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"appreciatively" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows that you are grateful for something or are enjoying something
"appreciatively" Synonyms

116 Sentences With "appreciatively"

How to use appreciatively in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "appreciatively" and check conjugation/comparative form for "appreciatively". Mastering all the usages of "appreciatively" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Each hunk of muscle is pointed out and described appreciatively.
"Oh, very nice!" he said, leaning in close and nodding appreciatively.
I saw too much that marveled, almost appreciatively, at their wiles.
I explain this to the Culter-Cohens and they nod appreciatively.
"That felt better," Ms. Moynahan said, whistling appreciatively, and Mr. Scheffing agreed.
"Really?" she said before appreciatively taking my two 20s and a 10.
It's very "Kate Hudson looks on appreciatively while Ryder learns guitar," and I like it.
"Obviously, this was done by an artist," Paul Roberts, a visitor from Edinburgh, said appreciatively.
She smiles appreciatively, but moves the conversation along, not one to linger in the spotlight.
The praise was universally positive, with one tester appreciatively gasping, "Holy balls!" after their first sip.
He was extolling the defence minister, Vladimir Padrino López (pictured with Mr Maduro), who nodded appreciatively.
As he told the story, his assembled family members laughed appreciatively, though they'd heard it before.
So, from our perspective this is a stock that we think can move up appreciatively from here.
They were so sweetly earnest, as I now appreciatively recall, about introducing me to 'the finer things.
Leaning against the seats a few rows away was a guy, smiling mischievously and observing me appreciatively.
Ford nodded appreciatively as Grassley thanked her for her bravery and left the hearing room in relief.
A wife with whom Rebecca had nothing in common save that they were both wives had clucked appreciatively.
"Crazy turbulence and injuries, but the @delta crew handled it perfectly, even the emergency landing," Justice appreciatively wrote.
"He's not slick," Ms. Jarensky said appreciatively from the breakfast nook they now share as husband and wife.
She was a gossip and we were always searching for mutual friends and acquaintances to discuss, mostly appreciatively.
Everyone's doing their best, and no matter how it turns out, the camera pans appreciatively over it all.
Anyway, El-P caught wind of it yesterday and appreciatively called it a "weird gift" which it certainly is.
"Oh, it's a nice little mountain thing," my son said appreciatively, and then he asked if we could leave.
"Ajit Pai, as you probably already know, saved the internet," Schneider said, by way of introduction, as Pai guffawed appreciatively.
Soon after, on June 15, Nevaeha was all smiles as she proudly – and appreciatively — wore the dress to the dance.
This means that you may find yourself nodding your head appreciatively as certain points register, with clean clicks of revelation.
When he avoided sharp language in front of the cameras, Mr. Macron appeared relieved and patted Mr. Trump's leg appreciatively.
As the audience tittered appreciatively, they said that they all smoked Marlboros and claimed to share similar taste in women.
His raucous supporters, many wearing Santa Claus hats rather than the usual red "Make America Great Again" caps, whooped appreciatively.
"It's not just pretty graphics," an executive says, purring appreciatively over the 21-metre web of data flashing on the wall.
In the beginning, he'd asked if she was sleeping with anyone else, and when Tiffany said that she wasn't, he'd nodded appreciatively.
CLOSE your eyes and you could be in a farmyard: a docile heifer slurps a grassy lunch off your hand, mooing appreciatively.
The guy I made out with at the last party looks at me appreciatively and says, "Nice," in front of his fiancé.
" Khris Khal Davenport, who has also written appreciatively of "A Different World," told me that he finds it easier to consume than "The Cosby Show.
When NARS sends us previews of its new collections, the beauty department crowds around the products to coo appreciatively over the new hues, textures, and products.
Her mouth is slightly open, as if about to speak, and his cheeks are slightly hollowed and lips are puckered as if to whistle, or appreciatively exhale.
There was this whole thing we had to sort of nod your head appreciatively no matter whether you liked it or not, which I thought was funny.
People laughed appreciatively when he showed a video of himself wearing an "I ♥ Fossil Fuels" T-shirt at a climate-change march in New York City.
But if we write back to our attackers appreciatively, and offer a way to save face, 90 percent of the time the next email is totally transformed.
In a video posted to the organization's Facebook page, both Popole Misenga and Yolande Mabika showed gratitude and spoke appreciatively about having a flag to represent their team.
