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109 Sentences With "chroniclers"

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

Tomorrow's chroniclers will be grateful for Mr Tooze's assiduous research.
These chroniclers had a lot of material to work with.
He doesn't claim that they are perfectly detached, disinterested, nonideological chroniclers.
But both are unusually perceptive chroniclers of their time and place.
Despite her nuanced examination of such white trash icons and chroniclers as
John Binder has a bone to pick with his fellow fashion chroniclers.
Aspden, like most of its chroniclers, was rooting for it to succeed.
Chroniclers of the suffrage struggle tended not to record their black peers.
These contributions chronicle the chroniclers and critics of the Los Angeles art scene.
What these children of the Great Recession want, according to their chroniclers, is stability.
They are the forgotten heroes of the press, journalists and chroniclers, travelers and booksellers.
It has hosted the masters of Helmand's wars and all their cronies and chroniclers.
It's a world without promises, and Osborne is one of its most dedicated chroniclers.
She has never been profiled, and she has carefully eluded most of her father's chroniclers.
Are the nonfiction excerpts — from presidential historians, Lincoln biographers, Civil War chroniclers — real or fake?
Everyone else should come running, because Wasson is one of the great chroniclers of Hollywood lore.
SAMUEL PEPYS and John Evelyn were among the most determinedly inquisitive chroniclers of 17th-century England.
She is on her way to becoming one of the foremost chroniclers of America's "forgotten class".
Student journalists are acting as chroniclers and survivors of mass shootings -- something no journalism class prepares them for.
What could she be hiding that we round-the-clock chroniclers of all things fashion need to know?
It was many years later that he decided to imagine what the lives of these chroniclers were like.
The film also points up the mixed agendas for performers, chroniclers, hangers-on and of course Dylan himself.
Matt Bollinger, a figurative painter from Independence, Missouri, has become one of our most articulate chroniclers of Trump's America.
Chroniclers of the early internet praised its power to provide young sexual minorities with support, sex, and even love.
The wedding's excess and the obviously transactional nature of the match shocked even the usually fawning Gilded Age chroniclers.
They were praised as authentic voices from France's troubled suburbs, articulate and poetic chroniclers of the immigrant youth experience.
This collective forgetfulness is even more puzzling in light of a central preoccupation of ancient chroniclers, the communication of risk.
A permanent exhibition on the upper level makes the case for artists as vital chroniclers of Western exploration and expansion.
Journalists in Mexico are at once investigators, chroniclers and victims of the violence and corruption unleashed by the drug war.
Taking inspiration from Alexis de Tocqueville and other visiting chroniclers of the United States, this series spotlights their cinematic equivalents.
Taking inspiration from Alexis de Tocqueville and other visiting chroniclers of the United States, this series spotlights their cinematic equivalents.
In just a few years Halley Feiffer has become one of our foremost chroniclers of female rage, ambivalence and devastation.
In just a few years, Halley Feiffer has become one of our foremost chroniclers of female rage, ambivalence and devastation.
Lila Neugebauer, the director of "At Home", calls him "one of our most astute chroniclers of the human animal in captivity".
On the one hand, those who see themselves as the chroniclers of fact; on the other, those who hold with fiction.
Neither Byron nor his women have lacked for chroniclers; the combination of first-rate minds with fourth-rate temperaments is irresistible.
Several decades after the conquest, chroniclers detailed the burial rites of three Aztec kings, all brothers who ruled from 1469 to 1502.
Most chroniclers confine themselves to the human interest stories, reasoning that the funding of these hospitals is unlikely to be as gripping.
Notebook Belfast pubs pop up from time to time in the work of Ciaran Carson, one of the city's greatest writers and chroniclers.
Some chroniclers of the case would speculate that Nicole had sent O.J. over the edge that night, because she hadn't saved him a seat.
Katrina became a prism through which to ponder the issues that have always concerned the city's chroniclers: race, history, madness, identity, survival and death.
Yet the glowing contemporary accounts owed much to Saladin's tame and prolific propagandists—courtiers, chroniclers and muftis who were rewarded handsomely for their efforts.
I've thought for some time that he is one of our best chroniclers of the rise of a determined, resilient and mercurial American Right.
Ira Sachs, a treasure among chroniclers of modern gay life in film, directed this touching story of New York real estate and lifelong love.
