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81 Sentences With "arrestingly"

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

She recounts the night with terror but also arrestingly ugly indignation.
But it's the watch that might change the future most arrestingly.
Nearly all depicted some appalling crisis; nearly all were arrestingly beautiful.
Botanical records they may be, but rarely has algae been so arrestingly beautiful.
This combination of savagery and economy makes for an arrestingly original musical personality.
These stunningly strange, arrestingly intellectual constructs treat the human imagination with humor and forgiveness.
It's arrestingly blunt, as two humans gnarl their voices until they approximate heavily distorted guitars.
Without any attachments the dryer is arrestingly snub-nosed, with the silhouette of a rubber mallet.
The soprano Hila Plitmann arrestingly portrayed a Martian spokesperson, her voice oscillating like a sine wave.
It is least so here in the dances for Ms. Dutton-O'Hara, arrestingly bold and mature.
Anchoring the performance was the mezzo Clémentine Margaine, arrestingly stern and articulate in the title role.
And I was completely stunned to see Tatianna walk into the room, mostly because she's arrestingly beautiful.
Regardless of form or genre, Ray's music has always been engrossing and, at its best, arrestingly beautiful.
Her vocabulary is eclectic and large, her grammar arrestingly idiosyncratic, her skill at group organization often superlative.
The huge screens behind Mr. Ocean displayed the footage: arrestingly close up, smartphone-casual, made by hand.
But first, enjoy these arrestingly beautiful shots of Earthrise and Earthset, courtesy of JAXA and The Planetary Society.
Famous Deaths is one of the Tribeca Film Festival's most morally ambiguous, potentially offensive, and arrestingly weird interactive installations.
Likewise, the puppets in Anomalisa, with their arrestingly lifelike eyes yet visible seams are "mixture of artifice and realism".
The PG County native and self-proclaimed tomboy is charismatic in her raps and arrestingly experimental in her sounds.
With a voice by turns brightly crystalline and arrestingly powerful, she persuasively inhabits the role of this chameleon coquette.
These interpretations of the characters cropped up in fan fiction, Tumblr text posts, GIF sets, and most arrestingly, in art.
JON PARELES An arrestingly beautiful lead single from the forthcoming third album by American Football, lonely titans of 1990s emo.
This arrestingly unequal pattern of global income distribution has become known, famously (at least to economists), as the elephant graph.
With music that is often arrestingly lovely, the production is fluent in the stage language of then and now (5549:5233).
But even in the company of new scores by three young composers, Berio's ingenious "Circles," composed in 1960, sounded arrestingly fresh.
The new National Veterans Memorial and Museum is an arrestingly beautiful building, a spiral that seems to spring from the ground.
As on Grindr, many BateWorld profiles are arrestingly frank about their interests, and in a lexicon as rich as it is specific.
Criminals, after all, generally don't look any different from law-abiders, which is one reason photographs of them are so arrestingly mysterious.
It's a far cry from "Hiroshima Mon Amour," arrestingly presented by Bertrand Marcos and Ms. Ardant at the Théâtre des Bouffes Parisiens.
Even as couples and soloists emerged from the work's shifting constellations — most arrestingly the steady, impassioned Zimmi Coker — the ensemble was the star.
It had an honorably creaky nineteenth-century plot, complete with unsigned legal papers and a vengeful judge, yet the dialogue was arrestingly contemporary.
An arrestingly creepy feature of many images is the discord between a dreamer's impassive expression and her predicament: she is literally not awake to its horror.
It became the band's biggest hit, thanks to one of Mr. Cornell's signature vocal performances, which was arrestingly drowsy, topped off with a few fiercely controlled shrieks.
It's not her job exactly: A biologist with wide-ranging curiosity, Lutz moonlights as a data-driven illustrator who transforms public data sets into arrestingly beautiful visual objects.
Unable to continue his scientific work, he poured his creative energies into painting, producing, by the time of his death in 1979, more than 3,000 arrestingly unfiltered gouaches.
It also uncovered the songful properties of a row of carefully tuned flower pots in "part 3," an arrestingly poetic movement and one of the highlights of Thursday's program.
While Tyrese is the picture-perfect embodiment of conventional sex appeal, Usher is arrestingly bizarre, contorting his body and exaggerating his facial expressions so that he looks nearly grotesque.
Despite that unevenness, there's no denying that Johnson's film, with a script by Pulitzer-winning playwright Suzan Lori-Parks, is an ambitious and arrestingly compelling work that packs a mighty punch.
