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122 Sentences With "curios"

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

To collect Curios, you enter AR mode, go to those culturally relevant spots and look for the Curios spheres.
The AR world is where your pet can collect Curios.
The antiques zone where Andy Warhol shopped for curios is shrinking.
Someone is paying a mint for curios left behind by deceased celebrities.
Once thought to harbour protective spirits, the heads are now tourist curios.
It's easy to read these fables of nationhood as curios from another age.
Also performing are the authentic '90s curios Coolio and the appealingly seamy Color Me Badd.
All the same, Quirks that come from Curios are hooked into decisions that I made.
Unnecessary shelves, curios, cabinets or desks are nothing more than visual noise for potential buyers.
Many of the specifics in the book are dated, interesting now mainly as historical curios.
I've kept a few old paper drafts as curios, but I don't keep paper anymore.
Images from the building's website depict a wooden studio filled with antiques, sculptures and curios.
Familiar and negotiable, it nevertheless contains curios and peculiarities, myriad things players had not experienced before.
Although Zach's face initially expresses disgust over the thought, it quickly turns to a curios smile.
The Cabinet of Curiosities at the HMNS has all of these sorts of curios and more.
You can use the Curios to buy clothes, furniture, food and other stuff for your virtual pet.
He was a prodigious collector of art, antiques, furniture, curios and other treasures that struck his fancy.
It's the teen auteurs of Vine giving us a new appreciation for classic hits and pop curios.
Toomey promptly donated all his NASA curios to the South Florida Museum, where he served as a trustee.
Mementos, curios and old photographs figure prominently, as evidence of past actions and symbols of their hidden significance.
Unknowingly abusing their privilege as (mostly) white, foreign curios to crowd black artists out of hip-hop's left field?
One block from the border fence, the Martinez home is tidily decorated with western-themed curios and family pictures.
Sekiya grabbed Sofia and kissed her reassuringly as she rearranged the curios on her mantle (for the second time).
The 1970s in particular are littered with such curios and artifacts, byproducts of the decade's pivot to album-oriented rock.
As crate-diggers, collectors, yard-salers, thrifters, and hoarders will tell you, fascination with obscure cultural curios is nothing new.
He shakes hands with staff members who rise hastily from their desks, and studies the home state curios on the walls.
According to Mr. Lebo, she says, "Yeah, all in crates," referring to curios that Kane shipped to Xanadu and never unpacked.
But only on Sunday mornings do eccentric hoarders take to Avissynias Square where they lay out a cornucopia of vintage curios.
In the rest of the home, unconventional colors and prop-room curios are juxtaposed with carefully maintained authentic Victorian period details.
American Indian artifacts and Western curios line his walls: buffalo skulls, arrowheads, moccasins, and original paintings by the masters of the frontier.
But alongside high-end paintings and portraits are smaller curios and oddities, which means quite a few themes run through the show.
For years, he told me, he collected newspaper articles and curios from the industry, storing them in his shed or his garage.
His catalog's full of curios like "WYM," which appends a 21 Savage feature to a hook Auto-Tuned such that it's barely tonal.
The "Keys and Curios" journal is described as full of interactive surprises and secrets that can be unlocked using the Wizarding World app.
Reading the novel is like walking into your beloved uncle's bachelor pad: Every page is packed with curios and brimming with delightful nostalgia.
Chicago was struck by the way their art-making was tucked between laundry and cooking, their work displayed among toys and family curios.
Thus, as we ascended to the divine madman's temple, we were surrounded by shops selling phallus curios of varying sizes, including standing statues.
In their Amman atelier and boutique, you can find curios like rhinestone-adorned bras and her popular signature pants, called the Naughty Trousers.
Items on view will include fine estate jewelry and quaint Americana, as well as vintage furniture, handmade rugs, objets d'art and other curios.
While the project sounds clinical and impersonal (faces of subjects do not appear), the photographs do not treat bodily features as curios or deformations.
The grandeur was immediately evident, from the Art Deco curios to the classy black and white tiled floors, all illuminated by decorous period lamps. 