The many chroniclers of the Parisian expressionist speak in a variety of voices, some dramatic or poetic, and reveal stunning conjectures, sometimes even blatant contradictions.
Chroniclers record the existence of a synod in a diocese called Beit Qatraye, near Jubail, in 676AD, more than 40 years after the Prophet's death.
Faber & Faber; £30 Chopin's romantic life—he was a child prodigy who ran off with George Sand before dying at 39—has had many chroniclers.
She also emerged as one of its most poetic chroniclers when she detailed her heady, complex love affair with the drug in "Prozac Diary" (1998).
Ryan Grim, the news site's Washington bureau chief, called Fields "one of the most widely read chroniclers of the conservative movement," according to CNN Money.
Writings about place are almost always about the writer: The most rigorous are a series of self-exposures, revelations of their chroniclers' prejudices and ignorances.
Holmes does not so much resurrect five highly original women as explore how and why they have confounded (seduced, traduced and plainly exhausted) their chroniclers.
Despite a weekend sweep of the rival St. Louis Cardinals, the mood among the restive fans and chroniclers of Chicago's North Side baseball club is bleak.
Greenwold is a realist whose work is a combination of Marcel Proust, Anton Chekov and Isaac Bashevis Singer — all relentless chroniclers of facts — tripping on ayahuasca.
Like their mother, they assume new roles as chroniclers of their own ordeal, at times providing some of the movie's most charming, poignant sights and sounds.
And campaign chroniclers Mark Halperin and John Heilemann will publish a third installment of their campaign series, with HBO acquiring the rights to turn it into a miniseries.
A Word With: Edmund White Edmund White is one of the pre-eminent chroniclers of modern gay life, yet he often follows assured comments with self-deprecating caveats.
Whether they are drawn from legendary ancient historians or unsung modern eyewitnesses, moments like this one are what put Kneale one step ahead of most other Roman chroniclers.
Before later chroniclers left them out, Lorenz thanked them in the literature in the same way he thanked Saltzman, who provided the equations Lorenz used to find his attractor.
The fact of the matter is that Petty, as one of America's finest musical chroniclers of itself, had too massive a career to encompass in just a handful of songs.
Page 400: The tech ecosystem and its chroniclers like TechCrunch, forever agonizing about the deplorable state of women in tech, started howling about the corrosive effects of such a culture.
The format was introduced back in 1965, and before VHS camcorders killed it in the 80s, it was the film stock of choice for budding filmmakers and family life chroniclers.
"Mexico's political stability was broken and 100, 200, different political youth movements arose which spread out across the country," said Gilberto Guevara Niebla, one of the movement's leaders and chroniclers.
Although poets, landowners, chroniclers and others noted these historical events, manual record-taking can be imperfect and limited in geography, and they don't quantify their scale over the whole region.
Ms. Hay has cited Ms. Love and her "Kinderwhore aesthetic" as an inspiration before, part of a lineage that includes Cindy Sherman and other chroniclers of the restless feminine divine.
Hollywood chroniclers have described relationships with Mr. Flynn, John Huston and Howard Hughes, but she has remained regally mum, in contrast to her voluble friend Ms. Davis, who died in 1989.
You can tell your boss The New York Times said it's OK. ______ Mike Wilson is both a gentleman and one of our most astute chroniclers of life in New York City.
Ibn Ishaq, one of the great chroniclers of traditions in Islamic history, frequently cautioned his readers with terms "God only knows" or "it is alleged" to express his skepticism about many traditions.
Both documentaries are explorations of identity, at once heart-wrenching and hopeful, based on creators — explorers, anthropologists and chroniclers of our time — who occasionally end up being as fascinating as their subjects.
But in the plays of Foote, one of the theater's great chroniclers of dispossession and denial, people have a way of signaling their most profound fears without even knowing they're doing so.
By now, some of my colleagues are veteran chroniclers of such shootings, grimly bumping into one another with gallows humor over the past few years in Las Vegas; Colorado Springs; San Bernardino, Calif.
Everyone else should come running, because Wasson — whose previous books include "Fifth Avenue, 5 A.M.," about "Breakfast at Tiffany's," and the dance biography "Fosse" — is one of the great chroniclers of Hollywood lore.
