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63 Sentences With "confected"

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

Far from persuading people, these confected claims come across as hectoring and supercilious.
A TV crew soon arrives to report on this latest confected-but-real atrocity.
The name Häagen-Dazs was confected to suggest European sophistication (the firm is American).
The colors are more confected and his pastel pieces appear seasonal, like Easter candy.
The protest was expressive in the most confected sense, a masterpiece of control and logistics.
But in the absence of a genuine crisis to mobilise support, fake problems must be confected.
But Mr. Leckey preferred rave nights and obscure vinyl, and sat out that media-confected jamboree.
Why do we reject the real material remnants of the Islamic past for their confected counterparts?
Villalongo's images are imaginary, it is said in the accompanying wall text, confected from Yoruba ceremonial masks and animal figures.
On the palate, 3 Degrees was fruitier and sweeter, without the savory edge of the Montinore, yet it didn't taste confected.
Alone among pop royalty, she could walk down the street without being recognized, such is her reliance on costumes and confected personas.
"There has been for far too long a confected hysteria about no deal, and a determination to make it taboo," Johnson said.
"The New Negro" anthology had been a delectably shambling sample of an era, confected from disparate styles and stuffed with conflicting positions.
Still, Mr Hull's book is a delicious companion to the tale Greene confected from the incompetence of spooks and an island in turmoil.
Today, amid confected rows about "fake news", reporters who unearthed a new Watergate would start with roughly half the country ready to disbelieve them.
The companies she deals with are shells within shells, paper entities confected in the Mossack Fonseca offices, where accountability is laundered along with money.
The work marries the strength of the South (technology) to the strength of the North (craftsmanship), and it is confected through a hazard-filled maze.
No hint that, at the time Post confected this idyll, African slaves were working 20-hour days on plantations and indigenous peoples were being exterminated.
His shambling, confected upper-class English persona tends to go down badly with Scots, a majority of whom voted against Brexit in the 20173 referendum.
So is the slice of lemon chiffon cake confected by Jennifer Yee, who is serving as pastry chef until the restaurant is on solid footing.
These images are taken from a series called Confected, in which DeMarte suggests a cultural desire to enhance and perfect nature by creating oversaturated and blatantly artificial environments.
And while Europe's political class obsesses about its own partly confected and wholly inconclusive battles, things will be happening that merit attention and will not get enough of it.
In 1915, Maybel Williams confected a similar mixture, inspiring her enterprising brother, Thomas, to package and sell it, complete with a special brush to help coat lashes and brows.
Reporting on Mr. Trump's financial past by Times reporters, including David Barstow, Susanne Craig and Russ Buettner has already undermined the president's confected image as a hugely successful businessman.
Frustrated by how little she could discover about her Aunt Constance, Green, a visual artist, has confected a life for her in a pastiche of a mid-century family scrapbook.
The easygoing $20 Valle dell'Acate was both the least expensive and the simplest of the three, with plenty of bright, earthy cherry fruit, though maybe with a slightly confected note.
Whether their personal lack of excitement is real or confected, it seems to clearly have a tactical purpose: to encourage voters to pay little heed to what is going on.
She has been the target of twenty-five years of hatred, misogyny, and conspiracy-mongering, endlessly metamorphosing from one confected "scandal" to another—Filegate, Benghazi, the State Department e-mails.
They deplore its sabre-rattling towards Taiwan and Japan, and its deep reservoirs of grievance (this week the paper peddled a largely confected tale accusing Swedish police of brutalising some rowdy Chinese tourists).
She is, of course, Melania Trump, a beacon at the inaugural balls in Washington last Friday night, sheathed in a vanilla silk crepe evening column that Mr. Pierre had confected expressly for her.
They showed how, when Americans think they are arguing about points of ideology or fact (or confected para-facts), they are often wrangling about who is a good person, with a right to be heard.
Hari Nef wore a peppermint-green tulle gown with a glittering appliqué panther on the bosom; Gia Coppola, another Gucci devotee, was in a long dress confected of black netting embellished with red and pink sequins.
While the movies pursued these quarrels with varying degrees of nuance and conviction — and with lots of fighting, flying and large-scale digitally confected destruction — both were sympathetic to the let-superheroes-be-superheroes point of view.