The curios he has collected from across the United States are arrayed in vintage wooden bookcases that line a studio at his Nashville home.
He had more luck selling Russian souvenirs at flea markets — the hand-painted dolls and other Soviet curios that now populate his storefront window.
A collection of VHS-ready cuts, flickering between wildflower baths and whatever outdoor curios they come across, it's as forcefully synthetic as the track itself.
She pulled archival prints from Dedar fabrics for the sofas and armchairs (and, elsewhere, the curtains and tablecloths) and curios from Piva Antiques in Milan.
Other authenticity-signifying curios include a large Hank Williams, Jr., bobblehead, a backlit sign advertising Marlboro cigarettes, and more taxidermied animals (goat, boar, squirrel, armadillo).
In other words, this is folk art threaded through the needle of studied composition and artistry rather than curios fashioned by a self-taught savant.
The ground floor is a restaurant and bar with wood-panel walls, camel-hue booths and curios like a parliament of ceramic owls perched overhead.
Once perceived as curios—and presumed to have descended from the riot-grrrl movement—female-fronted rock acts now dominate regional (and online) rock scenes.
The flowers were the pair's later work, following the production of hundreds of invertebrate models sold as teaching aids and private curios around the world.
Throughout the game, you go to real-world locations like museums, art galleries and other places with cultural relevance to collect Curios, the in-game currency.
" There are multiple ways to acquire Quirks—most of them fairly random—but only one that feels narratively substantial: When exploring dungeons, heroes come across "Curios.
Pizza-themed curios and framed artworks (several by the musician Daniel Johnston) are scattered throughout his space and supplemented with his own doodles and thought-poems.
So the young artist began carving human faces out of the stones and incorporating them with other found materials to create something other than crafty curios.
The foyer opened onto a living room, a dining room, and a parlor with sponge-marbled walls and tables smothered with brocade and studded with curios.
A small but illuminating case displays books that Cornell read and a few biographical curios, like a self-published pamphlet to the opera diva Maria Malibran.
A few streets back from the waterfront in Tanmen, elegant boutiques sell jewellery and curios fashioned from the giant clams—and clam shells are still stacked outside.
The relatively small store, walls lined with curios, has an upbeat and cozy atmosphere—it's a fantastic place to kill a few hours looking at rare knicknacks.
In the show, Hey slams eccentric songs with absurd production choices, often drawing on old synth-pop archives or weirdo psych curios or forgotten post-punk gems.
There are musical guests (an Albanian orchestra, a theremin player, a SoundCloud rapper) and dancers (Japanese folk, hula, tap) and curios (a knife thrower, an ice sculptor).
The Economist has compiled price indices for many of these items—diamonds, classic cars, fine wine, art, watches and other curios—and grouped them in a "passion" index.
He also increasingly relies on Japanese wrestlers, presenting them not as deceitful heels or even as exotic curios but as, quite simply, the best wrestlers in the world.
Even the mansion itself, at first seemingly inexplicable, is explained and characterized—booby traps and curios, it turns out, were simply a passion of the house's eccentric owner.
Emigdio Manuel García, 89, who owns a restaurant and curios shop in Matamoros about a block from the bridge, expressed exasperation over the disruption caused by the closure.
With its ironic sweatshirts, designer baseball caps, and kitschy 20133s curios, it feels like a 2019 update on the funky boutiques of the East Village in the 1980s.
That is why it is so heartening to see electric cars, considered curios for the rich or eccentric or both not that long ago, now entering the mainstream.
Our science and AI correspondent Devin Coldewey The big challenge today though is to move from curios in the lab to production-ready hardware prepared for the open road.
A mishmash of ornamented taxidermy sculptures, intricate matchbook illustrations, and nostalgic oil paintings cover the walls of the beinArt Gallery in an eccentric new three person exhibition, titled Curios.
But the structure, which was filled with wooden antiques and curios, was quickly engulfed in flames and filled with a thick, choking smoke that rose to the second floor.