"A comparison to the Holocaust is somewhat apt," said Sean Strub, one of the earliest chroniclers of the AIDS epidemic, a New York activist who learned in 21980 that he was H.I.V.-positive.
According to men's magazines and grooming chroniclers like Esquire and the New York Times Style section, beards started becoming popular six or so years ago because of the rebellion they represented at the time.
The reputable and trustworthy chroniclers of Washington life have amply covered these issues, without being contradicted by the Fed's leaders who got the country into the most serious financial crisis since the Great Depression.
Joining her will be Mr. Richter, as well as the authors D. T. Max, a biographer of David Foster Wallace, and Edmund White, one of the most prolific and influential chroniclers of gay life.
Gabbiness as an existential force is as central to the genteel Southerners of Foote (1916-2009), one of the great American chroniclers of small-town angst, as it is to David Mamet's foulmouthed urbanites.
With these vivid, wistful memoirs, he joins the great chroniclers of Europe—the Prousts, Zweigs, Lampedusas, Leigh-Fermors and Bassanis—and shows how some of the things those writers loved persisted as late as 1989.
Some chroniclers of the war, like Robert Graves, write scathingly of the Anglican chaplains, who were discouraged at first from going to the front line, and more warmly of the Catholic ones, who seemed braver.
Daniel Dale, a reporter for The Toronto Star, was one of the most keen-eyed chroniclers of Mr. Trump's language during the campaign, putting out a detailed list of the president's false statements on Twitter.
Knicks chroniclers could write books on the epic feuds between Hubie Brown and Dave DeBusschere; Rick Pitino and Al Bianchi; Pat Riley and Dave Checketts; Jeff Van Gundy and Ernie Grunfeld; Larry Brown and Isiah Thomas.
As the guardians of Uighur traditions, chroniclers of their history and creators of their art, the intellectuals were building the Central Asian, Turkic-speaking society's reservoir of collective memory within the narrow limits of authoritarian rule.
It was a world driven by hard work, sacrifice and relentless ambition — one that Mr. Talamon came to know well as one of the pre-eminent chroniclers of R&B, soul and funk musicians in the 1970s.
And yet, because the triangle has been imbued with some mystical quality by Jackson and his biographers/thought chroniclers, it's all anyone can talk or think about in New York (along with the latest Melo-drama, of course).
In 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt handed out a Nazi Iron Cross at a news conference and asked that it be bestowed on one of his least loved chroniclers, a columnist at The Daily News of New York.
Valdez was one of Mexico's most well-known, and loved, chroniclers of the drug war, winning the International Press Freedom Award from watchdog group the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) in 2011 for his prolific coverage of trafficking and organized crime.
Instead of curious, intellectually honest chroniclers of human affairs, Twitter regularly turns many in the news — myself included — into knee-jerk outrage-bots reflexively set off by this or that hash-tagged cause, misspelled presidential missive or targeted-influence campaign.
The filmmaker behind Wendy and Lucy, Meek's Cutoff, and Night Moves is long overdue to be recognized as one of America's finest chroniclers of everyday lives, a master of miniature whose seemingly tiny dramas produce profound emotional ripples in audiences days later.
A lazy reader might compare Beverly's novel to similar fables by Richard Price, but a genuine conversation about such stories necessarily includes inexcusably neglected urban chroniclers like Ronald Fair ("We Can't Breathe"), Jess Mowry ("Way Past Cool") and ­Jervey Tervalon ("Understand This").
But the strongest tendency among chroniclers inclined to paint in shades of gray — the filmmaker Ken Burns's recent PBS series on the war is a striking example — has been to credit all sides with fighting sincerely for principles that made sense to them.
WALKING OUT Alex and Andrew J. Smith ("The Slaughter Rule"), chroniclers of their native Montana, direct this lean survivalist film about a father and son (Matt Bomer and Josh Wiggins) whose rare time together turns harrowing after complications on a hunting trip.
Though possessed of different temperaments, both are alive to difference, variety, the possibilities of our rangy humanity; both are avid chroniclers of our species — Sacks in his case studies, and Hayes in his character sketches of the people he meets in the street.
"Great Houses, Modern Aristocrats," by James Reginato and photographer Jonathan Becker, longtime chroniclers of the rich and famous, does not disappoint, providing an insiders' portrait of 16 extraordinarily maintained residences belonging to such tenacious tenants as the Prince of Wales and the fourth Baron Rothschild.