In 1911, the review was moved to Sundays, on the theory that it would be more appreciatively received by readers with a bit of time on their hands.
Ms. DeVito (whose father, Danny DeVito, sat in the front row, chortling appreciatively) has the less rewarding role here, but she does it well, gradually softening toward Charlie.
Without any hesitation, I said that I loved the Chrysler Building beyond any other, and he laughed appreciatively at my total lack of interest in saying something original.
" Turning a head appreciatively between his fingers, he added, "I can look at them from any angle, and they give me a basis of facial structure and head shape.
But appreciatively, Turbulences dans les Balkans focuses mostly on the beguiling, immoderate whirlpools of the marginalized whose phantasmagorical approach to life disenfranchises them, as so happened to Vojislav Jakić.
To Trump's critics, the wall is a punchline — every so often, someone will tweet, "Hey, remember when Mexico was going to pay for the wall?" and people will laugh appreciatively.
"He'd make his changes with a touch so light that you could only nod appreciatively," Jerry Kirshenbaum, a writer and editor at the magazine for 30 years, wrote in an email.
The movie leers appreciatively at her long limbs, but then it leers at everything else as well, from her costars to the neon-lit furnishings of the room Lorraine commandeers for herself.
Green is careful to say that Hazel — whose middle name is Grace — is not Esther, but Esther's father and sister have spoken, appreciatively, of how much Green's creation reminds them of her.
By the time that book appeared in English, the "myth" of Bolaño, as Vargas Llosa calls it (appreciatively, not derisively), had already spread throughout the Spanish-reading world; now it crossed over.
He even appeared to pass something to Michelle Obama, who laughed appreciatively, in what seemed to be a callback to how he snuck her a cough drop at John McCain's funeral in September.
As I reach appreciatively for a second slice, Kitchin tells me about a couple who recently came to Cal's Own with their grandchild, and requested that they didn't burn the pizza this time.
The new foursome definitely treads its own path, with a story that nods appreciatively backwards while staking its own claim on the basic idea of four chums saving the world from paranormal threats.
And while Professor Marston has plenty of shots of Bill gazing appreciatively at his female partners, the film takes great pains to ensure we spend just as much time in Olive and Elizabeth's points of view.
Watching the broadcast, Fei and her friends nodded appreciatively when Xi emerged on to the stage, but she said she barely recognized any of the other figures appointed to the Politburo Standing Committee, including Premier Li Keqiang.
No one in Mr. Holl's entourage was more appreciatively wide-eyed than Councilman Jimmy Van Bramer, a Queens Democrat who said he had been fighting for a Hunters Point branch since 1999, when he worked at the Queens Library.
Although the Kochs and their political network spent some four hundred million dollars trying to defeat Obama and other Democrats in 2012, the President, during an N.A.A.C.P. convention last summer, spoke appreciatively of the brothers' efforts on prison sentencing.
"We are better than this," she said earlier Monday at the Brickhouse Tavern in Indianola to an enthusiastic group of voters, who nodded appreciatively when she decried the "powerful forces that are trying to sow hate and division" in America.
It includes Ellis's stories of writing Less Than Zero and American Psycho — pausing to note appreciatively his own "gleaming nihilism" — and then watching each novel get adapted into a movie (successfully in American Psycho's case, and not in Less Than Zero's).
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Lost Profiles: Memoirs of Cubism, Dada, and Surrealism is a diminutive, stylish book that kicks off by appreciatively documenting a curiously seedy period of transition within the anti-rationalist French avant-garde: from Dada to Surrealism.
The younger Kygo fans swayed appreciatively, but they were not his only audience—he had to be mindful, too, of the revellers at the reserved tables, taking delivery of sparkler-enhanced bottles of champagne, not all of whom seemed to have studied his discography online.
He is half-crouched with right forearm resting on knee and gazing appreciatively at his partner, while she thrusts her taut belly forward and kneels next to him in a favorite Yuskavage pose (reminiscent of the posture in "Sweetpuss"), her rounded back exposing her small, bare breasts.
And then, when Trump brought up the fact that there are more women serving in Congress than ever before, she stood up and appreciatively clapped in her colleagues' direction — signaling that despite their opposition to Trump, it was now okay for them to stand up, too, because they were celebrating themselves.
Once our legs stopped shaking, we climbed the 249 steps to the top and appreciatively took in the view: lush greenery; white roofs topping homes painted in bright, jelly-bean hues; and a sea that displayed so many shades of blue — inky blue, deep blue, aqua blue — that I ran out of adjectives.