Bland's father was a pastor, while Maas's parents ran a nursery, 12 verdant acres crowded with curios from around the world and home to a wallaby, among other animals.
Its hard-working, unaffected dancers have been presenting repertory gems and worthwhile curios overlooked by major troupes, alongside new works by choreographers sometimes also unjustly neglected by the big guns.
Jlin, "Downtown" Footwork wizard Jlin released "Downtown" as part of Adult Swim's Singles Program, a yearly event that usually yields a handful of stellar tracks and a dozen other worthy curios.
The nomadic Traveling Museum of the Paranormal and Occult rotates its supposedly cursed and haunted curios on its live feed, where viewers around the world can monitor them for unusual activity.
As owner of the Spiritual Candle Shop, he creates amulets and other talismanic items using roots, oils, candles, herbs, and various curios that are part of the African American folk magic pantheon.
He's made soaring compositions with the ascendant Laraaji and cosmic reggae refractions with the Congos and M. Geddes Gengras, among a whole lot of other collaborative curios scattered across his Discogs page.
He has the end of a paintbrush in his mouth, a jaunty beret on his head, a sword in each hand, and a crown, urn, and other curios looming in the background.
This time, Cockcroft had written in appreciation of the series of blank pages that Macfarlane had left at the back of the book, in the hope that readers would record linguistic curios.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads HOUSTON — At the turn of the 17th century, Ferrante Imperato, a well-to-do apothecary from Naples, had a truly impressive collection of natural history curios.
In other words, cabinets of curiosities are not just the physical curios of their collections — they're the power dynamics of collecting and colonialism that followed the development of natural history for centuries.
Along with Pueblo pottery and Diné weaving, such works remind viewers that the collection of "curios" by non-Natives has historically transformed such works from ritual or utilitarian objects into fine art pieces.
Most booths feature walls hung with artworks and shelves or pedestals covered with curios; you won't find any sleek light boxes, digital screens, or colossal sculptures that make for easy Instagram fodder here.
Dion and his wife, the artist Dana Sherwood, live amongst a lovely and quirky mélange of objects — taxidermy and coral specimens and curios — not unlike the Renaissance wunderkammers that have long inspired his work.
To an extent that baroque design ethos is what triumphed in PC wargame design, and a lot of "serious" PC wargames are carrying on with the spirit and philosophy of those 1970s Ameritrash curios.
Located south of the pedestrian Ermou Street and north of the Temple of Hephaestus near Plateia Avyssinias, the weekly flea market, with its array of curios and trinkets, represents the diverse culture of Athens.
Similar scenes are unfolding throughout the old empire, as a small army of developers and entrepreneurs use cheap electricity and abandoned buildings—the curios of their Soviet past—to get rich quick on cryptocurrencies.
But the retrospective includes curios like "The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane," a thriller starring a young Jodie Foster and Martin Sheen, as well as the indisputable gem "Atlantic City" from 1980.
Vendors sell curios, piggy banks, and soft blankets with the image of a strangely sensual panther on them, and you try not to look too much or else they'll follow you incessantly until you give in.
Some visitors complain about the free-for-all traffic, the polluted air, the trash in the streets, the shabby restrooms at tourist spots and the insistent peddlers proffering bundles of curios like five Pharaonic prints for 50 Egyptian pounds.
The Z Flip also might be one of the last chances folding phones are going to have to really prove they could be a mainstream product sometime soon and not just weird curios for the rich and tech-obsessed.
The duo have covered the bar's time-warped ceilings and storied walls with curios from the ages: eighteenth-century wine jugs that were dug up in the cellar during excavations, porthole-framed paintings, numerous sculptures and drawings of ears.
If only to appease the adults suckered into watching garishly animated early-morning television with their drooling kids, children's TV shows have always been littered with jokes and pop culture curios that fly over the heads of their target demographic.
A fine older art work in this vein is Edward and Nancy Kienholz's "The Caddy Court" (1986-87), consisting of a 1978 Cadillac that has been sutured to a 1966 Dodge van and filled with animal skulls, antlers and other curios.
