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19 Sentences With "congenially"

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

"I tell them this is a test from God," he said, smiling congenially.
What comes after that, and how congenially Congress handles the appointment, is still to be determined.
It was impossible to traverse the space without being congenially asked if you wanted a photo.
The set piece rips away the artifice that so often congenially pillows our notions of theatre.
Around them was a predominately white and upper-middle class crowd, some of the district's voters who congenially greeted her.
His congenially coy paintings are now being shown in For the Selenites' Pleasure, his third show at Galerie Anne Barrault in Paris.
The Colbert who appears on our screens every night in 2017 is a lot more ruthless than the one who congenially interviewed Trump in the first month of The Late Show's existence.
The hearing attracted other familiar faces, including the lead trial attorneys for each side: Daniel Petrocelli for AT&T and Craig Conrath for the DOJ, who could be seen speaking congenially with one another before entering the courtroom.
This same gallery room, which shows off examples of that "fine furniture," could have been designed to be a congenially ahistorical showroom subtly venerating the planter class and privileging visitors' aspirational desires for these objects that represent elevated social status.
The entire film is about Chris coming to terms with his need to defend himself, to fight back, and to trust his instincts about who's a threat, no matter how congenially they tell him that black skin is "in fashion" at the moment.
The tone of the contest before it began suggested a crossover episode of a sitcom: Stephen Curry and Bryant, protagonists in two of the league's most absorbing serial story lines this season, each congenially cohabiting the other's universe for a few hours under the theater lights of Staples Center.
Björn Hayer, NZZ: "The boundaries between reality and wishful thinking are blurred in a sophisticated narrative structure, visually congenially implemented - Lena's perspective and her thoughts alone carry this extraordinary work". Kinozeit: "A remarkably fearless film, a highlight in Locarno 2018".
Fabulous Histories (later known as The Story of the Robins), Trimmer's most popular work, was first published in 1786, and remained in print until the beginning of the 20th century.Grenby, "Introduction", viii; Wills, DLB, 344. It tells the story of two families, a robin family and a human family, who learn to live together congenially. Most importantly, the human children and the baby robins must learn to adopt virtue and to shun vice.
Crews who had survived several "ops" would often have a particular aircraft assigned to them whenever possible, that aircraft would have its own ground crew (known congenially as "erks") and if "their" aircraft was "D for Dog", "G for George", "F for Freddy", "K for King" or whatever, they would be protective of "the old girl" and would have feelings of considerable disquiet if their aircraft was unserviceable after the air test, meaning that they had to take a spare aircraft.Charlwood (1986), p.71 and p.102Smith (1987), pp.
9 After playing children's parts for seven years she returned to school, first at a boarding school in England, which she hated, and then, more congenially, at a finishing school at Fontainebleau, near Paris."Miss Minnie Terry", Table Talk, 9 October 1902, p. 10 Two years after her return to the stage in the late 1890s, she played Lydia Languish in a production of The Rivals in which Edmund Gwenn was also appearing. They married in 1901, and Minnie had thoughts of leaving the stage, as some her aunts had done on marriage.
As a singer, Strandberg released her LP En sång ett vapen in 1965. She has interpreted songs by Jacques Brel, Édith Piaf, Lars Forssell and Cornelis Vreeswijk. In 1995, she received the Cornelis Vreeswijk Scholarship with the motive "En sångkonst av stor bärighet och styrka, rå och sovrad intensitet som kongenialt gestaltar tillvarons gläde och sorg, en formulering som även kan räcka hennes skådespeleri" ("A song-art of great buoyancy and strength, raw and sifted intensity which congenially portrays life's happy and sad, a formulation that also may suffice her acting").
Police Inspector Dillon (Cyril Cusack) reluctantly sets out walking through the countryside to see an old friend, Dan O'Flaherty (Noel Purcell). Along the way, he encounters Mickey J. (Jack MacGowran), a poitín maker (bootlegger) who is not Dillon's target, but accompanies Dillon to O'Flaherty's stone cottage where Dillon serves O'Flaherty a warrant for striking Phelim O'Feeney. While they are all congenially drinking and socializing inside O'Flaherty's cottage, O'Flaherty refuses to pay the fine, as he feels he has done nothing wrong, nor will he allow O'Feeney to pay it for him. Instead, he heads off to prison.
A similar honorary society, for exceptionally outstanding women leaders, known as Mortar Board, had been established just a few years after ODK, in 1918, with many similar ideals and purposes. With the passage of Title IX in 1972, each of those two societies was then required to accept candidates of either gender into its membership. As a result, the two organizations found themselves competing to tap many of the same distinguished students, and those formerly complementary societies became rivals at many institutions, perhaps fiercely so during membership selection, while more congenially so during the rest of the year, as the two rivaled one another in service, athletics, or other campus activities.
He retained this position till 1869. The Education Office of that day had to administer a somewhat chaotic system of government grants to local schools, and Lingen was conspicuous for his fearless discrimination and rigid economy, qualities which characterized his whole career. When Robert Lowe (Lord Sherbrooke) became, as vice-president of the council, his parliamentary chief, Lingen worked congenially with him in producing the Revised Code of 1862 which incorporated "payment by results"; but the education department encountered adverse criticism, and in 1864 the vote of censure in parliament which caused Lowe's resignation, founded (but erroneously) on an alleged "editing" of the school inspectors' reports, was inspired by a certain antagonism to Lingen's as well as to Lowe's methods. Shortly before the introduction of Forster's Education Act of 1870, Lingen was transferred to the post of permanent secretary of the treasury.

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