This room murmured appreciatively when Rami Malek talked about making a movie about a queer man — despite the fact that this particular movie largely sidestepped the queerness of that man — and everyone seemed to be happily ignoring that Bohemian Rhapsody has been mired in controversy because its director has been repeatedly accused of rape and sexual misconduct.
One of the only happy moments in this episode took place early on, when the character Sam—who also appears in The Lord of the Rings—went to a library and looked at it appreciatively, making an overt reference to how one might come up with a cool name for a kingdom like "Dorne" (by reading).
Two pictures – made when it happened – who went against the grain of mainstream media and which today has a prophetic force.Lennervald, Dan, Kungsbacka, 2010, pp. 286 - 287. Bertrand Russell wrote appreciatively to Torsten Billman about these two grisaille woodcuts.
Both Spears and will.i.am responded positively to her performance; will.i.am remarked appreciatively that she was "possessed." Sonenclar next advanced into the Top 16 round, where she performed "Good Feeling", then the Top 13 round, where she performed "It Will Rain".
After Shah took Lalitpur, he treated the traitorous nobles appreciatively for a time. Then one day he called them to a meeting at the riverbank of Teku Dobhan on the outskirts of the city. There, all the Pradhan nobles were captured and killed. The Gorkhalis then turned their attention towards Bhaktapur.
It produced little effect in the West. However, Marius Victorinus, one of the most distinguished professors in Rome, chose "to give up the idle talk of the school rather than the Word of God."Augustine, Confessions, VIII, 5 Thenceforth, Christians studied more closely and more appreciatively their own literature, i.e., the Biblical writings.
Page 120. Franz Liszt and Richard Wagner spoke appreciatively of this work. Ferdinand Lassalle, who had particularly liked the libretto and was equally enthusiastic about the music, had offered to write Weißheimer a textbook on Florian Geyer, Thomas Munzer or the Bohemian Jan Žižka, but his death put an end to this idea.Weißheimer, Wendelin.
A few other deputies welcomed the marchers warmly, including Maximilien Robespierre who was still at that time a relatively obscure figure in politics. Robespierre gave strong words of support to the women and their plight, and his efforts were received appreciatively; his solicitations helped greatly to soften the crowd's hostility towards the Assembly.Scurr, p. 93.
Outside on the porch, a sulky Ali jealously calls Jenna a slut. Back at the party, Emily is seen slow-dancing with Ben on the dance floor. Jenna is seductively dancing nearby, and Emily ogles appreciatively at her curves and moves. Alison turns her eyes from one to the other, and approaches Emily, alluding to her concealed sexual orientation.
Luitpold Hall in Nuremberg, Bavaria Wendelin Weißheimer became music director in Augsburg. Despite his official duties and numerous other engagements he continued to compose. After scoring songs and ballads of the German Minnesang, as well as from Goethe and other poets, he dealt with his first opera Theodor Körner. Franz Liszt and Wagner spoke appreciatively of this work.
Painfully aware of the bitterness often encouraged in both Greece and Turkey toward the other, he has written appreciatively of the personal welcome given to him by the Turks that he meets. > There are no real differences [between Greeks and Turks]. I love Turkey and > I can live there. I can't live in Paris or in London.
After writing Tragedy of Korea, critics attacked MacKenzie as exaggerating facts. He was also signaled as "anti-japanese". He answered the critics saying: No man has written more appreciatively of certain phases of Japanese character and accomplishments than myself. My personal relations with the Japanese, more especially with the Japanese Army, left me with no sense of personal grievance but with many pleasant and cordial memories.
He writes that the notion of an "American way of life", for example, provides a sociological backdrop for active propaganda. "Once one accepts the American way of life as superior, it becomes a criterion of good and evil; things that are un-American become evil," Marlin writes.Marlin, (Ethics), p. 37. Aside from Ellul's work on propaganda and technology, Marlin has also written appreciatively about the French thinker's theological studies.
Chinese Street Food in Beijing (1900-1901). Chinese Street Food in Beijing. Jonathan Spence writes appreciatively that by the Qing Dynasty the "culinary arts were treated as a part of the life of the mind: There was a Tao of food, just as there was Tao of conduct and one of literary creation." The opulence of the scholar-official Li Liweng was balanced by the gastronome Yuan Mei.