The Room and Troll 2 may have found their followers more quickly than the curios of a half-century ago, but the long build-up to their breakthroughs—which were such an essential part of their charm—would be essentially impossible in 2017.
Taken together, the works are a collection of curios, told intimately and with an assortment of props, which are so integrated they almost become characters; all the same, "Short Form" feels more like an excuse for dancing than a reason for sustaining it.
There is something vaguely Marquezian about it, with its side-street location, its shelves lined with used books, some rare, curios piled haphazardly on top, the feeling that the small store is somehow much larger than the sum of its dusty parts.
As time's gone on, his sound's drifted ever closer to these sounds (including the lounge curios in between the spikier moments on last year's ken), and his lyrics have grown steadily more venomous, singing about Marxist revolutionaries in between mournful trumpet instrumentals.
To nail down your Southwestern swag, you could end up at South Congress's Allen's Boots to stomp off in your very own pair of shit kickers, or maybe grab a luchador mask along with other oddities and curios at folk art peddler Tesoros Trading Company.
Limited to just 40 vehicles globally in 2016, the Holland & Holland Range Rover contains enough leather, burl walnut and hand-wrought curios to rival an Oxford Classics professor's study, and at $244,500, it is by far the most expensive vehicle in Land Rover's lineup.
"People claim that as soldiers marched down from the castle, heading off to war, they would buy their sweethearts a luckenbooth to keep until they returned," said Martin Bosi, one of the proprietors of Royal Mile Curios in Edinburgh, which sells antique jewelry, including luckenbooths.
Just as we've relegated the cassette to a cabinet of pre-digital curios, so has the overstuffed postmodern novel become a relic of an earlier epoch, when a novelist like Pynchon could be seen as a prophet issuing coded warnings about America's past and future.
The opening moments tend toward misty synthesizers, the drawn out drawls of uber-DIY songwriters, or grayscale ambience—whatever that particular AM calls for—before slowly, as the clock ticks toward noon, turning to gnarlier territories: techno slivers, abstract polyrhythms, aqueous electro, 80s post-punk curios.
Seventy-five guests from as far as Chile and Puerto Rico gathered in an enormous warehouse jammed with vintage furniture and curios, including huge collections of patinated leather couches, wooden rolling pins, several bird cages the size of small cars, and the chassis of a wooden airplane.
Hip-hop's early recordings, from the late 1970s to the mid 1980s, have also been getting attention recently: Soul Jazz recently released "Boombox 2: Early Independent Hip Hop, Electro and Disco Rap 1979-83," the second edition of a winning CD series capturing early rap curios.
After a typical Dutch lunch of sandwiches and milk in a kitchen that seemed right out of a Vermeer painting — dark woodwork, tile floors, angled light — he took me through his home: a delightful warren of halls and old rooms stuffed with curios, some of them priceless.
With their curios around them, a growing number of New York friends and a Hudson River view from the kitchen — a feature especially prized by Mr. Johnson, who loves to cook and tries to find a cooking class whenever they travel — New Paltz beckoned less often.
When they first migrated to American devices several years ago, discovering emoji felt like opening a grab bag of Japanese curios: smiley faces, yes, but also a buffet of Japanese foods (a cut of sashimi, a fish cake, a bottle of sake) and a host of untranslatable images.
A hundred and twenty-seven almost exclusively European and American renditions of human bodies, from very old to recent and from masterpieces to curios, elaborate the thesis that colored figurative sculpture has been unjustly bastardized ever since the Renaissance canonized a mistake made during its excited revival of antiquity.
" If you're wondering what input topic elicited this deadpan parade of stereotypical and strangely unexciting suggestions for a lady who apparently has everything yet still desires handmade and bespoke curios, or at least a coupon to go skydiving, it was a request for an article about "chocolate teapots.
A collector and dealer of contemporary art and design, Baruch uses the space as a de facto showroom, a place to display beguiling curios and whimsical home décor for the benefit of clients, though of course he also takes personal pleasure in living among eccentric and beautiful things.