But both have to keep their audiences entertained and loyal, which they largely do through outrage—in Mr Putin's case, the fury of Russia's confected wars; in Mr Trump's, the shock and awe of his own wild rhetoric.
These prove to be dense sponges confected from yeast and Wondra — whose textural effect is the closest the kitchen can get to using the traditional mix of coarse and semicoarse Czech flours — and bolstered by diced sourdough rye.
Given these indications I thought the exhibition might end up being a tedious slog through artwork conscripted into illustrating liberation theology confected with ad hoc continental philosophy, homeopathic self-cures, and indigenous spiritual practices adapted to 21st-century needs.
President Donald Trump says that federal probes into Russian attacks on the presidential election of 2016 are a "hoax" confected by Democrats to explain Hillary Clinton's defeat, and are now kept alive by what he calls the "Deep State Justice Department".
It was then that two homemade bombs — confected from malodorous and highly volatile chemicals in the living room of the apartment — exploded in the check-in area of the airport, followed an hour later by another at a busy subway station.
"The candyfloss of outrage we've had over the last 24 hours, which I think is almost entirely confected, is from people who never wanted to leave the European Union," Conservative lawmaker Jacob Rees-Mogg, a leading Brexiteer, told the BBC Thursday.
Documentary evidence had always existed, but over the years the wharf was covered up—by a new pier to receive the Portuguese empress in 1843; by a commercial plaza in the early 183s; by a powerful myth, confected in the 1930s, that Brazil is a "racial democracy".
Yet most were subject, indirectly or directly, to an incessant drumbeat of negative reporting by mainstream outlets such as the New York Times, Washington Post and network news channels on the Democratic candidate's wooden public speaking and the largely confected scandals she was said to be embroiled in.
Reasonable, cautious and wholesome to the point of blandness, Mr. Hunt is the opposite of Mr. Johnson, whose charisma and bumbling, confected persona have made him the clear favorite in the contest, despite an early setback when the police were summoned to the home of his girlfriend after a loud argument.
Brexit -- a cause confected almost entirely within the collective psyche of the Tory party -- has left British politics mudbound, Irish politics teetering on the edge of the most serious crisis since the Troubles of the 1970s and relations with our closest and most important trading partner, the EU, in the toilet.
They did not, however, come with the right to drive squad cars, arrest white suspects, conduct investigations or set foot in the main police HQ. Boggs and Smith, like their historical antecedents, may only patrol black neighbourhoods, while some of their white counterparts look for opportunities, real or confected, to discredit or otherwise dispose of them.
This, now, is what United has become: a tribute act to its own former glories, a kind of permanent walking tour through a costumed, confected version of its past, a club adrift in a sea of nostalgia: a visit to the Cliff here, a mention of Barcelona there, never-ending mentions of Ferguson and last-minute winners and Manchester United DNA.
And hence the collection, a parade of relatively relaxed throwback mini- and midi-skirts and long vests in blanket plaids, often worn with jackets and skinny little ties (also a reference to Marc Bohan's tenure at Dior, in the same period); knit Bar jackets and jumpsuits (those were good); faded denim and branded puffers; and slipdresses confected out of hairy silk fringe.
In Gigi Scaria's All About This Side, exhibition at Aicon gallery, the buildings become genuinely surprising because they are allegorized in myriad ways that reveal a history of varied uses for the idea of a dwelling place: surrealist structures, temples, edifices confected from minerals housed in natural rock, features of the landscape, repeated theoretical design templates that are ostensibly created for people though no humans are in evidence.
Laap was harvested over a period of 6 to eight weeks, any area could yield up to 40-50 pounds of the substance a day. It was confected from the sugary excretions of a species of psylla (Psylla eucalypti Dobson) deposited on the leaves of the walkerie mallee gumtree.
However, in the chronology in Gospel of John, the Last Supper occurred the day before Passover suggesting that the bread would be leavened. Despite this point of disagreement, the Council of Florence of the Catholic church agreed that "the body of Christ is truly confected in both unleavened and leavened wheat bread, and priests should confect the body of Christ in either".