100px The poet Birger Sjöberg (1885–1929) was born in Vänersborg. He wrote appreciatively about Vänersborg, most notably in Fridas bok (1922), wherein the comparison "Vänersborg – little Paris" is found. The park in the northern part of Vänersborg, Skräckleparken, offers a picturesque view over lake Vänern, and therein also stands this statue of mentioned Ragnar. The prominent Swedish explorer and trader Axel Eriksson was also born in Vänersborg.
Brownell married Virginia S. Swinburne in 1878. Ten years after her death in 1911, he married Gertrude Hall. In her autobiography, A Backward Glance, Edith Wharton mentions him appreciatively as one of the finest literary men of his age and a significant contributor to the New York literary scene. His studies of the later English prose writers were highly regarded and deservedly praised; he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
He then changes his mind and tells the operator not to place the call, appreciatively adding "you can keep the dime" (the then standard toll he had deposited in a payphone). The story was inspired during Jim Croce's military service, during which time he saw lines of soldiers waiting to use the outdoor phone on base, many of them calling their wives or girlfriends to see if their Dear John letter was true.
Jacintha Buddicom's account, Eric & Us, provides an insight into Blair's childhood.Jacintha Buddicom Eric & Us Frewin 1974. She quoted his sister Avril that "he was essentially an aloof, undemonstrative person" and said herself of his friendship with the Buddicoms: "I do not think he needed any other friends beyond the schoolfriend he occasionally and appreciatively referred to as 'CC'". She could not recall his having schoolfriends to stay and exchange visits as her brother Prosper often did in holidays.
The music State Conservatory of Potenza is named after Carlo Gesualdo da Venosa. In The Doors of Perception (1954), Aldous Huxley writes of Gesualdo's madrigals: > Mozart's C-Minor Piano Concerto was interrupted after the first movement, > and a recording of some madrigals by Gesualdo took its place. 'These voices' > I said appreciatively, 'these voices – they're a kind of bridge back to the > human world.' And a bridge they remained even while singing the most > startlingly chromatic of the mad prince's compositions.
On one memorable occasion, the 300 Blanks star prize was a trip on Concorde. As the audience (expecting the usual cheap prizes) clapped and cheered appreciatively, Dawson waved them down with "Don't get excited—it goes to the end of the runway and back." Most famous was the consolation prize—the Blankety Blank chequebook and pen, which Dawson would often call "The Blankety Blank chequepen and book!" The "chequebook" consisted of a silver trophy in the shape of a chequebook.
" Besides his further general remarks, Hazlitt lingers appreciatively over a number of amusing scenes and poetic passages, including the songs, all showing how "Shakespear's comedy is of a pastoral and poetical cast. Folly is indigenous to the soil [....] Absurdity has every encouragement afforded it; and nonsense has room to flourish in."Hazlitt 1818, p. 257. Characters of vastly different types are all welcome and fit into his scheme: "the same house is big enough to hold Malvolio, the Countess, Maria, Sir Toby, and Sir Andrew Ague-cheek.
"Adolph Schuman Dies at 73; Was Apparel Maker on Coast" The New York Times, October 2, 1985 Census records indicate that Schuman was five years older than stated in this obituary A liberal Democrat, Schuman frequently held campaign fund-raising dinners and parties at his Nob Hill home, and was one of the four wealthy San Francisco Jewish political contributors - the others were Cyril Magnin, Benjamin Swig and Walter Shorenstein - who formed what local Democratic politicians appreciatively called "The Green Machine" of the 1960s.
One way to reduce this problem is to build them periodically, that is, at regular intervals, or when some significant event occurs, such as a line or neighbor going down or coming back up again, or changing its properties appreciatively. A major procedure called flooding which is used for distributing link state algorithms throughout the routing domain can be implemented with link state packets. However, ordinary flooding may result in problems, because it generates exponential behavior. Smart flooding, on the other hand, recognizes link state packets appropriately.
When he wants to close his car door, Dara with her chainsaw turned on breaks it and slaughters Adjie with it, leaving no survivor that night. The scene changes to Dara's restaurant, where she takes some meat from her refrigerator, and it is revealed that the meat used for her meals, are human meat. Then the camera pans through the restaurant as everybody looks appreciatively at the food cooked by Dara herself. Dara who still won over the men' fights yet, smiles and makes a grimace to camera.