Eventually, people caught on to his penchant for curios, and many of the 200 or so pieces now displayed in his Covent Garden office in London were given to him as gifts, including several from Apple's chief design officer and fellow British knight, Jony Ive, a longtime friend.
Even in an era full of peculiar curios like the Wu-Tang album no one is allowed to listen to, the Beyoncé album not even her label knew existed, and the Rihanna album fans were instructed to solve a mobile puzzle game to unlock, the shiftlessness here is shocking.
None of the self-generated 'trust and accountability' structures that tech giants are now routinely popping up with entrepreneurial speed — to act as public curios and talking shops to draw questions away from what's they're actually doing as people's data gets sucked up for commercial gain — can in fact be trusted.
We visited a one-room, private "maritime museum" full of curios from the sea, including dolphin skulls, shells, shark jaws, a massive sea tortoise preserved in lacquer, and a sword made from the nose of a sawfish that the museum owner had planned to give to King Abdullah before his death.
The 100-square-meter booth overflowed with thousands of items from Blake's own collection of outsider art and curios dating to his youth: a United Nations-worth of dolls; Victoriana; Americana; collectibles from wrestling, boxing and classic celebrities of the mid-20th century (Marilyn Monroe, James Dean, Kim Novak, Katharine Hepburn); and general kitsch.
Aside from the reams of paperwork and science books, it is a cornucopia of biological curios: a pickled bat in a perspex box, monkey skulls, horse skulls, the scull of a saber-tooth tiger, a dead crow, a stuffed fish and a plastic bag of preserved rats from the 1920s hanging on the door.
The Harwood Museum of Art is site to a permanent installation of paintings by Agnes Martin (1912–2004) who called Taos home at several times in her long and prolific life and an installation of Death Shrine I, part of Happy's Curios series by Kenneth Price (1935–2012) who was a lifelong friend of Bell and also from Los Angeles.
January's streaming options include a couple of high-profile new releases — among them Netflix's attempt to overwrite the terrible 22008 Jim Carrey movie Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events with its own take on Daniel Handler's book series — and some 270 curios you may have missed, as well as a lot of older stuff that will stoke the warm embers of nostalgia.
In addition to painterly handblown vases by Arnhold and soaps printed with poetry by Walz, shoppers will find marbled soap dishes from the ceramist Isabel Halley and 19th- and 20th-century curios sourced by Eric Oglander of the Instagram account Tihngs, as well as a line of works on paper, from limited edition artist prints to catalogs from past museum shows.
The Last Guardian is steeped in sadness and solitude because you form a strange bond with the most unlikely of mythological curios deep within this dark recess, and that bond is strained, wrenched into arrest, torn apart, sewn together again, and ultimately smashed into smithereens so fine they dissipate into thin air, still existing but never to be seen again.
Room one focuses on early works, in which a gloomy palette depicts dim Ostend interiors and introduces Ensor's main concerns with bourgeoisie life: "Bourgeoisie Salon" and "Chinoiserie, Fans and Fabrics," both from 1880, are beautifully observed reflections of the niceties of middle-class life, the latter detailing the trinkets and curios sold by Ensor's parents in their seaside Ostend shop.
Over on South Beach, two small institutions have consistently been punching above their weight: The Jewish Museum of Florida-FIU, which is featuring provocative photographs by Zachary Balber that blend Yiddishkeit with thug life, and The Wolfsonian-FIU, paying an 80th birthday tribute to its Willy Wonka-esque founder, Mitchell Wolfson Jr., who has spent a lifetime traveling the world hunting down remarkable historical curios.
I had asked to visit a place of personal significance, and although he has lived and worked in Los Angeles since the 1970s, he didn't plot some dutiful trip down memory lane — a spin past the old headquarters of the Groundlings, the pioneering improv troupe where he created Pee-wee Herman, his indelible comic alter-ego; through the Burbank soundstages where he filmed much of ''Pee-wee's Big Adventure,'' the hit 1985 film that made him a star; up to his Hollywood Hills home, where he keeps an elaborate cactus garden and a stockpile of curios and tchotchkes.

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