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110 Sentences With "embodiments"

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

They're the musical embodiments of old souls and new waves.
They also depict themselves as strong and accepting—embodiments of resilience.
" He describes them as "gigantic bronze embodiments of that same racism.
Heartless—monstrous embodiments of pure darkness—steal hearts, snuffing out their light.
Policemen were a subset of his preoccupation with embodiments of masculine power.
"We are cursed to outlive the embodiments of love," wrote user Daniel Simmons.
Their creativity results in objects that serve as concrete embodiments of life itself.
In other words, they're visual embodiments of the contradictions inherent in each of us.
The people of Papua New Guinea believed that sharks were the embodiments of ancestors.
Open source software is perhaps one of the purest embodiments of the Engelbart philosophy.
They are re-embodiments of secret fears and desires, of monstrous hungers and frightful lusts.
Aurora and Jim are the latest embodiments of Hollywood's ever-evolving ideal of young lovers.
They are national institutions, roadside embodiments of the best of America, and the worst of it.
LB: That's important — we are, all the time, that messy recombination in our actual lived embodiments.
This family of white-blue stars are embodiments of the "live fast, die young" approach to existence.
"Both men and women are often attracted to culturally idealized embodiments of masculinity and femininity," he said.
It's both comforting and slightly unnerving to see how closely he resembles the fictive embodiments of his role.
One sometimes thinks of prodigies as embodiments of peculiar genius, uncorrupted by convention, impossible to replicate or reëngineer.
If these embodiments of perception and energy built on surroundings transcribe Nishino's own personal stories, there is no legend.
Others, however, see them as exceptional artworks and embodiments of the creative exuberance that occurred as timekeeping was revolutionised.
By nature, their adventures spoke of flawless embodiments of the law, order, and mainstream values of the ideal American.
But artists and athletes are embodiments of human capital, too, and they are also driven, sometimes obsessively, to succeed.
Those battered but indomitable embodiments of disreputable romance, with hidden reserves of performance for anyone skilled enough to pilot them.
The classic monsters, though — smashing cities, swatting planes out of the sky, exploding out of torsos — are embodiments of rage.
Messrs Wilson and Eagleman themselves are both scientists and novelists—living embodiments of the fallacy that there are two distinct cultures.
The majority of the bile Yiannopoulos spits towards the rightwing is directed at old-guard Republicans, embodiments of a rigged system.
Here, both turn to look pointedly at the "camera," blinking embodiments of that "what can you do" shrug — and that's it.
The judges on Venezuela's supreme court are the living embodiments of that, essentially functioning as an arm of an unpopular government.
More disturbing still than this mutation are the continuities between those early embodiments of postcolonial virtue and their apparent betrayers today.
When our neighbors approach us on the sidewalk, they do so as idiosyncratic individuals, rather than as embodiments of sociopolitical categories.
The real escape, Mao's work suggests, is poetry, which tracks the mind as it moves through embodiments not transmittable by visual means.
Especially when photographed, these embodiments have a curiously disembodied feel, almost akin to the personifications that people project onto constellations of stars.
Artistic and playful connections are positive embodiments of this planetary energy, but look out for any sort of manipulation or dangerous dynamics.
As physical embodiments of one of the most sought-after style aesthetics, it's fair to consider these women authorities on all things fashion.
And "Ambulance Blues" is one of the most stunning (that harmonica!) embodiments of Youngian wisdom and bottomless emotional depth of his whole discography.
Even dogs and horses are transformed into strange embodiments of manic depression and anxiety, as if they inherit the human tendency to overthink.
Now it's also a way to make images that might approach a fantasy realm or a framework for past, present, and future embodiments.
Letts, who as a performer and a playwright has grown scarily wise to the embodiments of power, tightens his features and sets his jaw.
The Sagrada Família, the towering, incomplete Gaudi cathedral, is one of several inspired physical embodiments of the serious ideas this book means to contemplate.
But the two books are also sometimes weirdly similar, making them respectable and disreputable embodiments of the same crisis in the right-wing mind.
They run out of the bullpen as bipedal of embodiments of impending doom, throwing signature pitches so famously dominant that they are characters unto themselves.
His hires are embodiments of Trump the Decider, and he will be loath to undercut you because then his original choice will come into question.