The New York Times has published a book review section since October 10, 1896, announcing: "We begin today the publication of a Supplement which contains reviews of new books ... and other interesting matter ... associated with news of the day."The New York Times, October 10, 1896. Inaugural book review issue (announced on page 4, column 1) In 1911, the review was moved to Sundays, on the theory that it would be more appreciatively received by readers with a bit of time on their hands. The target audience is an intelligent, general-interest adult reader.
Marmaduke Stalkartt was the fourth child of Hugh Stalkartt. After presumably serving an apprenticeship at Deptford Dockyard, he was sent to India in 1796 to establish shipyards to build men-of-war in teak. Stalkartt's Naval architecture (1781) was divided into seven books: 'Of Whole-Moulding'; 'Of the Yacht'; 'Of the Sloop'; 'Of the Forty-Four-Gun-Ship'; 'Of the Seventy- Four-Gun-Ship'; 'Of the Cutter, and Ending of the Lines'; and 'Of the Frigate'. It was reviewed appreciatively in The Critical Review and The Monthly Review.
Thomas Hardy, 1792 In 1776, during a visit home to Vienna from his posting in Berlin, van Swieten offered encouragement to the 43-year-old Joseph Haydn, who at the time was vexed by the hostile reception his work was receiving from certain Berlin critics. Van Swieten told him that his works were nevertheless in high demand in Berlin. Haydn mentioned this appreciatively in his 1776 autobiographical sketch. In 1790, with the death of Nikolaus Esterházy, Haydn became semi- independent of his long-time employers the Esterházy family.
Billy Joe slowly repeats the word, "damnation". Meanwhile, Tennessee walks over to the truck and tells Fanny that "I prefer the older stuff", while looking at her appreciatively. After he makes a few more suggestive remarks and, opening the truck door, reaches to touch her, Fanny responds, "I think you've said just about enough, young man". Meanwhile, Billy Joe asks Willis if he expects to make a lot of money tonight and Willis tells him that it could be a good crowd and maybe he will see him there.
In the introduction to his review of God's Nightmares, Marsh notes appreciatively that Telefilm Canada and other funding bodies in recent years "have completely redefined how money is awarded to filmmakers across the country", choosing to support dozens of different projects "instead of bankrolling two- or three-million-dollar epics by washed-up directors who have been phoning it in since middle age", representing "a shake-up that is already transforming the landscape of Canadian film in a fundamental way." It has been reported that Cockburn's project had a budget of $300,000.
Indeed, Jahan was cautious in her portrayal of sexual and psychological problems, resisting the urge to pummel society. Ismat Chughtai appreciatively wrote of her works but criticised her female characters for not being stronger; Jahan took this advice to heart and made her subsequent characters bolder. Jahan wrote in a sensitive fashion about the connections between her characters, but in her stories addressing the wreckage of families following the Partition of India, she was able to portray the devastation and the meaninglessness of relationships. In her later stories, she was lauded for the nuanced depiction of empathy.
She received her worst injury of the journey on a bus in Afghanistan, when a rifle butt hit her and fractured three ribs; however, this only delayed her for a short while. She wrote appreciatively about the landscape and people of Afghanistan, calling herself "Afghanatical" and claiming that the Afghan "is a man after my own heart". In Pakistan, she visited Swat (where she was a guest of the last wali, Miangul Aurangzeb) and the mountain area of Gilgit. The final leg of her trip took her through the Punjab region and over the border to India towards Delhi.
Ortzen grew up in the East End of London, and his first novel, Down Donkey Row (1938), was appreciatively reviewed by Hugh Massingham as "a picture, at once faithful and amusing, of the East End".Hugh Massingham, 'Donkey Row', The Observer,13 March 1938 However, his second novel was not so well-received, and thereafter Ortzen stuck to translation and writing non-fiction. In the late 1930s he had moved to Paris,Ortzen, Rue de Paris, 1939 and after the war he and his wife ran a guest house in Brittany.Ortzen, Our Guests Paid in Francs, 1953.
The Dreyfus Affair remains the most famous of Méliès's reconstructed actualities, surpassing even his highly successful 1902 work in the genre, The Coronation of Edward VII. The film historian Georges Sadoul believed The Dreyfus Affair to be the first "politically engaged film" in the history of cinema. In a study of the Dreyfus affair, the cultural historian Venita Datta comments appreciatively on the dramatic power of Méliès's series, with the combat between Dreyfusard and anti-Dreyfusard journalists "brilliantly played up". The series is prominently featured in Susan Daitch's 2001 novel Paper Conspiracies, which includes fictionalized accounts of its making, preservation, and survival.