Montaigne famously retired to his castle with a library of a thousand volumes to write his Essais, which are shot through with bits from the great Roman authors and orators as well as with stories and anecdotes from both their contemporaries and subsequent chroniclers.
Freemark, one of the most thorough chroniclers of American transportation projects, calculated that the U.S. spent more than $47 billion on 1,200 miles of new and expanded transit lines in the decade from 2010 to 20303 (most of that mileage has been on bus routes).
The underground excavations reveal a section of what was the foundation of a massive, circular-shaped temple dedicated to the Aztec wind god Ehecatl and a smaller part of a ritual ball court, confirming accounts of the first Spanish chroniclers to visit the Aztec imperial capital, Tenochtitlan.
Future scholars will sift through Trump's digital proclamations the way we now read the chroniclers of Nero's Rome—to understand how an unhinged emperor can make a mockery of republican institutions, undo the collective nervous system of a country, and degrade the whole of public life.
He is quicker to indicate where the herd of previous chroniclers have turned right and he intends to turn left, where earlier portraits have been airbrushed, where defective translations have left us peering farther down Elizabeth's cleavage than either the original text or her wardrobe actually allowed.
To discuss this oddball time in chart history, Jon Caramanica is joined by The New York Times pop music reporter Joe Coscarelli and Chris Molanphy, a freelance writer for Slate, Vulture and others who is among the most diligent chroniclers and explainers of the Billboard charts.
And as President Donald Trump called for unity, Washington's political players and their chroniclers were left to question the viciousness of a political culture that may have spawned such a ferocious attack that injured Scalise, a congressional staffer, two police officers and a lobbyist playing with the team.
Conspicuously absent from the Times piece are quotes and stories from the people who have been deemed—both by the canceled and their chroniclers—supporting players in the culture war debate: the trans individuals the canceled have concerned themselves with, and whose lives and health are at stake.
He doesn't tell one knockout story, as he did in the "The Perfect Storm," which made him rich and famous, or as he did in "War," which — along with his documentaries "Restrepo" and "Korengal" — established him as one of the country's most mesmerizing chroniclers of the Afghanistan war.
Mr. Hare, one of the British theater's most fervent chroniclers of his country's moral failings, made his agent of destruction a former teenage courier for the French Resistance, unleashed in all her angry disillusionment onto the increasingly affluent and ideal-stripped England of the post-World War II era.
There is an entire subgenre of warped Auto-Tune rap (think Young Thug, Chief Keef, and Future) that can trace its origins to this era of Lil Wayne, and Alex is one of the leading chroniclers of said subgenre, so I advise listening closely to what he has to say.
Six people died in the shootout that ensued, and chroniclers of Mexico's brutal drug wars have long attributed the massacre to Joaquín Guzmán Loera, a young kingpin known as El Chapo, who was settling a score with the leaders of the gang — the brothers Francisco Javier and Ramón Arellano Félix.
And while this plan has met with resistance, some of it captured on a viral video of a meeting of angry parents at another District 3 school, chroniclers of the city's fitful desegregation efforts see a growing recognition across demographic lines that segregation is a problem that needs to, and can be, addressed.
I have a vision of my own now: in her dark cell, Christina stands from her prayers and staggers to her bed, where she is, in the words of the chroniclers, held fast in the sickness of death: she lies stretched out after the manner of corpses, and passes to the immortal age of ages.
Last week, the expansive archive of these major chroniclers of African American life was sold for $30 million, and its contents will be donated to the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC) and the Getty Research Institute — an outcome that has allowed researchers, historians, and the public to breathe a sigh of relief.
Photo: Counterclockwise from top left: AP, BBC, Gizmodo, GettyThe holidays are nigh, and this year's naughty list is long indeed—and from revelations of reckless privacy violations over at Facebook headquarters and continued labor abuses at Amazon to the generally terrible way humanity has treated our homeworld, your erstwhile chroniclers at Gizmodo have been adding names to it until the very last minute.
The paradox of life in a society in which a not-insignificant number of the traditional lower caste can be fully integrated into the highest social and political strata at the very same time that many of their less fortunate peers remain profoundly excluded from the mainstream highlights, among many other things, the need for as wide as possible a variety of chroniclers of this fractured reality.

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