drear उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The following poem was written shortly after Ball's murder : Twas on a Sabbath evening in drear November days Two friends were heard creating, in Perry Barry's byways High words just fed the anger, now this young man's life is fled.
- Announcer Don Wilson was to say he heard Jack bought a new suit on Drew Pearson, but said Pearson s name wrong; Don said Drear Pewson . Later on in the show, comedic actor Frank Nelson was asked by Benny if he was the doorman.
- In a pennant-clinching display of power and grit, Johnson put the wheezing Atlanta dynasty out of its misery by harnessing the Braves for seven innings of a 3-2 victory by the Arizona Diamondbacks before a puny crowd of 35, 652 in the drear at Turner Field.
- So there is quite a delicious irony in the glittery $ 200 million project named for the artist that is rising on what used to be the drear and depressing docklands of the Salford district where Lowry lived all his life _ the very emblem of the urban regeneration that has, in recent years, devoured the last vestiges of his Manchester.
- Mary McNamara of the " Los Angeles Times " labelled the series as " the best new show of the fall " describing it as " a rapturous mix of absurdly fairy-tale-romance and frantic modern complications, set in the picturesque drear of Yorkshire and brought to life by masterfully shaded performances . " She opined that Reid and Jacobi " are capable of doing more with a startled look or careful smile . . . than most actors can do in seven pages of dialogue ".
- He quoted English poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge's " Dejection " as a perfect description of his case : " A grief without a pang, void, dark and drear, / A drowsy, stifled, unimpassioned grief, / Which finds no natural outlet or relief / In word, or sigh, or tear . " English writer Samuel Johnson used the term " the black dog " in the 1780s to describe his own depression, and it was subsequently popularized by depression sufferer former British Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill.
- According to Jeremy Maas, the turn to mythological and fantasy elements, and in particular to the fairy's world, allowed an escape from these demands . " No other type of painting concentrates so many of the opposing elements of the Victorian psyche : the desire to escape the drear hardships of daily existence; the stirrings of new attitudes toward sex, stifled by religious dogma; a passion for the unseen; the birth of psychoanalysis; the latent revulsion against the exactitude of the new invention of photography . " The significance of fairy paintings as a reaction to cultural change is not universally accepted, however . " Ultimately, " Andrew Stuttaford wrote, " these paintings were just about fun ."