Arrestingly sleek at just 1.8 inches thin, the TV's OLED display technology produces gorgeous imagery with intense contrasts and rich, natural-looking colors, and supports Dolby Vision for a detailed, high-res picture.
She adores the New Orleans of her childhood—not the tourist-filled downtown, but a majority-black, working-class community that is often overlooked, and which her vivid descriptions bring arrestingly to life.
The one for Tiler Peck (flanked by the female corps), with repeated turns into a sideways leg extension, is the ballet's most outgoing; Ms. Peck also becomes, arrestingly but reasonably, its angriest character.
Teetering through the clutter, she maintained an arrestingly unsteady state for the nearly hourlong work, flirting with control — how much to keep, how much to relinquish — over her body, her voice, her surroundings.
That they rap far more fluently than she does (and sometimes in arrestingly bawdy fashion, given that their collaborator is underage) is only a mild inconvenience — Bhad Bhabie has the conviction of a true brat.
In his photo series "In Praise of Shadows," for example, he examines fire through hourslong exposures that capture the life span of a candle's flame as it flickers and burns out, yielding arrestingly haunting images.
Lovecraft readers might recognize the ancient Antarctic city from At the Mountains of Madness, one of his most arrestingly creative works (albeit something that's still hard to separate from its author's notoriously virulent racism and xenophobia).
Directed by Knud Adams for Glass Bandits Theater Company, this arrestingly designed fever dream of a play, written by and starring Carl Holder, starts strong and ends gloriously but gets awfully muddled in the middle (1:15).
When he sings that he'll tell Mimì in a couple of words who he is, Pavarotti's high note is so arrestingly golden that it finally makes sense that, when he asks if he should keep talking, she's speechless.
An expansion of Ms. De Keersmaeker's "Vortex Temporum" — a 65-minute piece created for the stage and set to Gérard Grisey's score of the same name — "Work" springs from an arrestingly simple vocabulary of walking, skipping and running.
While the DeLay tribute in Manhattan had showcased the bulletproof technique and tonal brilliance she had bequeathed to her students, the Phillips event offered generous helpings of Bach, including an arrestingly vulnerable and heartfelt Chaconne played by Daniel Phillips.
Arrestingly direct, one of his most well-known English songs opens with the line "I was born blind and I don't know why," going on to tell of his parents "crying their hearts in confusion" when learning of his condition.
At times, the film — as in its arrestingly fiery opening — seems to be straining to express ideas beyond the rote, only to be thwarted by a director who doesn't know how to develop them or when to pick up the pace.
And two of Ms. Jonas's arrestingly magical yet simple multimedia installations will have their American premiere: "Reanimation," seen in Documenta 13 in Kassel, Germany, in 2012, and "stream or river flight or pattern iii," her largest work since the Biennale.
While much of the musical seems to be merely a decorative, time-tarnished gilt frame, inside that frame Mr. Steggert provides us with a portrait of an artist virtually as alive and arrestingly drawn as any of the figures in Lautrec's oeuvre.
Though the show is sadly light on original music (what we do hear is a hybrid of synth pop and hair metal, all written by the band and fronted by the arrestingly beautiful singer Gabi Bechtel), this visual element helps make up for it.
Self-serious and prone to pompous commentary (she describes a paperback she's reading as "arrestingly undissembling"), she also possesses an arrogant insecurity that leads her, when Archer asks her to ghostwrite various things for him, to interpret the request as proof of her latent genius.
Raw and arrestingly intimate, Relationship chronicles Ernst and Drucker's private moments as an opposite-oriented transgender couple — over the time period in which the photos were taken, Ernst was transitioning from feminine to masculine expression, while Drucker was transitioning from masculine to feminine expression.
For snacks and hot chocolate, stop by the Kulm Country Club, a storied chalet recently remodeled by Norman Foster, a part-time St. Moritz resident who also designed the timber-shingled blob that is the Chesa Futura private residence (the most arrestingly contemporary architecture in town).
With active shooter scenarios apparently on the rise—or at least increasingly covered in the media—and the number of gun homicides in the US remaining 25 times higher than most other high-income nations, this ersatz house, with all of its fake furniture, is still arrestingly real.
The result of the group's efforts is unlike anything else in my restaurant-going experience: Lunch (there is no dinner service as of yet) consisted of eight courses, a gustatory grand tour of altitudinous ecosystems, each stop an opportunity to use age-old ingredients and techniques to arrestingly modern effect.
The first stirrings in Jacobs's day of what we call "gentrification" she called, arrestingly, "unslumming," insisting that the process works when a slum, amid falling rents and vacated buildings, becomes slimmed down to a "loyal core" of residents who, with eyes on the street, keep it livable enough for new residents to decide to enter.