It was also given a spot on Booklists Editor's Choice list for 2003. Happy Valentine's Day Dolores, involving a series of mishaps that take place after Dolores can't resist peeking at a frog necklace in Faye's room, also received a starred review; Cooper stated that, "With so much to laugh at, children will enjoy repeat reads--and so will the grown-ups." Dolores Meets Her Match deals with Dolores' rivalry with the new cat expert at school, a girl with a siamese cat (Samuels has noted that she owns a Siamese cat herself). Zarina Mullan Plath of Parent's Choice wrote appreciatively about Samuels' illustrations and her portrayal of childhood rivalry.
Flavours and aromas are described appreciatively using terms which include "grassy", "floral", "citrus", "spicy", "piney", "lemony", "grapefruit", and "earthy". Many pale lagers have fairly low hop influence, while lagers marketed as Pilsener or brewed in the Czech Republic may have noticeable noble hop aroma. Certain ales (particularly the highly hopped style known as India Pale Ale, or IPA) can have high levels of hop bitterness. Brewers may use software tools to control the bittering levels in the boil and adjust recipes to account for a change in the hop bill or seasonal variations in the crop that may lead to the need to compensate for a difference in alpha acid contribution.
As a result of his whiny persona and lack of true slapstick punishment against him (the cornerstone of Stooge humor), Joe has been less popular with contemporary Stooge aficionados, so much so, that "Stooge-a-Polooza" TV host Rich Koz has even apologized on the air before showing Besser shorts; during the show's tenure he received more than a few letters from viewers expressing their outrage over his airing them. Besser does have his defenders, however. Columbia historians Edward Watz and Ted Okuda have written appreciatively of Besser bringing new energy to what was by then a flagging theatrical series. The Stooges shorts with Besser were filmed from the spring of 1956 to the end of 1957.
The story appears in the form of a short anecdote in the collection of Phaedrus and concerns an old woman who comes across an empty wine jar, the lingering smell of which she appreciatively sniffs and praises, saying 'Oh sweet spirits, I do declare, how excellent you must once have been to have left behind such fine remains!'Aesopica Phaedrus is playing with the comic stereotype of the drunken old woman, who was a stock figure of both Greek and Roman comedy, as illustrated in the statue here. The fable has been used comparatively rarely. In France an illustration of it appeared in the first emblem book of Guillaume Guéroult, accompanied by a long poem on the importance of educating children early.
Cikovsky, 389 According to Downes the painting was initially exhibited without Homer's having titled it, and received its name from a hunter who shouted appreciatively "Right and left!", the term for a rifleman's accomplishment in taking down two birds in quick succession with a double- barreled shotgun.Cikovsky, 388National Gallery of Art Upon viewing the painting in New York, its first owner, Randal Morgan, asked several questions regarding Homer's intent: he inquired as to the direction of the largest wave, and the cause of the disturbance in the water at the front of the picture, which he believed was the impetus for the ducks' movement to leave their feeding.Cikovsky, 389 The questions were forwarded to the artist, but his reply is unknown.
Whether playing Dixieland, bebop, or avant-garde jazz, in big bands or in small groups, Manne's self-professed goal was to make the music swing.To the end of his life, Manne felt that "swinging" was the most important component of his, or anyone's, jazz playing. See the 1982 interview by Arganian, p. 60. His fellow musicians attested to his listening appreciatively to those around him and being ultra-sensitive to the needs and the nuances of the music played by the others in the band,Pianist Russ Freeman, who had performed with him for years, would praise his ability to listen to the other musicians and added that those who criticized his playing as old-fashioned didn't realize "what it felt like to play with him".
Parakilas (1999, 102) For instance, Emma Wedgwood (1808–1896), the granddaughter of the wealthy industrialist Josiah Wedgwood, took piano lessons from none other than Frédéric Chopin, and apparently achieved a fair level of proficiency. Following her marriage to Charles Darwin, Emma still played the piano daily, while her husband listened appreciatively. A number of female piano students became outright virtuose, and the skills of woman pianists inspired the work of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, who dedicated difficult-to-play works to their woman friends.Wheelock (1999, 116) notes that with but a single exception, the dedicatees of Haydn's keyboard works were all women (the exception is the first publication authorised by his employer Nikolaus Esterházy, the sonatas of 1774, which were dedicated to him).
