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"delicateness" Definitions
  1. the quality or state of being delicate : PRECARIOUSNESS, FRAGILITY, REFINEMENT, DELICACY

32 Sentences With "delicateness"

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

I could feel the delicateness of my head balancing on my neck.
Susie is in every piece, in all her delicateness and hidden strength.
Steel clips and mesh screens hold the sculptures together, lending them an unexpected delicateness and lightness.
The doll that Barry bought is "probably the best we've ever seen," he said, especially considering its delicateness.
Even when he's playing the tenor saxophone, his main instrument, Mr. Speed's muted warble bears the delicateness of a clarinet.
For all that newfound patience and delicateness, though, they're still able to be make even Jim Morrison-level bluster feel charming.
And it gave us an opportunity to show their intimacy and that delicateness that's really important to represent the start of that love story.
Any explorer who opens just a box or three will discover something that has the heft, glow, delicateness, or mysterious aura of a treasure of some kind.
"Ocean" sees both Gahan and Alison Goldfrapp taking on vocal duties, with Gahan singing alongside Goldfrapp on the chorus, balancing out the delicateness of her voice with something weightier.
The track is far more threadbare than a lot of the band's other work, creating a delicateness in its verse before launching into a more emotive and heavy chorus.
In him, in the push and pull of his delicateness and beauty versus the fuel and loving fury of his music, I found a figure that felt true and right and precious.
The sense of delicateness in each scene emerges from details such as female kimonos, worn by the younger gents; the length and flow of hair; painted lips; and even soft hand gestures.
The delicateness of the Putin-Trump meeting was laid bare on Thursday -- before Sanders' statement -- when the two sides gave dramatically different accounts on whether the two leaders would even meet in the first place.
Even those Republicans who trash Trump's frat-boy boorishness buy into what feminist scholars have long called "the pedestal problem," the subtly sexist intellectual act of elevating women to an almost otherworldly, less-than-human status by emphasizing their delicateness, supreme virtue, fitness for motherhood, and essential difference from men.
Nobody's fucking with that inner strength and delicateness. The cunts, the gay men, adore that. My friends would say, 'Oh you need to cunt it up! You're being too banjee.
Out described it as a "summer hit". The Free Lance–Star called it "warm and cuddly". Calhoun Times wrote that the song was "almost lullaby-like in its delicateness", "genuinely sweet" and "touching".
Wagashi typically takes a lot of work. It is usually named after poetry, historical events, or natural scenery. Wagashi is well known for its delicateness and variety in appearance. This can reflect the delicacy culture of Japan.
Francis and Robert meet at the Norfolk Hotel to plan their safari over a whiskey. Then the story begins chronologically. What happened was this: Francis, a wealthy man, has alienated his wife Margot with his displays of cowardice and physical delicateness while on safari. Margaret is attracted to Robert so, to prove his masculinity, Francis sets out to kill a lion.
Spronk (1997), 8 Usually the frames of hinged works were constructed before the individual panels were worked on. Glue binder was often used as an inexpensive alternative to oil. Many works using this medium were produced but few survive today because of the delicateness of the linen cloth and the solubility of the hide glue from which the binder was derived. Well known and relatively well preserved – though substantially damaged – examples include Matsys' Virgin and Child with Saints Barbara and Catherine (c.
The award-winning opulence of St. Florian's is a reminder of the "humble structure" that preceded it; the prosperity and generosity of parishioners made possible construction of "one of the most attractive churches in the metropolis." The front facade has a "broad Gothic Arch flanked by twin spires notable for the impression they give of lightness and delicateness." Exceptional brickwork is arrayed in a varied horizontal bands. The interior consists of the nave of six bays topped by a rib vault.
The Chiusi Painter was an Attic black-figure vase painter, active in the final quarter of the sixth century BC. His real name is not known. The Chiusi Painter was part of the so-called Leagros Group, the last major important group of painters in the black-figure style. He is characterised by what John Boardman calls a "boring delicateness"John Boardman: Schwarzfigurige Vasen aus Athen, p. 121 compared to other artists of the group, failing to reach the standards of the Acheloos Painter for example.
" In contrast the Kristubhagavatam is the first major Sanskrit poem on the "whole life of Christ," and Devassia "follows all the norms and practices of the Mahakavya, but does not indulge in too many figures or descriptions.... The style is simple and clear, endowed as it is with the Gunas of 'Prasada' and 'Saukumarya.'Literally: "delicateness"; see Sanskrit and Tamil Dictionaries (enter "Saukumarya" to verify). Furthermore, > Not only the incidents, the miracles, etc. are faithfully given, but also > the famous sayings of Christ... are incorporated in appropriate terms.
Like Zhu Yizun, Li E was an admirer of the qingkong (pure and spare) style of Song Dynasty poets Jiang Kui and Zhang Yan. One of Li's famous lines, "雨洗秋濃人淡", comprises six Chinese characters that literally read: "rain/wash/autumn/lush/people/pale". It is translated by Shirleen S. Wong as "Autumn ablaze with colors after rain, but paler she looks". This "pure and spare" style attempts to create an impression of etherealness and delicateness, in contrast to the boastful expressions in the works of poets such as Su Shi and Xin Qiji.
The album was warmly received by Rolling Stone, with reviewer Billy Altman opining, "Her voice, which at alternate times recalls Olivia Newton-John and Melanie (but without the former's calculated submissiveness or the latter's hyperextended vulnerability) is strong and self-assured". Also commenting, "she has a fine sense of where the heart of a song lies (...) There is a delicateness and vitality in Twiggy's music that is well above the usual MOR fare and one wishes her good luck in a field that is, if anything, more volatile and fickle than the modeling and fashion world".