Among these were the manticore (head of a man, body of a lion, spiky tail), the lamia (head of a man, breasts of a woman, body of a scaly cow), and the Scythian lamb (like a regular lamb, except it grows out of a stalk in the ground)—but also, arrestingly, the antelope and the pelican.
Chris Lattner, the CEO and creative director of Berlin's The Room, which is among the legends — its latest game includes what I have been told is an arrestingly accurate simulation of being on an elevator, so lifelike that if you were there, you'd swear it's moving — reports the company brings in $220,238 to $230,221 a month.
The grief, anger, and betrayal felt over the situation in Flint, articulated by artists throughout the region and the nation, is expressed in Re:Formation through a multitude of media: documentary video footage by Detroit artist and cultural archivist Kate Levy; a comic book starring a Flint family rendered as whimsical woodland creatures, by Philadelphia artist Meg Lemieur with Beehive Design Collective; and, arrestingly, in "Plumbum," a large-scale installation by Bay City artist Mark Bleshenski.
Hindustan Times wrote in their review that the book was a "template biography", and was "arrestingly written".
Denise Djokic (born 13 November 1980) is a cellist from Halifax, Nova Scotia. The Strad magazine has called her instantly recognizable for her "arrestingly beautiful tone colour".
Maria Dunn is a twice Juno-nominated Canadian songwriter and musician. She has been described as "an arrestingly powerful singer-songwriter who writes great historical and social commentary." Her music blends Celtic folk with North American bluegrass and country influences.
Bizarre editing and no-frills cinematography make for arrestingly disconcerting images that evoke a cockeyed alternative universe.” J. Hoberman for The Village Voice: The least one can say for The Golden Boat is that it should show would-be purveyors of ironic noir how it’s done.
This was arrestingly bold and highly condensed, quite unlike the classical proportions of Caslon's design, but very suitable for poster typography and similar in aesthetic effect to the slab serif and the (generally wider) "fat faces" of the period. It also added a lower-case. Similar condensed sans-serif typefaces, often display capitals, became very successful.
The Winona bank was unusual for its time and place. In the prosperous river town where Victorian commercial blocks prevailed, the bank's cube-like geometry was arrestingly different. Botanically inspired (and decidedly nonclassical) terracotta ornamentation crept across its façades. Stained glass, generally reserved for religious structures, was used liberally in expansive windows and a sky lit ceiling, transforming daylight into a multi-hued glow.
Writing for The Guardian, Wendy Ide commended him for "combin[ing] soulful Bollywood heartthrob charisma with an arrestingly intense performance." In the comedy Dream Girl, he starred as a cross-gender actor who speaks in a female voice while working at a call centre which unwittingly attracts male attention. Nandini Ramnath of Scroll.in considered his "manic energy and believable Everyman persona" to be the film's highlight.
412 In an observation arrestingly revealing of its era, Tiltman chooses to identify the act of "illegally demanding a half-ticket" for the Salisbury train in the opening lines of the book as an example of Denton's "mis-deeds". Robert Phillips notesPhillips, Robert (1974) Denton Welch, New York: Twayne, p. 46 that for some time following publication, many, including some significant bibliographies, took Maiden Voyage to be a work of literal autobiography.
Woodward often uses unnamed sources in his reporting for the Post and in his books. Using extensive interviews with firsthand witnesses, documents, meeting notes, diaries, calendars, and other documentation, Woodward attempts to construct a seamless narrative of events, most often told through the eyes of the key participants. Nicholas von Hoffman has made the criticism that "arrestingly irrelevant detail is [often] used",Nicholas von Hoffman, "Unasked Questions," The New York Review of Books, June 10, 1976, Vol. 23, Number 10.
" Young himself stated that the song is "overblown, but it's great." Village Voice critic Robert Christgau described the song as a "major" song that was "gratifying musically." Rolling Stone critic John Mendelsohn described it as being "particularly interesting" for how Young "treats his favorite theme — his inability to find and keep a lover — in a novel and arrestingly brazen (in terms of our society's accelerating consciousness of women's rights) manner." The New Rolling Stone Album Guide critic Robert Sheffield described the lyrics as being "unintentionally hilarious.
His investigation lets him conclude that the murderer is somewhere near his home town and he returns to find that his town now has a new Police In-Charge, Inspector Ajay Kumar. Rohit suspects that Ajay is not who he claims to be and starts making inquiries, and he soon unmasks Ajay, who is none other than Deva. Accused of killing Vasudev, Deva pleads his innocence, to no avail, as no one believes him anymore. Desperate, he kidnaps Choudhry's arrestingly beautiful daughter, Kajal, and bolts, with Rohit.
