to deliver a keynote address at the Democratic National Convention, riveting her audience on national television as she spoke magisterially from the stage at New York's Madison Square Garden.
- And it concludes with the magisterially scaled pieces he has been producing for the last two decades in Spencertown, his retreat in upstate New York, buoyant fan-shaped or trapezoidal panels of vermilion, magenta and forest green.