It isn't just that their characters have grown in emotional stature, but that they feel like living, breathing embodiments of a stirring new franchise ethos.
Contrast Trump's substantive views on our post-9/11 wars with those of today's military leadership, who are human embodiments of the American national security establishment.
Supernatural creatures are embodiments of the things we fear or don't understand, and they rise and fall in trendiness just as any other pop culture phenomenon.
" As embodiments of the spectacle, celebrities necessarily "renounce all autonomous qualities in order to identify [themselves] with the general law of obedience to the course of things.
One of my primary aims is to create, exhibit, and publish photographs depicting queer experience to fill society's gap in representations of these lived experiences and embodiments.
He may not be singlehandedly responsible for the changing role of geek culture within mainstream media, but he was one of the most significant embodiments of it.
A front-page article in The New York Times at the time said 38 people had witnessed her murder and failed to act, embodiments of urban indifference.
Largely immigrant-owned, they are the ultimate frills-free symbol of consumer access and gritty mini-embodiments of both the city's diversity and its 24/7 ethos.
But with her winning cackle of delight at the prospect of murder and torture, Belatrix LeStrange remains one of the most chilling embodiments of death in human form.
Hilter and the Manson family have been among the most prominent boogeymen of the last century, existing as embodiments of pure evil in the popular psyche for generations.
Two of the portraits liken Chisholm's characteristics to those of Orishas, human embodiments of elemental spirits from the Yoruba tradition, while the third incorporates the Pan-African flag.
"I'm interested in the idea of combining and juxtaposing two distinct yet different embodiments of pattern and this is where I see my new work heading," he adds.
As those skilled in the art will appreciate, the present embodiments are suitable for application in a variety of different types of mobile and/or hand-held apparatuses, e.g.
A new picture, Avery thought, of one of nature's purest embodiments of chaos and existential unease would have a different message: It would say, There are monsters out there.
Ms. Morrison viewed literary canons as the contingent products of history and associated forms of domination and erasure, not as the timeless embodiments of universal human experiences or values.
Trump's first meeting with New Zealand's leader Jacinda Ardern will bring together the embodiments of two global poles: Trump the conservative populist and Ardern a symbol of progressive values.
In the self-financed and -choreographed videos for "IUD" and "Dance Like U," the second single off Both, Kaya presents her feelings as physical embodiments identical in appearance to herself.
Talk show host Ellen DeGeneres is good at many things, from trying to trick the Kardashians into revealing pregnancy news to scaring guests with physical embodiments of their biggest fears.
To be a little fair to Mickey, the kids in question — save for the littlest, sweet Ben — are the walking, talking, eye-rolling embodiments of obnoxiously unchecked wealth and privilege.
Here's how Apple describes that process in its patent filling:In some embodiments, a device may apply a watermark to detected images as an alternative to completely disabling a recording function.
Natural languages aren't just more complex versions of the algorithms with which we teach machines to do tasks; they are also the living embodiments of our essence as social animals.
This paragraph is revealing: Although the present embodiments are described and illustrated herein as being implemented in a smartphone, the device described is provided as an example and not a limitation.
The two party establishments are mired in their orthodoxies, but Trump and his appointees are embodiments of the nationalism espoused by Pat Buchanan, the most influential public intellectual in America today.
But neither is particularly Trumpist when it comes to the actual details of foreign policy; indeed, both are embodiments of the full-spectrum hawkishness that the businessman-candidate often campaigned against.
Also, it looks like a typo: here, as throughout her career, Howe is interested in the accidents, smudges, and tears that fasten works of literature to their material embodiments on the page.
In the early '80s, the embodiments of downtown N.Y.C. culture Cookie Mueller and Glenn O'Brien co-wrote the play "Drugs," a tragicomedy about two roommates and life-altering substances through the decades.
Both works are intended as comments on Marcel Duchamp's "The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even" (1915-21975), one of the most noteworthy of art history's countless embodiments of the male gaze.
Larger firms, in particular, which you can think of as wildly successful businesses and thus embodiments of the logic of business, tend to be more tolerant of employee personal tastes than smaller firms.
Often, they serve as perfectly distinct, bite-sized embodiments of what the characters are feeling in any given moment, swerving from deeply human to eerily alien depending on what the scene calls for.
