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20 Sentences With "enthrallingly"

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

The "Firebird" — now enthrallingly suspenseful storytelling — looked far better than when new.
Expect an enthrallingly low-key performance that Mr. Cohen might have appreciated.
That evolved civility combined with the characters' primitive lifestyles makes the show feel enthrallingly timeless.
You watch the formations cohere, melt and change, fluently and enthrallingly, like sand patterns changed by successive sea waves.
Streaming on: Netflix Netflix's British imports don't always hit, but when they do, they can be dreamy and enthrallingly fascinating.
His enthrallingly difficult later silk-screens cannibalize his own archive, discordantly remixing earlier works and treating paint as both material and information.
His enthrallingly difficult later silk screens cannibalize his own archive, discordantly remixing earlier works and treating paint as both material and information.
The tragically powerful but infinitesimally nuanced resonances of "Trilogie" are as enthrallingly pleasurable to listen to as observing glistening icicles melting in the winter sun.
Eventually Kilmer was considered dreadful enough to parody with a contest that values the ability to string thoughts together the way he did: enthrallingly, even absorbingly.
Incorporating electric lime greens and less-than-docile indigo blues, the majestic arena of Saint-Eustache evolves into an enthrallingly accessible starry night—all set to the tune of cathedral's organ.
Most literally, "White Noise," Suzan-Lori Parks's enthrallingly thought-packed new play at the Public Theater, refers to the whoosh generated by those much-used, soothing sound makers designed to lull people to sleep.
The title "Derren Brown: Secret," the enthrallingly baffling one-mentalist show that opened on Tuesday at the Atlantic Theater Company's Linda Gross Theater, turns out to have so many meanings that you soon stop counting.
Known for its fearsomely dedicated community of archivists that can update relevant pages with new material mere hours after its official release, no matter how obscure, it's one of the most enthrallingly nerdy resources you can find.
It is described by Rolling Stone magazine as "the man himself, Marlon Brando, in his own words. With narration provided by tapes of the actor speaking about fame, his craft, and his eventual hatred of both."'25 Must-See Movies at Sundance 2015: Listen To Me Marlon' Rolling Stone. January 2015 Variety called it "a superb portrait" and Hollywood Reporter "marvellously creative and enthrallingly intimate".
In a retrospective review of "Carrie," AllMusic journalist Dave Thompson praised "Carrie" as being "an enthrallingly atmospheric number. One of the most electrifying of all Cliff Richard's recordings." In 1980, Richard officially changed his name, by deed poll, from Harry Rodger Webb to Cliff Richard. At the same time, he received the Officer of the Order of the British Empire from the Queen for services to music and charity.
Saintsbury, EB, 298 For example, the scandalous novel Vicaire des Ardennes (1822)—banned for its depiction of nearly-incestuous relations and, more egregiously, of a married priest—attributed to a "Horace de Saint- Aubin".Robb, 103 These books were potboiler novels, designed to sell quickly and titillate audiences. In Saintsbury's view, "they are curiously, interestingly, almost enthrallingly bad".Saintsbury, "Honoré de Balzac", xv Saintsbury indicates that Robert Louis Stevenson tried to dissuade him from reading these early works of Balzac.
A story of a struggle to overcome adversity, set in outback Australia, involving bigamous marriages to Afghan cameleers, conversion to the Muslim faith and travel to Mecca, The Washerwoman's Dream has been described as "a life story as enthrallingly readable as any novel", in which "the strength of the narrative .. rests on the firm foundation of Lindsay's thorough research". It has since become an Australian classic, and as of 2018, is in its third edition and has also appeared in braille and as an audiobook. It has also been drawn on for a museum exhibition about the Afghan cameleersHoysted, Merilyn.
" The track "details the grotesque waking nightmare of systematic oppression in America, which ensures some people have less a chance at survival—be it from police brutality, poisoned water, global warming, white supremacy, patriarchy, religious groups, or (as the title suggests) the predatory industry of gambling." Casey and Deal sing the "startling" chorus of “I decide who lives and who dies” together. The final track "You Always Win" was arranged by Deal, who also provided vocals. It has been described as a "delicately aslant closer" and a "far less direct but still affecting duet" in which "Deal's comparatively soothing backup vocals [...] enthrallingly contrast with [...] vocalist Joe Casey's gruff, Nick-Cave-meets-Mark-Kozelek speak-sing delivery.
Robeson's criticism of British and French appeasement and strident pro-Soviet statements (immediately after the signing of the Nazi-Soviet Pact) led to his (and by extension the film) being placed on a publicity blacklist by Lord Beaverbrook, proprietor of the Daily Express. However, the Monthly Film Bulletin described the film as a "moving and enthrallingly interesting story of courage, endurance and self- sacrifice," praising it as "an outstanding achievement for all concerned" and singling out Pen Tennyson's "sensitive and skillful" direction and Robeson's "impressive presence" and "glorious voice". Variety disparaged the film as possessing "not much dramatic wealth" and compared it unfavourably with Carol Reed's The Stars Look Down. The reviewer also complained that Robeson "delivers only two songs and neither solo".
Jensen is particularly good at animating male characters, but her Dr. Jill Talcott is a memorable creation here." Fiona Kelleghan gave the novel a rave review in The Washington Post, saying that Jensen writes "confidently and enthrallingly" and that the novel "deserves to take its place...in a Hugo nomination line-up": "Babe scientist Jill Talcott and her delightful lab assistant Nate stumble onto an equation with literally world-shaking implications, and their unexpected alliance with a playboy tabloid journalist and an Orthodox rabbi endangers all four and their murderous Department of Defense pursuer. Equally assured at mathematical speculation and kabbalistic cosmology, the novel is fast-paced, suspenseful, and a joy from beginning to end." Victoria Strauss of the SF Site thought that the novel "has more the feel of a thriller than science fiction" but that "Not so many thrillers, either, are as character-driven as this one.

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