Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

21 Sentences With "catchily"

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

His catchily-named "Slay It, Don't Spray It" segment with Nick Jonas features both!
This is the goal of the catchily named FIRE movement (for financial independence, retire early).
I'd rate it as Less Bad than the Intel disaster (which is very catchily named ZombieLoad) and More Bad than the WhatsApp hack.
The game's predecessor, the not-so-catchily-named Supersonic Acrobatic Rocket-Powered Battle-Cars, came out in 2008 and received middling reviews from critics.
The eerie silence in XENON1T, and in other catchily named dark matter detectors like LUX and PICO, had already dimmed many experts' hopes about DAMA.
And unfortunately, the information essential to assembling it—to understanding what the virus catchily labeled 2019-nCoV will do next—is only starting to trickle in.
Coffee. It might just be why Coca-Cola has latched onto our favourite caffeinated beverage, combining it into the (not so catchily named) Coca-Cola Plus Coffee No Sugar.
Bell Helicopter's catchily named Autonomous Pod Transport 70 (aka APT 70) has managed a major milestone, performing its first autonomous flight during a test at its Forth Worth proving ground.
The clip above, which features Dan slowly being squashed beneath a six foot orange balloon filling with water, is the first in a catchily named segment called "Giant Balloon June".
On top of that, the EU is now formally launching the catchily-named permanent structured cooperation ("PESCO" in Eurospeak) between 24 member states for the development and deployment of defense capabilities.
Just last month Najib Razak, the prime minister (pictured), launched the latest iteration: the catchily named Bumiputera Economic Transformation Roadmap (BETR) 2.0, which, among other things, will steer a greater share of government contracts to bumiputera businesses.
A recent study by the European Council on Foreign Relations, a think-tank, divides Europe's voters into four groups named catchily, if not entirely convincingly, for factions from "Game of Thrones", a television series about failures in governance.
I had a great time last year with Sony's catchily named DPT-RP1, an e-paper tablet that's perfect for reading PDFs and other big documents, but one of my main issues was simply how big the thing is.
In the experiments they ran, the researchers found that the system, catchily named Decentralized Distributed Proximal Policy Optimization or DD-PPO, appeared to scale almost ideally, with performance increasing nearly linearly to more computing power dedicated to the task.
Last summer, tech giants including Google, Facebook and Twitter formed the catchily entitled Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism (Gifct) to collaborate on engineering solutions to combat online extremism, such as sharing content classification techniques and effective reporting methods for users.
La Mercerie sits at the junction of two mighty rivers of contemporary eating trends: the redundantly, if catchily, named all-day-cafe movement and the restaurant-as-shopping-catalog approach pursued by Jean-Georges Vongerichten's places inside ABC Carpet & Home.
You might also find yourself in a bustling brothel (Yuzo Kawashima's "Sun in the Last Days of the Shogunate," 1957), wandering through a sketchy street market (Akira Kurosawa's "Stray Dog," 73), in the shadow of giant smokestacks (Heinosuke Gosho's "Where Chimneys Are Seen," 1953) or picking up orders to go from the catchily named No Kidding Noodles (Kawashima's "Suzaki Paradise," 1956).
A massive crackdown on how tech and social media companies use children's data is underway in the UK. Over the next 12 months, everyone from YouTube to Spotify will legally have to conform to a set of 15 "standards" laid out in the catchily-named guide, "Age appropriate design: a code of practice for online services," released on Wednesday by the UK's Information Commissioner's Office.
They sound as determined as Michael Jackson at that age." Music Week stated that "against an unusually fresh and eclectic backdrop, the two 13-year-old rappers make a highly infectious noise incorporating some ragga influences". People Magazine said that "their best trick is inserting catchily melodic refrains in the middle of their free-stylin' raps. That should help them kross over to pop.
In 2012, The Guardian included the song on their list of The Best Number One Records, labelling it "sleek, Arctic-blue minimalism, like an emotionally thwarted retelling of Donna Summer's 'I Feel Love'". In the same year, the UK agency PRS for Music, which collects royalties on behalf of songwriters and composers, named "Can't Get You Out of My Head" the most popular song of the decade because it received the most airplay and live covers in the 2000s decade. According to author Lee Barron, "Can't Get You Out of My Head" "further established Minogue's cultural and commercial relevance in the new millennium". He said the song "with its hypnotic 'la la la' refrain and the deceptively uncomplicated, catchily repetitive beats and synth-sound, marked yet another clearly defined image transformation from the camp-infused Light Years to an emphasis upon a cool, machine-like sexuality".
At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the release received an average score of 78, based on 15 reviews, which evaluates at "generally favorable reviews". In an advance review of The Prettiest Curse for NME, Hannah Mylrea said, "Blending growling riffs worthy of The Strokes with soaring melodies and a generous dash of the band’s no-fucks-given attitude, it’s a break-neck 30 minutes of glorious chaos." Writing for the Hampstead & Highgate Express, Stephen Moore called the album Hinds's "best record yet", writing that it is "highly listenable chart fodder, the lyrics centering on highly dysfunctional kidult relationships, and opens a record which explores the fertile crossovers between garage rock, disco, sampling, synth-pop and more." In his Substack- published "Consumer Guide" column, Robert Christgau hailed the album as "the charming maturation of these club kids who've mastered pop songcraft", "emote ever more catchily about their ever twistier love lives", and "ponder possibilities that have gotten so much chancier" in the wake of a pandemic that gives the release a sharp poignancy.

No results under this filter, show 21 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.