Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"evince" Definitions
  1. evince something to show clearly that you have a feeling or quality
"evince" Synonyms
demonstrate display manifest reveal show bespeak communicate evidence expose convey declare disclose divulge exhibit impart indicate proclaim give away make manifest make obvious announce broadcast publish publicise(UK) publicize(US) promulgate state advertise advertize blazon herald trumpet enunciate pronounce annunciate sound post release personalise(UK) personalize(US) embody express epitomise(UK) epitomize(US) personify incarnate incorporate substantiate materialise(UK) materialize(US) externalise(UK) externalize(US) instantiate body symbolise(UK) symbolize(US) exemplify prove determine establish verify attest confirm validate authenticate corroborate document ascertain certify check find justify elicit cause induce produce provoke trigger engender generate occasion prompt evoke inspire stimulate bring kindle raise educe excite extort draw confess acknowledge admit allow concede grant profess avow confide affirm agree assert make known derive deduce infer conclude evolve excogitate reason think out make develop make out gather understand glean divine figure construe conceive testify swear depose allege asseverate aver witness bear witness claim submit vouch render perform act characterise(UK) characterize(US) play depict execute personate portray present represent do emote enact imitate impersonate playact have foster harbour(UK) cling to embrace harbor(US) hold maintain retain assimilate cultivate devise feel nurse mark label denote distinguish identify delineate flag designate illustrate notate pinpoint underline betoken brand tab tag tick More

131 Sentences With "evince"

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

Instead, the sketches and debris evince the impish, sweet, and haphazard.
These Orientalist narratives evince their own insecurities and anxieties of China.
The Trump campaign continues to evince confidence in its public pronouncements.
The naturalistic backgrounds of these works evince a generic romantic realism.
But only a few in Labour evince an appetite for such pluralism.
Lichtenstein's women evince distress in the form of petite, rare tears, their
Republicans supportive of Hyde-Smith continue to evince confidence in her chances.
Working relationships at risk They evince a bitter distaste for one another's cultures.
Yet Mr Prayuth's team has yet to evince a flair for economic management.
Both energies float on a white surface and evince little or no depth.
His questions and statements didn't evince an obvious view one way or another.
Almost none of them evince a sense of being observed by the artist.
Countless historical anecdotes evince the passion with which Castro sought to bolster Cuban dairy.
Since these shots have been magnified, their subtle modulations of color evince some beauty.
At no point does David Brooks evince any particular engagement with any of these sources.
A selection of artworks that point back in time evince a strong sense of historical conscience.
Shinique Smith's and Maren Hassinger's contributions to the exhibition evince a poignant acceptance of this limit.
Classics such as "Mary the Dyke" and "Zezé's Head of Hair" do not evince respect for homosexuals.
There are few things that evince a stronger nostalgia for a traveler than an overnight sleeper train.
Some images evince a biting sarcasm or ironic wit, while others poke fun at our consumerist society.
Trace fossils evince movement, whether the footprints of a dinosaur or the sinuous bore hole of a worm.
While some Republicans are increasingly gloomy about Trump's chances, others evince optimism about the opportunity the debate presents.
One wonders whether investors would be expected to evince a disinterested love for Bosnia, if they were European.
These efforts, which the formal assurance embodies, evince a bona fide relationship between a resettlement agency and a refugee.
For Safe Harbor, she says she prefers introverts or, at the very least, people who evince precision and curiosity.
You might feel a little bit crazy by the end, and several scenes are calculated to evince hollering and cringing.
What was striking last week was that a dovish Fed did not evince the usual rally response from financial markets.
Even his photographs of mannequins, another frequent subject, seem to evince a fascination with, and perhaps a yearning for, rest.
On the other side are former football players who do not yet evince signs of having C.T.E. — but may someday.
It's dizzying to see a president who celebrated the hacking of his rival's campaign emails suddenly evince alarm about leaks.
Granted an immense amount of power they weren't expecting, they evince no humility or maturity, just a palpable sense of vengeance.
Her texts evince more than a negligent or reckless mind; the intent behind them was clear: she wanted him to die.
Trump's own interviews, memoirs, news conferences and Twitter feed evince a pattern of sexual degradation, objectification and assault stretching back decades.
Munster, who argued in July that Netflix's best days "are in fact behind it," continued to evince a bearish outlook Wednesday.
Likewise, the rigid latticework of her numerous "Human Argument" triangles evince a fondness for visual order that belies their satirical intent.
But despite the clearly political overtones of the adaptation, It doesn't evince much self-knowledge about what its own politics are.
These pieces evince conflict between the permanence of ink and the abandoned or perhaps in-progress quality of the tattoos' dedications.
It's easy to see his affection for the city, but some of his images evince a coldness and confusion toward its inhabitants.
If that is to happen, then the United States, the world's most powerful nation, will have to evince consistent respect for it.
Never mind whether they're supporting an effective policy; it's considered gauche for savvy pundit types to evince concern over the hoi polloi.
Men are neither more "nativist" nor "authoritarian," compared with women, the study found, nor do women evince less "discontent" with their governments.