As conductor he forged fire, soul, delicateness, and passion, when performing the music of Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, Mozart and Brahms. He was noted for performing concerts outside of the traditional Conservatory venue, and into the ruins and remote villages of Guatemala. A most memorable concert was performing Beethoven's 9th with a full choral, at the cathedral ruins of Antigua in 1952. During his tenure as director of the Guatemalan National Symphony Orchestra, and especially before the overthrow of President Jacobo Arbenz, Maestro Archila attracted the best musicians in Guatemala and from the Americas, and was able to create an orchestra whose music transcended political, economic, social and cultural boundaries.
The nice Jewish boy is a stereotype of Jewish masculinity that circulates within the American Jewish community, as well as in mainstream American culture. In Israel and the parts of the diaspora which have received heavy exposure to the American media that deploy the representation, the stereotype has gained popular recognition to a lesser extent. The qualities which are ascribed to the nice Jewish boy are derived from the Ashkenazic ideal of אײדלקײַט (eydlkayt, either "nobility" or "delicateness" in Yiddish). According to Daniel Boyarin's Unheroic Conduct (University of California Press, 1997), eydlkayt embraces the studiousness, gentleness and sensitivity that is said to distinguish the Talmudic scholar and make him an attractive marriage partner.
The specific name was chosen to express that the fossil was "very fragile", referring to the delicateness of the bone produced by very thin laminae (vertebral ridges). In 1902, Oliver Perry Hay corrected the name to the Latin fragilissimus,Hay, Oliver Perry, 1902, Bibliography and Catalogue of the Fossil Vertebrata of North America, Governmental Printing Office, 868 pp but such emendations are not allowed by the ICZN (International Code of Zoological Nomenclature). As revealed in Cope's notebooks, which he recorded based on Lucas' report on excavation site locations in 1879, the specimen came from a hill south of the Camarasaurus quarry now known as "Cope's Nipple", also sometimes known simply as "the Nipple" or "Saurian Hill".
According to Australian rock music historian, Ian McFarlane, Post is a stark, personal collection of acoustic songs that highlight Kelly's broadly based song writing skill. Australian Rolling Stone magazine hailed Post as the best record of 1985. Both the album and the one single released from it, "From St Kilda to Kings Cross", failed to chart. The album is thought by some critics to be more of a demo recording, as four tracks were re-recorded by Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls for their debut album Gossip in 1986. However, according to others it is like Bruce Springsteen’s Nebraska, where there is a beauty and delicateness in this raw production, with the emphasis on the words, the melodies, the song structures that are the defining elements of Kelly as a songwriter.
Yamashita also suggested that the abundant Cylindraspis tortoises and dodos performed the same function on Mauritius, and that the broad-billed parrot, with its macaw-like beak, depended on them to obtain cleaned seeds. Many types of palms and palm-like plants on Mauritius produce hard seeds that the broad-billed parrot may have eaten, including Latania loddigesii, Mimusops maxima, Sideroxylon grandiflorum, Diospyros egrettorium, and Pandanus utilis. Mandible fragments in Naturalis On the basis of radiographs, Holyoak claimed that the mandible of the broad-billed parrot was weakly constructed and suggested that it would have fed on soft fruits rather than hard seeds. As evidence, he pointed out that the internal trabeculae were widely spaced, that the upper bill was broad whereas the palatines were narrow, and the fact that no preserved upper rostrum had been discovered, which he attributed to its delicateness.
That which must be seen in the > painting is not a luncheon on the grass; it is the entire landscape, with > its vigors and its finesses, with its foregrounds so large, so solid, and > its backgrounds of a light delicateness; it is this firm modeled flesh under > great spots of light, these tissues supple and strong, and particularly this > delicious silhouette of a woman wearing a chemise who makes, in the > background, an adorable dapple of white in the milieu of green leaves. It > is, in short, this vast ensemble, full of atmosphere, this corner of nature > rendered with a simplicity so just, all of this admirable page in which an > artist has placed all the particular and rare elements which are in > him.Émile Zola, Édouard Manet, 1867, et lps 91 Émile Zola incorporated a fictionalized account of the 1863 scandal in his novel L'Œuvre (The Masterpiece) (1886).
When he returned with wheat, declaring wheat to be "the most precious thing in the world," as it can feed the hungry, the widow, in her overweening pride and anger at his (as she perceived it) foolishness, let the wheat be thrown overboard into the harbour of Stavoren. When she was cautioned against this wicked behaviour, being reminded of the fickleness of fate and (despite her wealth and power) of the delicateness of her station, in hubris she took a ring from her finger and cast it into the ocean, declaring that she was as likely to fall into poverty as she was of regaining the ring. Soon afterwards, during a banquet thrown for her fellow Hanseatic merchant princes, she finds the ring inside a large fish served to her. As this event portended, she lost her wealth, living out her remaining years in destitution, begging for scraps of bread.
That which must be seen in the > painting is not a luncheon on the grass; it is the entire landscape, with > its vigors and its finesses, with its foregrounds so large, so solid, and > its backgrounds of a light delicateness; it is this firm modeled flesh under > great spots of light, these tissues supple and strong, and particularly this > delicious silhouette of a woman wearing a chemise who makes, in the > background, an adorable dapple of white in the milieu of green leaves. It > is, in short, this vast ensemble, full of atmosphere, this corner of nature > rendered with a simplicity so just, all of this admirable page in which an > artist has placed all the particular and rare elements which are in > him.Émile Zola, Édouard Manet, 1867, et lps 91Émile Zola, Édouard Manet, > 1867, link to English translation Zola presents a fictionalised version of the painting and the controversy surrounding it in his novel L'Œuvre (The Masterpiece).

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