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20 Sentences With "denouements"

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

We don't have an author choreographing clear conflicts, rising tensions and satisfying denouements.
Her denouements tend to make more sense in retrospect than at the time.
The denouements of each of these experiments in spontaneous republican self-government were never pretty.
All eyes will be on the launchpad, given SpaceX's history of occasionally providing unhappy, if spectacular, denouements to missions.
Her book is a personal history because Ethiopia's public dramas and denouements are refracted through the domestic prism of her grandmother Yetemegnu's life.
But even The OA's biggest fans were left a bit bewildered by its finale, one of the most contentious small-screen denouements in memory.
And of course those denouements not only leave open the futures of other characters, but they also send the universe looping back toward the middle.
GG tells me that by the time she was working on I'm Not Here, she felt like her shock-like denouements were getting too formulaic.
It has survived the unhappy denouements of his last three jobs: at Real Madrid, a return to Chelsea, and then United, three clubs at which he lost first his players' faith and then control.
This sets the viewer up for perhaps one of the funniest, albeit cruel, denouements in cinema history, in which Treadwell abandons his beloved Cherry 2000 by asking her to go find him a Pepsi in the middle of an endless desert.
Scenes like these have become the Champions League's calling card, every spring: intense, engrossing games, games that seem to twist and turn and defy prediction, hour upon hour of live-action, cliffhanger drama, denouements that quicken the pulse and draw the breath.
For a Legislature that regularly passes thousands of bills a year, the end of this session will probably include denouements on some notable proposals, including one to make it easier for survivors of sexual abuse to sue and one to encourage buying American products.
Plot twists, denouements and sometimes an entire episode can seep out beforehand, making for markets that unfairly favor those in the know at the expense of fans and aficionados putting down money based on their hunches or their own studied analysis of what might lie ahead.
This is also known as denouement. In general, films in recent decades have had longer denouements than films made in the 1970s or earlier.
It portrays a military father's search for his son and, after his body is found, subsequent hunt for his son's killers. The film explores themes including the Iraq War, abuse of prisoners, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following active combat, and the apportionment of blame for these denouements of war.
Herbert Bates, "Ironquill" (Eugene Fitch Ware), James Whitcomb Riley, and other authors and critics of the day. She provided the lyrics for 'The Wood Nymph's Song', set to music by W. W. Abbott and published in 1896. Richey's poems were generally serious, reflective, womanly; at times, they were tinged with a faint suspicion of weariness and sadness. She sought no startling effect or vivid denouements.
And both plots reach their denouements through the arrival of older male characters who figure out what is really going on. McEwan himself denied the charge of plagiarism, claiming he was unaware of Our Mother’s House. As for Gloag, he was convinced he’d been plagiarized and aired his views on Word for Word, a 1970s BBC book programme presented by Robert Robinson; the discussion panel included McEwan’s publisher, Tom Maschler, and Auberon Waugh. Gloag’s belief led him to write the subsequent novel Lost and Found, published in 1981, which involves a writer having his novel copied by another, who passes it off as his own.
As the time of its release by Viz Media, Warren Ellis declared that "Benkei is better than 96% of the crime fiction coming out of America right now." Although he described the stories as "ghoulish", Jason Thompson commented that Taniguchi can depict "the blood and the death in a cool, calm fashion." He also highlighted a battle sequence in the third chapter as "particularly notable" as it is wordless and free of sound-effects. Katherine Dacey of Manga Bookshelf said: "If Benkei's motives and methods are sometimes inscrutable—or downright illogical—the stories still work beautifully, with crack pacing and memorable denouements that can be as deeply unsettling as they are emotionally satisfying".
Recorded in Port Coquitlam, and released 11 August 2009 when the band was established in Toronto, Paint's debut album Can You Hear Me? was automatically praised as "5 STARS: in your face, but not overpowering, melodic but still harsh, well-crafted but not over-perfected... heartbreaking yet uplifting.... an underlying sense of sonic maturity and strong lyrical insight... well-developed and layered...retain(s) the attractive simplicity of a great rock album," as well as an "alt-rock relic spiritually scraping the ’90s, done with so much audacity and seismic guitar crunch one can’t help but strap into their time machine... this Toronto quartet wisely keep the sound big, but the anthemic denouements concise." In March 2010, Paint won the 102.1 The Edge "Indie Online" fan contest on the strength of the single "Strangers," upping their profile amongst the local and national independent music scene. Their performance at Edge Studios 27 March 2010 was called "Picture perfect" by curator Raina Douris.
It has fine literary qualities, although the author's inability to think himself into the age he exhibits constitutes a grave defect. The same may be said of Philip of France and Marie de Meranie (1850), 'a stirring tragedy, of which the verse has an appropriate martial ring,' and in which Helen Faucit produced a great impression. It is based to some extent on G. P. R. James's novel Philip Augustus. In the interim (1862) had appeared Anne Blake, another domestic drama, clever, but marred by such situations and denouements as only occur on the stage. In A Life's Hansom (1857) the domestic and historical elements are in some measure blended, the action being laid at the revolution of 1688. Such a piece might be easily produced by a man of Mareton's literary ability, but his next tragi-comedy, A Hard Struggle (1858), required genuine feeling in the author and great command over the resources of the stage.

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