Even when Taggart takes the mic, he's such a nothing singer that he fails to evince even the slightest hint of personality.
But at least since the roboticist Cynthia Brazeal's pioneering work with "sociable robots," people have suspected that machines could evince autonomy and affect.
Originally from Venezuela, Fraiz's paintings evince the bright hues of a childhood spent in Miami after immigrating to the US at age seven.
Jen: The scene of Elliot using American fuzzy lop to fuzz Evince (the PDF reader) to find an exploitable vulnerability was pretty cool.
However, the momentum did not evince any confidence for the Nifty to be able to again cross the 10,000 milestone in a hurry.
Even so, many Asians oppose the Trump administration's makeover of the immigration system, and their votes evince a broader discomfort with the president.
In a way, this is a tale about human nature, and how great gobs of cash evince both the best and worst of it.
The UAE has been particularly circumspect in its public statements about last month's sabotage (though in private officials evince little doubt about Iran's involvement).
In its original definition, it means homesickness; for many here, the homesickness they evince is for a period they're too young to have known.
Though he is a self-described straight-talker, the film nevertheless shows Mr Robbins communicating in a studied way, meant to evince certain emotions.
In a way, this is a tale about human nature, and how great gobs of cash evince both the best and worst of it.
All of this would evince a great understanding of the mechanics, but where Hollow Knight gets into homage territory is in its choice of themes.
"The facts alleged in Jackson's affidavit neither evince a personal bias nor would convince a reasonable person that a personal bias exists," Judge Starr wrote.
A big push to revive the education reform concept would be very controversial in Democratic Party circles and evince howls of fury from the left.
And if the technology gets good enough to evince love and lust—Turing love—but its programming still means it can't not consent, well, that's slavery.
Such cases evince how the flow and storage of data is increasingly considered a national security issue by countries large and small, governments democratic and authoritarian.
Unconvinced of the "decisive moment" preached by Henri Cartier-Bresson, she always worked in sequences and carefully staged fictive scenes that evince their own constructed nature.
Such papers also evince a surprising amount of intra-community conflict and political division that runs counter to the popular portrayal of a unified gay political front.
Black Americans overwhelmingly vote for Democrats in general elections, but many of them — particularly older ones — lean toward candidates in primaries who evince reliability instead of insurgency.
The 25 books on display evince a familiar old-fashioned style — think "Mutt and Jeff" or "Blondie" — distinguished by robust penciling and a cumulative air of obsession.
Like Trump himself, Pompeo seems to evince few core beliefs—his ideology guided primarily by hawkish views overseas and his commitment to evangelical policy goals like restricting abortion.
But as dollars flooded the country during the United Nations protectorate from 1992 to 1993, ancestor spirits began to evince a preference for American currency, especially $100 bills.
Waco's biggest issue is the writing, which loses the plot at levels that evince the "we know better"-ism of most politicians and pundits during the 2016 presidential campaign.
Back then, Anderson wanted no part of the Cyborg fight, and for good reason: she's only been fighting since 2013, and even her wins evince a work in progress.
The desperate cannibals banished to The Bad Batch's wasteland evince bits of shame over how low they've stooped to survive, and one of them slowly emerges as a sensitive hero.
A partisan gerrymander like the Republican-engineered map "evince[s] a fundamental distrust of voters by serving the self-interest of political parties over the public good" and cannot stand.
"Runaways" does evince the Savage-Schwartz sparkle — the capacity for transmuting high-school schmaltz into screwball comedy — and perhaps it will do it just often enough to keep your interest.
Though Sawyers bears a faint resemblance, his manner in both speech and physicality evince Obama in such a breezy, seamless way that you at once forget that you're watching an actor.
Sociologists have shown that for white families, "best" is often shorthand for "white," even if the school in question does not necessarily evince better educational outcomes than its more multiracial peers.
In much the same way that transformative acting performances are more likely to take the top prize, cinematography awards typically go to films that evince an element of risk or showmanship.
They evince an artist set on exacting what might be characterized as one woman's revenge on the male gaze while refusing to settle on what, physically, beauty in art should be.
Particularly in its second and third seasons, Louie seemed to evince an all-consuming empathy for humanity, undercut with a healthy sense of self-loathing on the part of C.K. himself.
The answer they arrived at was that they, as a Southern museum, should evince more Southern hospitality, and that they should be more humble in the ways they talk about themselves.
His pronouncements, on the page, evince an ardent faith in government of the people, by the people, and for the people, but you badly want him to hang out with the people.
It is all rather confounding — unless Mr. Trump is simply eyeing postelection business interests — for congressional Republicans, who evince little doubt that Moscow was behind the hack of the Democratic National Committee.
Some student advocates of racial justice evince a sense of alienation when it comes to First Amendment rights, having witnessed them being invoked mainly in relation to speech that they consider offensive.
But their association with the city isn't strained; they evince a gravitational tug that was felt, according to Boehm and Holcomb, by people in regions as far-flung as Iceland and India.