In 1755, Corsica had, under the leadership of Pasquale Paoli, freed itself from being governed by the Republic of Genoa. In The Social Contract Rousseau had written appreciatively about Corsica: On August 31, 1764, Rousseau received a letter from Matteo Buttafuoco, Corsican envoy to France, inviting Rousseau to be the "wise man" he had spoken of when mentioning Corsica in The Social Contract; essentially Rousseau was being asked to be a law giver for Corsica. Buttafuoco offered to share any knowledge he could to help Rousseau in this task; and stated that Paoli would personally supply any further information Rousseau might require. On October 15, 1764, Rousseau replied accepting the assignment and asking to be furnished with historical details regarding the people of Corsica.
One American critic commented: Méliès used his share of the considerable profits from The Coronation of Edward VII to produce two additional major films the same year: Robinson Crusoe and Gulliver's Travels Among the Lilliputians and the Giants. In complexity and notability, The Coronation of Edward VII remains second only to the multipart 1899 docudrama The Dreyfus Affair among Méliès's reconstructed newsreels. In their book-length studies of Méliès, John Frazer commented appreciatively on the film's "dignity and restraint," and Elizabeth Ezra highlighted the film's "interplay between fantasy and realism" inviting "viewers to question the distinction between the two representative modes." A few days after the coronation, the film was screened for Edward VII himself, who found the imitation ceremony delightful.
Magnin was a veteran political fund-raiser and power broker in the Democratic Party. He was treasurer of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's northern California re-election campaign in 1944, a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1948 (which nominated President Harry S. Truman) and again in 1964, when he co-chaired the Finance Committee of President Lyndon B. Johnson's campaign in California. Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Magnin was one of a quartet of wealthy San Francisco Jewish contributors to Democratic candidates, appreciatively called "The Green Machine" by career politicians, the others being the Fairmont Hotel magnate Benjamin Swig, Lilli Ann clothing company founder Adolph Schuman, and real estate mogul Walter Shorenstein. The four did not always agree in their choice of candidates.
By her account, Lejeune took her slides away under the pretence of having them photographed for her, but instead presented them as his own work at a conference and in a subsequent publication. From the available published evidence it is clear that both Lejeune and Gautier contributed significantly to the discovery, but it remains unclear who was first. In a personal letter from 5 November 1958 to Gautier, Lejeune wrote appreciatively about 'your preparations' that were instrumental to the discovery, and Gautier appeared as co-author on two seminal papers: one on the discovery of trisomy 21 and a second one about the cell culture techniques that Gautier had learned during a scholarship (1955–1956) at Harvard, Boston which made the discovery possible.
Balin (2000), To Reveal Our Hearts, p. 23. Mapu was the first fellow Hebrew writer with whom she initiated a correspondence, in 1861, writing to him in Hebrew and enclosing an original piece of writing.Balin (2000), To Reveal Our Hearts, p. 30-31. He responded appreciatively, complimenting the lucidity of her style and dubbing her a "maskelet", or enlightened woman. They exchanged a handful of letters over the next year or two, and also met briefly in person on two occasions, in 1861, and again in 1866 or 1867, both times at Mapu's home in Kovno. Markel-Mosessohn wrote to Judah Leib Gordon for the first time in 1868, after she had completed a draft of the first part of Ha-Yehudim be-Angliya, her translation of Francolm's work.
Kuitert in the course of his life moved from Reformed orthodoxy to Reformed middle orthodoxy following his mentor and Ph.D. supervisor Berkouwer, for whom he wrote his dissertation on the Divine Co- Humanity (Dutch: medemenselijkheid, Afrikaans: Medemenslikheid) (De mensvormigheid Gods (1962); German edition 1967). Then, after writing voluminously, critically, and yet appreciatively on Karl Barth, Kuitert later also moved on to a totally unorthodox stance on Jesus Christ, skipping neo- orthodoxy altogether. Kuitert developed his views beyond those of Berkouwer whose views seemed definitive. According to Ecumenical News International, Kuitert, after his own emeritation in 1989, and by now the most widely read theologian in the Netherlands, broke completely with Berkouwer and "Middle Orthodox" tradition (the theological mainstream of the reformed church) in his book, Jesus, the Inheritance of Christianity (1998).