But Batman and/or Harley Quinn – both embodiments of Dini's determination to live on – are ever present, making sure that he does not slip back into the habit of tuning the world out.
Participants in the holiday are generally encouraged to wear silly costumes, eat to excess, and drink so much they cannot tell the difference between Mordecai and Haman — the embodiments of good and evil.
Skyscrapers and towers are part of the DNA of the modern metropolis — embodiments of capital and power, facilitated by trade-offs between private and public sectors, and occasional beacons of innovative, progressive design.
San Francisco and Los Angeles — where buying a house is increasingly out of reach and residents feel priced out of many rental properties as well — have become embodiments of a national housing crisis.
The novels follow the adventures of 12-year-old Lyra Belacqua, who lives in a parallel universe version of Oxford where humans are constantly accompanied by animal "daemons," the literal embodiments of their souls.
By bringing together these different embodiments of time, as well as recognizing that a large part of the world he inhabits will always be facing in the other direction, Cole's photographs recognize that limitation.
For this reason, the author sees Kim Il-Sung and Donald Trump as embodiments of "cute," because they pair a childlike and cartoonish appearance (they both look like overgrown babies) with fearsome political tactics.
"We're playing soccer to identify how much new technology we need to create and we need to develop in order to have a fully autonomous team of humanoid robots and humanoid embodiments," Visser told Friedlander.
The people he talked to in their homes and mosques, listening to their frustrations with a war that is taking an increasing toll on civilian life, are embodiments of the larger Afghan population, Hamdard says.
Movements like this, the flickering between what is thought to be known and what remains unknowable, are embodiments of queerness, and a facet of their power is that they cannot be dictated by the state.
The stories and their characters became instant hallmarks of the PlayStation brand, much in the same way Master Chief would become the Xbox mascot and the creations of Shigeru Miyamoto became the embodiments of Nintendo.
Thursday's debate may well highlight the party's ideological evolution and tensions, when the race's frontrunner — former Vice President Joe Biden — takes the stage against Bernie Sanders, the two embodiments of the party's establishment and left wings.
For Mr. Hazony and for his followers, the Roman Empire, the Hapsburg Empire, the Soviet Union, the European Union, and even the post-Cold War United States are just different embodiments of the idea of universal empire.
By the time Chris reaches his last three embodiments — rendered with deepening pathos by Michael Countryman, Denise Burse and Charles Turner — you may find yourself, as I did, on the verge of tears and then past it.
As we all become embodiments of a permanently available, always-on, multi-faceted marketplace, please remind yourself of how electricity changed business and, by extension, society: It didn't really change the effect, but it totally changed the cause.
Now, though, the club is in the rudest of health, with an ambitious, promising squad; a charismatic manager in Rodgers; and, in Vardy and Schmeichel, two unifying, experienced figures in the changing room, embodiments of the spirit of 2016.
And what makes the regime the rabbits are founding good — and successful, but first and foremost good — is the integration of the different virtues, the cooperation of their different embodiments, their willing subordination to one another as circumstances require.
Overwatch gives him an outlet to take out his worries on digital embodiments of those robots, rather than having to wait until humanity invents artificial intelligence and then have to worry about the ethical ramifications of ending a sentient's life.
But the knitted teepees in Native Intelligence (1987–92), for example, were not solely about nostalgia—they were also embodiments of a "lost in translation" situation, where meaning collapses as the teepee goes from an ethnographic photograph to a knitted object.
While these heroes are traditionally, overwhelmingly, male, for Campbell and his cultural kin, there is something universal at the core of the monomyth: we are all embodiments of this archetype, living out our own particular stories, trusting and rebirthing ourselves.
A Skin So Soft (originally in French, Te peau si lisse) is not quite in line with all these other works, even though it is about male bodybuilders, whom you would naturally think of as the living embodiments of this physical ideal.
DreamWorks Animation is making a movie about the inexplicable '90s toy—for why, please consult Creativity (Death Thereof) or CGI Cash Grab in your appendix—and to promote it they've enlisted their A-list voice cast to pose with their trollish embodiments.
And whenever there's a big speech to be made — by Beale, or his honorable best friend, Max Schumacher (Douglas Henshall), or the show's various embodiments of institutional evil — the production slows down and e-nun-ci-ates with organ music (really) as underscoring.
