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16 Sentences With "demureness"

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

She was pushing into their improvising space, rejecting demureness or stoicism.
She just cloaks her self-assuredness behind a layer of British demureness.
She was never interested in being anyone's sex symbol or denying her own talents to give off a false facade of ladylike demureness.
Tom Hiddleton is doing away with his demureness for a very hot second (literally), stripping down to nothing but a book for his newest role in High-Rise.
Another explanation is that her natural demureness and inclination toward privacy have made her seem more reclusive in a social-media age in which an artist like Madonna — or her and Ms. Jackson's proliferating progeny — seems more omnipresent.
The VSCO girls and E-girls who rise to the top of my feed are a new version of an enduring yet impossibly banal image of the Cult of Domesticy: that piousness and demureness are the ultimate ambition.
Compared with giving potentially lethal weapons to cabin crew—who, no matter how well trained, will have been selected primarily for their pleasant demeanour (and often their demureness) and not their marksmanship—arming licensed law enforcement officers is clearly preferable.
Karen Oberlin, an artist who continues to shuck off demureness, put a brassy, caustic spin on Randy Newman's "Political Science," and Barbara Fasano, accompanied by her husband, Eric Comstock, on piano sang "Old Photographs," a rare collaboration by Alec Wilder and Fran Landesman.
Binnie Barnes, who is also Mrs. Frankovitch, does a stiff but at least restrained job as his protecting sister. And Massimo Serato makes an honest but unsustained try as the gigolo. But Miss Paige, who ranges from Louisa M. Alcott demureness to snarling tantrums, takes the cake for water-level histrionics.
The maiden shows him a room. Enchanted by her demureness and beauty, the prince guesses she is not the man's daughter, but the peasant girl exchanged for him. He retires to his room and plots his next move. On the second day, he draws water and hews wood for her.
Modesty, sculpture by Louis-Léopold Chambard, 1861 Recreation on a California beach in the first decade of the 20th century Modesty, sometimes known as demureness, is a mode of dress and deportment which intends to avoid the encouraging of sexual attraction in others. The word "modesty" comes from the Latin word modestus which means "keeping within measure".Jennett, Sheila. The Oxford companion to the body. Eds.
"Powerful Program of Iconic Works at American Ballet Theater", BachTrack.com, October 25, 2015 and "brought a seductive mix of demureness and sex appeal to 'Rum and Coca-Cola'" in Paul Taylor's Company B.Harss, Marina. "American Ballet Theatre: After You, Le Spectre de la Rose, Valse Fantaisie, The Green Table, Valse Fantaisie, Company B", DanceTabs.com, October 25, 2015 The same month, she created the role of His Loss in AfterEffect by Marcelo Gomes, danced to Tchaikovsky's Souvenir de Florence, at Lincoln Center.
According to reviews at the time, Collins delivered the suggestive verses with deceptive demureness, before launching into the lusty refrain and her celebrated "kick dance", a kind of cancan in which, according to one reviewer, "she turns, twists, contorts, revolutionizes, and disports her lithe and muscular figure into a hundred different poses, all bizarre". The song was performed in France under the title 'Tha-ma-ra-boum-di-hé', first by Mlle. Duclerc at Aux Ambassadeurs in 1891, but the following year as a major hit for Polaire at the Folies Bergère.
Despite Castro's leading a socialist revolution, it only seems to reinforce macho-control over the Cuban people, specifically for Cuban woman who have yet to occupy any established political positions. The idea of the male ego, where the male is symbolized as "hyper-masculine, virile, strong, paternalistic, sexually dominant, and the financial provider" is reinforced by the teachings of the Catholic Church, the main religion practiced in Cuba and Latina America in general. According to Catholic Church teachings, the female should be a virgin but it's less important for the male to be one. During colonial times, a female's chastity and demureness were linked to the family's societal standings [new], while the males were expected and sometimes pressured into proving their sexual prowess by having multiple partners.
However, Clara suffers from his explosive and extremely sexist temper and but ends up being advised by Sophia (Marieta Severo), her mother-in-law, to be understanding. Behind Sophia's demureness, which is just a facade, hides an ambition for the lands of Josafá, where a depleted emerald mine has been discovered, in which neither he nor his granddaughter have the least interest in exploiting after a tragedy that causes Clara's father and son of Josafá, Jonas (Eucir de Souza) to perish. Sophia, a domineering, self-willed, cunning and false woman, plans a plan to get rid of Clara, eventually putting her daughter-in-law in a psychiatric clinic for 10 years. The second phase, set in the present time, presents Clara trying to escape from the psychiatric clinic, without understanding how she got there, but discovers she was the victim of a major coup.
He was very eager to obtain his university (after only one year of studies in Berlin he obtained his PhD at Giessen, magna cum laude, then after a year, he got his license at the Philology and Philosophy University of Sorbona and one year later, after he studied at the University of Paris, he took his license in law), but his eagerness did not affect his demureness in his studies; the foundations of Maiorescu's extremely solid culture were established during that period. On 3 January 1857, he sent an essay signed with the name Aureliu to the Transylvania Gazette in order to publish some of his translations from Jean Paul's works. In the following number he intended to publish the translation of a short story written by Jean Paul and entitled "New Year's Eve Night". Although the translation was not published at that date, the letter that Aurel A. Mureşianu edited later in the Gazette of books, no 1, in 1934 is still considered the first publishing attempt of T. Maiorescu and it was republished under the same title.

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