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19 Sentences With "darknesses"

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

Thousand Darknesses: Lies and Truth in Holocaust Fiction, explores the line between fiction and
In all his stories, the interior and the exterior darknesses tend to leak into each other.
After last week's bottle episode, which was equal parts claustrophobic and revelatory, it felt nice to see everyone else — but watching their individual darknesses calcify is tough.
Most of all, in my youth I believed Nowruz might have the power to eclipse the other darknesses of my homeland that played nonstop on television and in the news.
And then there are the times when we can laugh with each other — at ourselves and our limitations — and something breaks open in us and light pours into our darknesses.
And for good reason: Arnold himself is a mellow and generous, Buddha-like character, who wonderfully balances the inner-city eccentrics who surround him, teaching valuable lessons while standing tall amidst life's myriad darknesses.
The very futility of the Vietnam War (at the moment being laid before America again in Ken Burns' PBS series), made sharing in the experience a collective initiation for veterans into the darknesses of adulthood.
My mind turned to the poet Paul Celan's phrase, "the thousand darknesses of murderous speech," and to the complications for a postwar German Jew, or indeed any German, of having a mother tongue that was also the murder tongue.
I don't know that I would say that Serena has mental health issues, but I think she has, like all of us, that secret and darknesses in places that she doesn't like in herself; that she certainly doesn't want anyone to see.
"I think Brexit is the wrong decision for Britain and it's been this horrible blotting paper and it's brought all of these darknesses that were bubbling under the surface of British society to the fore," he says quickly yet with careful thought.
It is that my pals maybe made it through a year or two that they might not have otherwise because Linkin Park, and specifically Bennington, kicked in the door to our respective darknesses not to spark a light, but to sit with us for a while.
To catch the nuances in their differences—and to imagine what these nuances might mean for the future of people like these, and therefore for the future of our country—is a bit like the corneal adjustment required in the first moment of the play: you've got to distinguish dark from dark, and perceive a thousand darknesses in between.
In 1999, Franklin began her literary critiquing career at The New Republic. While working as a senior critic, she published her first book titled A Thousand Darknesses: Lies and Truth in Holocaust Fiction in 2010. In Franklin's book A Thousand Darknesses, she critiqued the assumption that Holocaust survivor testimonies were completely factual and should be taken as such. "Her study questions the privileging of autobiography over fiction and endorses imagination as a form of truth- telling," wrote Heidi E. Bollinger.
Franklin, Ruth (23 March 2006). "A Thousand Darknesses". The New Republic. Night is the first in a trilogy—Night, Dawn, Day—marking Wiesel's transition during and after the Holocaust from darkness to light, according to the Jewish tradition of beginning a new day at nightfall.
The Keres were daughters of Nyx, and as such the sisters of beings such as Moirai, who controlled the fate of souls and Thanatos, the god of peaceful death. Some later authorities, such as Cicero, called them by a Latin name, Tenebrae "the Darknesses", and named them daughters of Erebus and Nyx.
He wrote two novels with cricket as their subject – The Cricket Match (1924) is better known than its successor The Game of the Season (1935). Oxford University Press reprinted both these books in the early 1980s. The novel Son of Grief by Dudley Carew (1936) was rated highly by John Arlott. He wrote: It has its darknesses, but it is convincing, and its characters are rounded and credible.
Based on Tayyebi: One of the narraters of this hadith is Abu Dharr who narrates this hadith while holding on the door of Kaaba which is an emphasis on this hadith and holding on to the ahl al-Bayt. Abu Dharr, while introducing himself, narrates this hadith to remind people that he is Abu Dharr known as Sadiq by Muhammad. The Prophet compares this world with its darknesses, deviations, innovations and passions to a stormy and raging sea covered with dark clouds that the only, unique way of salvation is boarding this Ark (safinah). Al-Samhudi states: The salvation is the aspect of resemblance of Ahl al-Bayt to Noah's ark by the Prophet.
The end result was the Keyblade War, which ended in a world known as the Keyblade Graveyard; the aftermath led the χ-blade itself to shatter into seven pieces of light and thirteen pieces of darknesses. These seven lights, which are said to be the source of all light in the World, later became the hearts of the Princesses of Heart. In Birth by Sleep, Master Xehanort's over-eagerness to obtain the weapon has him seek to clash two hearts of equal strength—one of pure light and one of pure darkness—with each other. He finds such a means through his former apprentice Ventus and the youth's personified darkness Vanitas, whom Xehanort created and enlisted to ensure his plans succeed.
Almost all his articles for The Times were written anonymously, as was the paper's policy until William Rees-Mogg became its editor in 1967. John Arlott wrote of him: > It was, perhaps, unfortunate for Dudley Carew that his entry into cricket > writing should have coincided with the rise of Neville Cardus. If there had > never been a Cardus, how highly should we have ranked one who wrote: "At the > other end Gunn batted much as a man potters about a garden, digging his fork > into a bed with an abstracted and absent-minded air..." Arlott also rated highly Carew's cricket novel, Son of Grief, saying: "It has its darknesses, but it is convincing, and its characters are rounded and credible." The title, as with another of Carew's cricket books, was taken from the poetry of A. E. Housman.

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