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17 Sentences With "archetypally"

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

If you're not in the target audience, it's remarkable how archetypally unappealing he is.
Blonde, chiselled and archetypally Aryan, Gottfried was seen as a powerful symbol by the regime.
Even in the archetypally feminine role of mother, women can find themselves the subjects of that old and storied hatred.
Your characters literally know everyone in town by name, since the game generates (extremely, archetypally British) names for every single bystander, enemy, and corpse.
An archetypally unglamorous expert — a statistician in the federal bureaucracy — was describing how he tried to keep the faith of the government's constitutional mission while Bannon and Kobach had his boss's ear and were secretly undermining it.
I wonder if the writer Jen Silverman has had the same experience, because her inspired new play, "The Moors," rolls out like the stuff of dreams, with telling passages heightened by surrealistic flights of fancy — including that mastiff and hen in an archetypally pleasing, you-really-ought-to-see-this parable.
As such it is also the key image of its imaginary matrix, its seity, purposefulness, archetypally determined intentionality, and existential project.
Avon Water is a small river draining some of the southwest of the New Forest in Hampshire to The Solent. West of the upper part of its archetypally dendritic drainage basin, which has formed due to the forest's heath soil, is the due south, much larger River Avon, rising in Wiltshire.
The family trust's key landholdings are in Putney and West Brompton, London. Most of the houses were originally let for a large premium, to give long leases, archetypally 99 years. These have been gradually reduced in number by freehold enfranchisement, however value loss has been counteracted by a manifold in property prices in the capital over the last centuries, greater than all other British cities.
Dancing the hora on a kibbutz The Horah is a circle dance that predates the State of Israel. It was introduced to Palestine by Baruch Agadati in 1924. Adapted from the Romanian hora, it has become an icon of Jewish and Israeli folk dance. It can be performed to many of the traditional klezmer and Israeli folk songs — archetypally to the music of Hava Nagila.
Afternoon is a time when the sun is descending from its daytime peak. During the afternoon, the sun moves from roughly the center of the sky to deep in the west. In late afternoon, sunlight is particularly bright and glaring, because the sun is at a low angle in the sky. The standard working time in most industrialized countries goes from the morning to the late afternoon or evening — archetypally, 9 am to 5 pm — so the latter part of this time takes place in the afternoon.
Firstly, soul is synonymous with the daimonic realm itself, the > realm of Imagination, and is really an abbreviation for the collective Anima > Mundi, or World-Soul. Secondly, soul refers to whatever images the World- > Soul itself uses to represent itself. Archetypally, this image is usually > feminine and appears, for example, as a female daimon or goddess who, as > Jung would say, "personifies the collective unconscious." Now the third use > of "soul" refers to the image by which we, as individuals, are represented > in the World-Soul.
An interregnum (plural interregna or interregnums) is a period of discontinuity or "gap" in a government, organization, or social order. Archetypally, it was the period of time between the reign of one monarch and the next (coming from Latin inter-, "between" and rēgnum, "reign" [from rex, rēgis, "king"]), and the concepts of interregnum and regency therefore overlap. Historically, the longer and heavier interregna were typically accompanied by widespread unrest, civil and succession wars between warlords, and power vacuums filled by foreign invasions or the emergence of a new power. A failed state is usually in interregnum.
As to the slopes, they may have been considered sufficient, or castle builders may have improved them hewing into them to make them harder to climb and reduce risk of landslide. Often high walls, towers/turrets and a neck ditch, cutting off the spur from the rest of the hill, have been added. When more inset on an escarpment, defensive status of topography (lie of the land) as a ridge castle applies, archetypally having two slopes of lower gradient, not one. A long spur castle is sometimes, but not always, subdivided into a lower ward and a more strongly defended upper ward (or even a succession of three or more wards).
In foremost use soffit is the first definition in the table above. In spatial analysis, it is one of the two necessary planes of any (3-dimensional) optionally built area, eaves, which projects, for such area to be within the building's space. In two-dimensional face analysis it is a discrete face almost always parallel with the ground that bridges the gap(s) between a building's siding (walls) and either: their parallel extraneous plane (fascia) where such exists; or where no such plane, a point along (or the abrupt end of) the roof's outer projection (overhang). Soffits and fascias are archetypally screwed or nailed to rafters known as lookout rafters or lookouts for short, their repair being often undertaken simultaneously.
Paglia, Sexual Personae, 581, 583 Lauren Berlant termed Hester "the citizen as woman [personifying] love as a quality of the body that contains the purest light of nature," her resulting "traitorous political theory" a "Female Symbolic" literalization of futile Puritan metaphors.Berlant, The Anatomy of National Fantasy, 94, 148, 175 Historicists view Hester as a protofeminist and avatar of the self-reliance and responsibility that led to women's suffrage and reproductive emancipation. Anthony Splendora found her literary genealogy among other archetypally fallen but redeemed women, both historic and mythic. As examples, he offers Psyche of ancient legend; Heloise of twelfth-century France's tragedy involving world- renowned philosopher Peter Abelard; Anne Hutchinson (America's first heretic, circa 1636), and Hawthorne family friend Margaret Fuller.
Shaper tool slide, clapper box and cutting tool boring bar setup to allow cutting of internal features, such as keyways, or even shapes that might otherwise be cut with wire EDM. A shaper is a type of machine tool that uses linear relative motion between the workpiece and a single-point cutting tool to machine a linear toolpath. Its cut is analogous to that of a lathe, except that it is (archetypally) linear instead of helical. A wood shaper is a functionally different woodworking tool, typically with a powered rotating cutting head and manually fed workpiece, usually known simply as a shaper in North America and spindle moulder in the UK. A metalworking shaper is somewhat analogous to a metalworking planer, with the cutter riding a ram that moves relative to a stationary workpiece, rather than the workpiece moving beneath the cutter.

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