Liezi scholars have long recognized that it shares many passages with other pre-Han texts like the Zhuangzi, Daodejing, and Lüshi Chunqiu. Barrett (1993:298) says opinion is "divided as to whether it is an ancient work with later interpolations or a forgery confected from ancient sources." On the one hand, the Liezi could contain a core of c. 400 BCE authentic writings of Lie Yukou; on the other hand, it could be a c.
Rabbit's feet, either authentic or imitation, are frequently sold by curio shops and vending machines. Often, these rabbit's feet have been dyed various colors, and they are often turned into keychains. Few of these rabbit's feet carry any warranty concerning their provenance, or any evidence that the preparers have made any effort to comply with the rituals required by the original tradition. Some may be confected from fake fur and latex "bones".
Some of the profane vocabulary of Esperanto is derived by giving specific and profane meanings to words formed according to the regular methods of Esperanto grammar. For example, one Esperanto word for "a female prostitute" is ĉiesulino. This word, which has no direct cognate in any European language, is confected entirely from a priori elements belonging to Esperanto alone: a female (-in-) person (-ul-) who "belongs to everyone" (ĉies-). This last root is one of the systematically formed Esperanto correlatives.
A marble altarpiece with a molded cornice frames the niche, inserted within a decoration depicting eighteenth-century columns and garlands of flowers, which itself gives the impression of greater depth. High on the wall there is a quadrangular window. A pluteo in shaped pink marble separates the presbytery from the nave. On the vault of the presbytery there are symbols of the four Evangelists; the latter decorations were probably confected, along with the decoration of the vault of the nave, prior to the altar's decoration.
Michael Wilcock of Sussex, England, built the Swandean Spitfire Special,Swandean Spitfire Special using a Merlin XXV engine acquired from a scrap yard for one hundred and forty pounds. The engine was installed in a home-brewed chassis confected from two Daimler Dingo scout car chassis. The car was run in the Brighton Speed TrialsBrighton Speed Trials in 1953, and was sold to James Duffy of St. Louis, Missouri, in 1956. As of 2005, the vehicle is still in St. Louis, where it is undergoing restoration.
Scandals may be regarded as political, sexual, moral, literary or artistic but often spread from one realm into another. The basis of a scandal may be factual or false, or a combination of both. In contemporary times, exposure of a scandalous situation is often made by mass media. Contemporary media has the capacity to spread knowledge of a scandal further than in previous centuries and public interest has encouraged many cases of confected scandals relating to well-known people as well as genuine scandals relating to politics and business.
The former places emphasis on the recipient, and the latter states the Presence is confected by the power of the Holy Spirit but not in Christ's natural body. His presence is objective and does not depend on its existence from the faith of the recipient. The liturgy petitions that elements 'be' rather than 'become' the Body and Blood of Christ leaving aside any theory of a change in the natural elements: bread and wine are the outer reality and the Presence is the inner not visible but perceived by faith.The Study of Liturgy, pp.
She told ABC that strangers were sharing their stories with her, which she said "[is] truly the most rewarding feeling". Stewart performed the song on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on the International Day of the Girl, which encourages female leadership. The host Jimmy Kimmel said that the Me Too movement and the events surrounding Kavanaugh's confirmation as Supreme Court justice had illuminated the risks and fear that women face as part of their everyday life. According to Australian columnist Van Badham writing for The Guardian, Lab’s song "exposes Donald Trump's rightwing mythology of confected male victimhood".
On the controversial date of the Dionysian collections, see E. Wirbelauer, ed., Zwei Päpste in Rom: der Konflikt zwischen Laurentius und Symmachus (498–514), Studien und Texte, Quellen und Forschungen zur antiken Welt 16 (Munich, 1993), p. 121. His collections contain his own Latin translation of the canons of the ancient third-, fourth- and fifth-century councils, excerpts from a (probably) confected collection of African canons (which Dionysius calls the Registrum ecclesiae Carthaginensis, c.f. Church of Carthage), and a collection of (38) papal letters (Epistolæ decretales) dating from the reign of Pope Siricius (384-398) to that of Anastasius II (died 498).
