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"ebulliently" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows a lot of confidence, energy and good humour

30 Sentences With "ebulliently"

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

In no other role is he so ebulliently, exuberantly fresh.
Both artists speak ebulliently about their new jobs, despite the requisite trial and error.
Despite this traditional association, Susun extensively and ebulliently stressed that femininity is a cultural construct.
In characteristic New York fashion, the moment the news media ebulliently broadcast its arrival, a Pamplona scene ensued.
Some people are ebulliently optimistic that the abomination is coming undone and may soon be at an end.
At the next table, Matsigenka rivermen were drinking litre bottles of Cuzqueña beer, shouting ebulliently and swaying in their chairs.
And a brooch, Old World style accessory, yes, but hers was big and ebulliently shaped and perched center on her chest.
Courtesy Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum The art being made was apolitical, for the most part: ebulliently neo-expressionist and facetiously faux-naïve.
Teddy Roosevelt never did, and carried on blithely bully-pulpiting, to ebulliently divisive and obstreperous effect, for a decade after leaving the White House.
Chance the Rapper, Lil Wayne, Justin Bieber, and Quavo traipse about a decadent mansion decked with women in bikini tops and denim cutoffs, jiggling ebulliently.
For example, the theme associated with the Cafe Momus, where the bohemians hang out, is built from a few parallel triads that dip and rise ebulliently.
Or the way she and Olivia Colman squinted at a fan's iPhone camera and ebulliently said, "Gay rights!" into a fan's camera phone at the BAFTAs.
They deserve airplay just for opening up a received genre's sexual possibilities, not to mention for assembling ten ebulliently catchy electrorockets that blast off in unison.
The 75-year-old grandmother usually takes to the air for major announcements, including ebulliently reporting the news of North Korea's sixth and largest nuclear test last September.
This diverse and earnest show tackles politics, discrimination and poverty, ebulliently portraying a neighborhood in which a gang is not a haunting menace but merely a fact of life.
And then I read the latest story, the children sitting on the floor as close to me as possible so they can see Robin Preiss Glasser's ebulliently comic illustrations.
In the rare chance of an attack from "dissenters," you will be assigned a Lady Gaga-autographed, pink limited edition electric scooter to escape, roaring ebulliently into the greater Mojave.
Ezekiel was on Cloud Nine, ebulliently reminding his soldiers again and again that "we will lose not one in our ranks," and it worked out pretty well for him until the episode's cliffhanger.
Chenoweth, 51, is best known as an ebulliently American musical comedy diva, while McKellen, 80, is one of the all-time great British classical stage actors, with a lucrative sideline in fantasy action movies.
"Everybody was dressing as 'Stranger Things' characters, and this one group of 12 or 15 people all dressed as Barb and sent me a picture," the actress remembered, speaking ebulliently by phone from her parents' home in Atlanta.
She is securely esteemed—or adored, more like it—for her ebulliently faux-naïve paintings of party scenes and of her famous friends, and for her four satirical allegories of Manhattan, which she called "Cathedrals": symbol-packed phantasmagorias of Fifth Avenue, Broadway, Wall Street, and Art, at the Metropolitan Museum.
Nobody in Washington was kinder to me as a novice journalist, nobody gave me more hope that my own peculiar vocation was worthwhile rather than quixotic, and few men I met in my D.C. years modeled the Christian virtues of faith and hope and charity so ebulliently, without the air of defensive irony that many of us weave around our unfashionable morality and metaphysics.
The second recitative is short and secco, contrasting sharply with the final "ebulliently major" da capo aria.
The chorus, "" (All eyes wait, Lord), is, according to the musicologist Julian Mincham, "dance-like but not toe-tapping, major but not ebulliently so, employing the full chorus but restrained throughout". The form is a free rondo with interspersed extended episodes of tenor and bass duet. The opening includes the BACH motif.
Caustic with colors is the brief yet ebullient finale, a rondo in which the main playful theme appears five times, imitated by both instruments, interspersed by episodes full of sparking scales. In the second of these, the piano is let loose in a cadenza of helter-skelter zest, ebulliently veering into unexpected tonal highways. The theme returns, to round the movement off in abrupt yet decisive brilliance.
Gould's secretary, Karen, arrives with the coffee and the two men ebulliently chat with her about the movie business and their experiences related to it. Karen is only temporarily filling in for Gould's regular secretary and is new to the ways of Hollywood. Gould asks her to make lunch reservations for them and she leaves. After she's gone, Fox comments on the secretary, teasing him about trying to seduce her.
Mysterious sotto voce strings open the final Allegro con spirito, again in sonata form. The full orchestra suddenly announces the arrival of the main theme, unveiling "...the blazing sunrise of the most athletic and ebulliently festive movement Brahms ever wrote". As the initial excitement fades, violins introduce a new subject in A major marked largamente (to be played broadly). The wind instruments repeat this until it develops into a climax.
Leslie Felperin of The Hollywood Reporter wrote: "Reprising the kind of musical performances, campus hijinks, stinging humor and sassy sisterhood put in place by its eminently likeable predecessor, Pitch Perfect 2 remixes the elements and comes up with something even slicker and sharper." Guy Lodge of Variety called it an "ebulliently entertaining, arguably superior sequel to the 2012 musical comedy hit." Also: "Kay Cannon’s script is even lighter on narrative than its predecessor, but fills any resulting void with a concentrated supply of riotous gags, and a renewed emphasis on the virtues of female collaboration and independence." Peter Travers of Rolling Stone gave the film 3 out of 4 stars.
" Raja Sen from Rediff gave a three stars said that "Guru is fuelled by a slew of strong performances. Abhishek Bachchan owns the movie, forcing audiences to sit up straight as it begins and making us laugh and applaud as he carries on. He's impressive in every frame, as he ebulliently takes over an alien room by hopping onto a chair, or when he's trying to be ever so slightly slimy, polishing his spectacles and showing off his smarminess". Daily News and Analysis reviewer gave a three star rating and cited " Guru is a film that enthralls you for most of its running time as it traces the life of the uncannily forward seeing bumpkin from Gujarat who turns every disadvantage into an advantage.
Students of Modernist painting and sculpture are familiar with Pierrot (in many different attitudes, from the ineffably sad to the ebulliently impudent) through the masterworks of his acolytes, including Pablo Picasso, Juan Gris, Georges Rouault, Salvador Dalí, Max Beckmann, August Macke, Paul Klee, Jacques Lipchitz--the list is very long (see Visual arts below). As for the drama, Pierrot was a regular fixture in the plays of the Little Theatre Movement (Edna St. Vincent Millay's Aria da Capo [1920], Robert Emmons Rogers' Behind a Watteau Picture [1918], Blanche Jennings Thompson's The Dream Maker [1922]),For direct access to these works, go to the footnotes following their titles in Plays, playlets, pantomimes, and revues below. which nourished the careers of such important Modernists as Eugene O'Neill, Susan Glaspell, and others. In film, a beloved early comic hero was the Little Tramp of Charlie Chaplin, who conceived the character, in Chaplin's words, as "a sort of Pierrot".

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