And again, on Shakespeare's artistry, Hazlitt remarks on the way the second plot, involving Gloucester, Edgar, and Edmund, is interwoven with the main plot: "Indeed, the manner in which the threads of the story are woven together is almost as wonderful in the way of art as the carrying on the tide of passion, still varying and unimpaired, is on the score of nature."Hazlitt 1818, p. 171. Hazlitt appreciatively quotes long extracts from what he considered some of the best scenes, and remarks that, as sad as the concluding events are, "The oppression of the feelings is relieved by the very interest we take in the misfortunes of others, and by the reflections to which they give birth."This is part of the theory of tragedy he was in the process of developing. See Kinnaird 1978, pp. 190–91.
Christian's decision to leave his garden to the state was appreciatively received by The Rhodesia Herald, which published an article on 8 June 1948 that read, "If the offer of the owner Mr. Basil Christian is accepted by the Rhodesian Government, the finest and most complete collection of aloes and cycads in the world will become the property of the Colony for all time." Christian said in an interview his work could not have been achieved and his collection could not have been expanded such were it not for the botanists at Kew and the South African government's Division of Botany, who frequently sent him new specimens. In the interview, he noted that while other gardens had a greater number of species, Ewanrigg had still made a significant contribution to science, and that the complete records of all the species would be donated to the state along with the garden.
Statue of Munchausen in Bodenwerder Reviewing the first edition of Raspe's book in December 1785, a writer in The Critical Review commented appreciatively: A writer for The English Review around the same time was less approving: "We do not understand how a collection of lies can be called a satire on lying, any more than the adventures of a woman of pleasure can be called a satire on fornication." W. L. George described the fictional Baron as a "comic giant" of literature, describing his boasts as "splendid, purposeless lie[s] born of the joy of life". Théophile Gautier fils highlighted that the Baron's adventures are endowed with an "absurd logic pushed to the extreme and which backs away from nothing". According to an interview, Jules Verne relished reading the Baron stories as a child, and used them as inspiration for his own adventure novels.
Girlschool's members themselves described their music in different ways, from "slapstick rock" to "raucous (...) heavy metal rock 'n' roll", and, even acknowledging the common origin of their music in the NWOBHM, they sometimes found it difficult to associate their songs to a single genre or subgenre of rock music. Just like most punk songs, Girlschool's lyrics usually have short and direct texts, often reflecting the wild rock 'n' roll lifestyle and treating sex and romance as seen from a feminine point of view, with the use of reverse sexism and tongue-in-cheek sense of humour. Although many of their songs revolve around these topics, the band members themselves never resorted to sex appeal gimmickry: as Creem noted appreciatively in 1982, "Girlschool doesn't pimp their gender". Some of their songs deal also with more serious matters, such as exploitation and abuse of women, murder, addiction, the destruction of the environment, social and political issues.
Like the Flight, it was popular with Joachim Patinir and his circle, who set the family amid extensive world landscapes. Maryan Ainsworth contrasts this group, centred on the outward-looking international trading-centre of Antwerp, with the paintings dominated by large figures of the Virgin and Child produced by Gerard David and his circle, based in Bruges, a city that had lost commercial pre-eminence and was now turning in on itself.David, 241–253, especially 252 18th-century depictions were often set beside classical ruins, and a few 19th- century ones featured Ancient Egyptian architecture. Some Romantic depictions placed the incident in lush paradisal settings, notably one that is "the first successful realization of Philipp Otto Runge's ambition to unite Christian orthodoxy with Romantic mysticism and his own personal cosmology",German, 186 or, less appreciatively, one where "he seeks to express the working of divine forces in nature in a vague, emotional manner".
" Steve Jones of USA Today commented "on the equally potent Made in America, the two talk about their rises to fame, while acknowledging those who helped and inspired them." Sputnikmusic's Tyler Fisher noted that "Frank Ocean asks, "What's a god to a nonbeliever?" on "No Church in the Wild", but later invokes "sweet baby Jesus" on "Made in America", pandering to each track without a thought to the coherence of the album." Los Angeles Times writer Randall Roberts stated "the album's highlight, and an instant classic, is "Made in America," a solid, slow-paced Frank Ocean-teamed jam about the American dream that reveals the main difference between West and Jay Z: humility." Popdust writer Emily Exton that while "Frank Ocean's "Sweet Baby Jesus" might be stuck in your head for the rest of the day", the highlist is "Kanye who manages to both appreciatively give thanks to his rise to fame as well as generate more than one eye roll with his bravado.

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