Great Florentine artists of the 15th century were called upon to decorate cassoni, though as Vasari complains, by his time in the 16th century, artists thought such work beneath them. Some Tuscan artists in Siena and Florence specialized in such cassone panels, which were preserved as autonomous works of art by 19th century collectors and dealers, who sometimes discarded the cassone itself. From the late 1850s, neo-Renaissance cassoni were confected for dealers like William Blundell Spence, Stefano Bardini or Elia Volpi in order to present surviving cassone panels to clients in a more "authentic" and glamorous presentation.Ellen Callmann, "William Blundell Spence and the Transformation of Renaissance Cassoni".
Ray Monk, one of Wittgenstein's biographers, concentrates on the inconsistencies in Cornish's theory that Wittgenstein was the head of the Cambridge spy ring, asking why Cornish has apparently not bothered to verify any of his theories by checking the KGB archives. Ultimately, Monk says "As I read The Jew of Linz, I found myself wondering how on earth Cornish had confected so strange a piece of work. I found it by turns puzzling, funny, challenging and outrageously nutty... Cornish calls his book 'pioneer detective work', but I think it is really pioneer detective fiction."Monk, Ray. "The Jew of Linz: Wittgenstein, Hitler and Their Secret Battle for the Mind", Quadrant, Sept 1998.
Mario Bernardi (left) with another conductor, Bramwell Tovey, in 2005 Alan Blyth reviewed the album on LP in Gramophone in January 1980. Readers who were regular visitors to Glyndebourne, he wrote, would already be familiar with Frederica von Stade's portrayal of Penelope, the lonely, sorrowing queen of Ithaca in Monteverdi's Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria. In her arioso and recitative "Torna, torna", she was "deeply moved [and] deeply moving" as she pleaded for her husband to come back to her after his long absence in the Greeks' war against the Trojans. Monteverdi's genius, von Stade's artistry and the able support of Janice Taylor as Ericlea combined to paint a picture that captured the very essence of romantic devotion, even if the music was performed in the "fanciful" edition confected by Raymond Leppard.
And since the Father gave to his only-begotten Son in begetting him everything the Father has, except to be the Father, so the Son has eternally from the Father, by whom he was eternally begotten, this also, namely that the holy Spirit proceeds from the Son. We define also that the explanation of those words "and from the Son" was licitly and reasonably added to the creed for the sake of declaring the truth and from imminent need. Also, the body of Christ is truly confected in both unleavened and leavened wheat bread, and priests should confect the body of Christ in either, that is, each priest according to the custom of his western or eastern church. Also, if truly penitent people die in the love of God before they have made satisfaction for acts and omissions by worthy fruits of repentance, their souls are cleansed after death by cleansing pains; and the suffrages of the living faithful avail them in giving relief from such pains, that is, sacrifices of masses, prayers, almsgiving and other acts of devotion which have been customarily performed by some of the faithful for others of the faithful in accordance with the church's ordinances.
Retrieved 12 November 2018. She has previously called for the sale of alcoholic drinks to be banned after 10pm, to limit the burden hospital emergency departments face by admitted alcohol- affected patients during the night.Powley, Katherine (28 January 2016) Australia Day drunks frighten patients, children away from Victorian emergency departments, news.com.au. Retrieved 12 November 2018. Egerton-Warburton has also been critical of the media's focus on the so-called "ice epidemic" because she believes compared to issues caused by alcohol consumption, methamphetamine use is "a very small issue".Lauder, Simon (24 June 2015) Claims 'confected' ice epidemic harming alcohol program, PM, ABC Radio. Retrieved 12 November 2018.Kennedy, Jean (24 November 2015) Alcohol-affected patients at emergency departments 'more disruptive than those on ice', researcher says, ABC News. Retrieved 12 November 2018. From 1997 until 2000, Egerton-Warburton was the president of the Australasian Society for Emergency Medicine.(April 2018) Monash alcohol expert on a roll, Health Victoria, Victorian Government. Retrieved 12 November 2018. In 2013, she was awarded the Australasian College for Emergency Medicine's teaching excellence medal.(25 October 2018) 'Tom has always had a special place in my heart', Australian College for Emergency Medicine. Retrieved 12 November 2018.

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