These variations in quality, pacing, and physical space feel restricting at times, but the exhibition is not without its high points —most often from young, black artists who were born at a time when museums in South Africa were institutional embodiments of colonization and inequality.
It's a statement of the core philosophy of a group of Conservative anarchists who've lost sight of the basic principles of Conservatism—respect for institutions as embodiments of the spirit of compromise and constraints of emotional self-indulgence—in pursuit of their ideologically charged vision.
The estranged (dis)embodiments of dystopia are elsewhere monumentalized: Esterio Segura Mora's "Right Hand" (212), implicitly "of God," clutches a hammer; Flavio Garciandía's hyperrealist painting "She is in Another Day" (21989), a companion to "All You Need Is Love" (22013) at the MNBA, suggests ironic escapism.
Ms. Thunberg, Ms. Bastida, Ms. Villaseñor, Ms. Peltier and the Wijsen sisters are living embodiments of SDG17, as they are bringing people together from around the world and inspiring young people to conceive and develop solutions that can preserve the planet that they will shortly inherit.
I also feel that many of these people were, in themselves, in the way they presented themselves in daily life, Wilde or Quentin Crisp, Radclyffe Hall and Gertrude Stein, all living embodiments of a queerness that more ordinary folk could marvel at and learn from, maybe even imitate.
It was essential to the Grambling project, as framed by the college's president and head coaches, that student-athletes not only triumph on the court and gridiron and diamond but also serve as embodiments of African-American dignity at a time when white supremacy reigned in defiance of federal law.
Here the joyless white dude "underdog" murdering everything in his path with minimal justification is replaced by a black man getting revenge on the embodiments of a history of injustices (and then Lincoln Clay drives over a pedestrian, kills a stranger, or shoots the face off the 700th foot soldier).
What is more, she gives relatively little attention to the fate of liberalism in twentieth-century France and Germany, even though, in the decades after World War II, France and West Germany were arguably the strongest embodiments of the older liberal traditions that she contrasts with post-war American liberalism.
In an industry that still can't seem to face shaking off the limits that define the image of a female artist, she's a breath of fresh air—playful in her embodiments of masculinity, flexing her muscles and essentially doing Nick Cave or Mick Jagger more boldly than Nick Cave or Mick Jagger.
Today, activists and social media influencers such as Harriet's Apothecary and Vintage Black Glamour are redefining the observance of Black History Month to include examples of African-American resistance and elegance -- not just the same embodiments of excellence every February: Martin Luther King, Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, Thurgood Marshall, and Sojourner Truth.
I started doing a lot of research on social media and seeing other embodiments or views of female virginity and I came across this interesting trend—so to speak— of virginity auctions where girls are putting up their virginity for auction because they recognize the market value [and] the fetish with their status as virgins.
Where each of the aforementioned actors had a moment or two that firmly entrenched them as the living embodiments of the comic-book characters they portrayed (the hallway fight sequence in the first season of Daredevil, for example), Jones' Danny Rand never quite finds that epic moment in the first half of the series.
Whatever their failings as college football coaches—in both Strong's case and Helfrich's, this is largely synonymous with offending super-boosters whose patience proved even shorter than expected—the signature failure of each seems to be that they were football coaches, instead of effective embodiments of whatever it was that their restive fan communities wanted them to be.
He could ostensibly choose more or fewer bodyguards, but no one ever bothers to explain why this all-powerful mutant would limit his henchmen to just a quartet (in the comics, the mutants he chooses are turned into embodiments of Death, War, Pestilence, and Famine which makes more thematic sense, but that's not the case here).
" He noted a pattern in American history: "There's an economic revolution, it creates amazing new opportunities, and then the companies that seize those opportunities become so powerful that the people revolt—they say the winners have become too powerful, they start attacking the people who are the embodiments of winning, sometimes with gossip, sometimes with facts.
He treats the most famous embodiments of it — Kierkegaard, Strindberg, Bergman — with deft sympathy, but even more engagingly comes up with unexpected examples, like the poor Icelandic leader, called the "Lawspeaker," left to ruminate on whether or not to convert his people from paganism to Christianity (spoiler alert: He says yes, though with some important caveats involving the rights to abandon newborns to their deaths and to eat horse meat).

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