The New York Times called her work in the Australian Art exhibition "arrestingly modern" — this was in contrast to the conservative works of other Australian artists. In a later interview with The Advertiser, on 17 June 1936, Allen mentioned all the art work exhibited had non-Australian scenery and had titles such as "Landscape in Spain" and "Bosky Dells in Surrey". She elaborated, "If I had come upon as much as a single kangaroo I would have hailed it with delight". Allen returned to Melbourne in 1935, for eleven months.
Castle Coch From Morganstown Castell Coch – exterior Castell Coch, a ruined Medieval castle, lying to north of Cardiff, was intended as an occasional summer residence for the Marquess of Bute. Burges's reported on the proposed reconstruction of Castell Coch in 1872 but construction was delayed until 1875, partly because of the pressure of work at Cardiff Castle. The exterior comprises three towers, "almost equal to each other in diameter, but arrestingly dissimilar in height ."The Keep tower, the Well Tower and the Kitchen Tower incorporate a series of apartments, of which the main sequence, the Castellan's Rooms, lie within the Keep.
John Boland, writing in the Irish Independent, praised the original Single-Handed for its "taut and suggestive" screenplay. Heralding it as "the real deal" and "that rare oddity—an RTE drama that works" and drawing comparisons to the Roman Polanski film Chinatown, he said "it didn't lose its nerve by resorting to far-fetched plot twists or ludicrous melodrama". Boland's report on the sequel indicated his view that it "wasn't as arresting as its predecessor but it was a superior drama all the same". Boland viewed Single-Handed: The Drowning Man as also being a "superior drama" whilst "a sense of place was arrestingly captured, too".
Listen out, too, for a clutch > of exhilarating, at times arrestingly Lisztian choruses. ... Other > highlights include the lovely quintet "Doubtless thou art our Father" and > soprano aria "Tell ye the Daughter of Zion" (such enchantingly > Mendelssohnian clarinets), the powerful Overture to Part 2, Mary Magdalene’s > almost operatic "Lord, why hidest thou thy face?", and that piercingly > expressive orchestral interlude that opens the final scene entitled "At the > Sepulchre – Morning" (pre-echoes here of Elgar). Wonderfully affecting, too, > is the purely orchestral introduction to the memorable "Weep ye not for the > dead", and the sublime unaccompanied vocal quartet "Yea, though I walk > through the valley".
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 84%, based on 55 reviews, and an average rating of 7.49/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Girl uses one aspiring dancer's story as the framework for a poignant drama that approaches its difficult themes with fittingly alluring grace." On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 73 out of 100, based on 15 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". David Ehrlich of IndieWire called the film "arrestingly empathetic" and gave the film a grade of B+, while expressing a concern over the casting of the cisgender male actor for the role of a trans woman.
Castell Coch In 1872, while work at Cardiff Castle was proceeding, Burges presented a scheme for the complete reconstruction of Castell Coch, a ruined thirteenth-century fort on the Bute estate to the north of Cardiff. Burges's report on the possible reconstruction was delivered in 1872 but building was delayed until 1875, in part because of the pressure of works at Cardiff Castle and in part because of an unfounded concern on behalf of the Marquess's trustees that he was facing bankruptcy. The exterior comprises three towers, described by Newman as "almost equal to each other in diameter, [but] arrestingly dissimilar in height." Burges's main inspiration was the work of the almost contemporaneous French architect Eugène Viollet-le- Duc who was undertaking similar restoration and building work for Napoleon III.
Critics largely reviewed The First Moderns favorably, appreciating Everdell's interdisciplinary approach, in publications including the New York Review of Books, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and the Washington Post.Jim Holt, "Infinitesimally Yours", review of William R. Everdell, The First Moderns: Profiles in the Origins of Twentieth Century Thought, New York Review of Books, May 20, 1999. "Drawing together such disparate manifestations as Seurat's pointillism, Muybridge's stop-motion photography, the poetry of Whitman, Rimbaud, and Laforgue, the tone rows of Schoenberg, and the novels of Joyce, the author [Everdell] makes an engrossing and persuasive case for his claim that 'the heart of Modernism is the postulate of ontological discontinuity'"Hugh Kenner, "A Change of Mind, review of William R. Everdell, The First Moderns: Profiles in the Origins of Twentieth Century Thought, The New York Times, June 29, 1997. "The change started to happen in the 1870s, and not, as William R. Everdell arrestingly demonstrates in The First Moderns, in painting or in literature but in number theory.

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