unnameable उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The rhythms of the 65 intermissionless minutes that make up the performance can be summed up in the final words of Beckett's short novel " The Unnameable " : " I can't go on, I'll go on ."
- Expecting some unnameable evil, his apprehension turns to joy when he opens the hatch and sees Martians that indeed appear to be human, have mind-reading abilities and give the impression of being most amicable, especially the beautiful Teenya, who welcomes and reassures him.
- The tracks are all instrumental, although other versions of " The Unnameable " and " Bugs in Amber " ( re-titled " Moot " ) have been performed with vocals live, and recorded in session for the BBC 6Music " Freakzone " programme.
- When speaking about the military order issued by President George W . Bush on 13 November 2001, Agamben writes, " What is new about President Bush's order is that it radically erases any legal status of the individual, thus producing a legally unnameable and unclassifiable being.
- What will forever link Walker to New York City is a visit he paid in the wee hours of a November morning in 1967 to the studios of radio station WBAI-FM, where Bob Fass was disc jockey for an all-night show called " Radio Unnameable ."
- WITH : THE COMPANY-- Arabella Edge's " The Company " retells a true story of the 1629 wreck of the Dutch East India flagship Batavia on the Abrolhos Islands off Western Australia, and the almost unnameable horrors that ensued . ( Browning, Palm Beach Post)
- Remembering the appearance of the Brooklyn Black Panthers on Radio Unnameable back in the day, Fass says, " I kind of like it when people come up a little hostile and suspicious and I and the audience warm them up and win them over by the end of the show ."
- Borensztein received overwhelming support from the artistic community of Argentina, but respected the judicial order, from then on referring to the judge as " the unnameable " or as " Jueza Barubudubud�a " ( intended as a nonsensical yet transparent rhyme of " Servini de Cubr�a " ) until the censorship was lifted.
- English phrases were always used to name the almost unnameable _ " sex, " for instance, or " privacy " or " office ladies " _ giving the impression that none of these outrageous things existed in the pure and good old days, before the arrival of Western influence in the 19th century.
- This period also saw the publication of Samuel Beckett's trilogy of novels, " Molloy ", " Malone Dies ", and " The Unnameable ", which enacted the dissolution of the self-identical human subject and inspired later novelists such as Thomas Bernhard, John Banville, and David Markson.