They also claim that the judge's bias "evince[s] a cumulative abuse of discretion that has deprived Defendants of their Fifth and Sixth Amendments rights to a fair trial," according to Politico.
The artists' choice to evince portraiture, landscape, and other accepted imagery conveys a devotion to the subject matter, and a concerted effort to bring the floral still life into the 21st century.
For its part, however, the museum store doesn't let the painting's absence from the show get in the way of selling "Scream"-branded merchandise (though, at least in San Francisco, they evince admirable restraint).
Indeed, your straightening of some of the figure's curves—for instance, of the sitter's cheekbone—seems to evince Maar's straight jacket fate, for a while confined to a psychiatric hospital, after the couple split.
Amid these increasingly deranged conditions of discourse, those who are foolish enough to actually believe in the principles they evince find themselves isolated and under attack, often as insufficiently true believers in the cause.
In failing to truly challenge the institutional bias and everyday assaults on human dignity that we see so often in the church, do they evince the type of courage Christ modeled in confronting the Pharisees?
They do evince some sympathy for long-acting reversible contraceptives (LARCs), like IUDs and implants, noting evidence from Colorado and Delaware that increased access to this kind of birth control can reduce unwanted pregnancies substantially.
But our system does allow for a powerful, unacknowledged presidential "veto,": firing US attorneys until the only ones on the job evince an "independent" judgment that just happens to be identical to that of the President.
With The Apprentice, Trump solidified the reality era–tinged understanding of the American dream: It's not actual hard work that makes you successful, but the ability to evince the feeling and effect of power and wealth.
Yes, his '24 production looks pretty good overall, but nine of his 215 grabs and 210 of his 210 yards came in one miraculous night in a Seattle shootout, and Wheaton didn't evince much explosiveness otherwise.
It was not expected to come from the far left, which continues to evince extreme hostility to Mr. Macron, seeing him as the hated representative of capitalism and finance — precisely Ms. Le Pen's depiction of him.
In its original statement, Apple said that while Bloomberg Businessweek asked the company to comment on the allegations in recent months, it "conducted rigorous internal investigations based on their inquiries" and hadn't found any evince of tampering.
Instead, the most repeated criticism is aimed at share repurchases, or stock buybacks, in the aftermath of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act that supposedly evince self-enrichment by CEOs and a failure to generate business investment.
This wave of student activism coincides with the Black Lives Matter phenomenon, and they evince a shared rage at racialised political rhetoric and police abuses, to which even Ivy League students, or their families, can be exposed.
In this light, the paintings at MoMA are logical extensions of his older works, as they evince the desire to push the limits and manipulate the principles of a framework, to see how far one can go.
The various subgenres of thriller have always relied on a certain level of misdirection, of course, and plenty have arrived at their finales only to evince eye rolls instead of — or at least in addition to — exclamations.
But their clichéd teen drama dominates most of the narrative, which makes the season a slog through lots and lots of slow, uninteresting scenes where teens fail to communicate, exchange cringeworthy banter, and evince zero self-awareness.
It's nice to see her in a movie in which she has more to do than parachute in and evince concern for Tom Cruise, as she's been doing in the last 10 or 20 "Mission Impossible" pictures.
The "unhappy marriages" in Lasker's paintings evince a nonchalance toward irresolvable conflict, a posture that I initially viewed as a form of resignation, an intimation that contemporary art cannot hope to achieve synthesis without succumbing to nostalgia.
Richard Nixon, the last president to evince so little respect for constitutional norms, was also a "law and order" candidate who promised to represent a silent majority frustrated by rapid racial advancement and unnerved by black anger.
Ellie Ga's artistic tarot cards, The Deck of Tara (2011), made in response to her time as an artist-in-residence on a nautical scientific expedition to the Arctic, also evince anxiety about the future's perils and uncertainties.
Smith's sculptures and installations, comprised largely of modified found objects, evince an alternate reality, one in which the ideals of capitalism and self-determination are countered by the reality of social and economic strife in the United States.
The white-collar creative class is having a collective Xanax moment about it all too, and Chipchase—via his profession, persona, and products, which all evince a kind of worldly-but-plainspoken, human-centered trustworthiness—is tapping into it.
To me, one of the most compelling and puzzling aspects of Porter's art is how, quite often, the human element seems frozen over or inexpressive while architectural features or the natural world evince a visual exuberance and animated depths.
Classes to resume Tuesday "Nestled next to the Village of Geneseo -- one of 24 communities nationwide to be recognized as a National Historic Landmark -- the campus' ivy-covered brick buildings evince a traditional college ambiance," the college website says.
" Commenting upon a British case, Judge Gorsuch questioned a decision in which "…the court seemed to assume that a competent patient has a right to refuse care, even if in doing so it might evince an intent to die.
Boyle shot the scenes at Jobs's first launch in 1984 on 16mm film, captured the scenes around the 1988 launch on 35mm film, and switched to digital to evince a polished modernity for the third product launch in 33.
The delicious tastes and sounds of Central Park — and of Prospect Park in Brooklyn, where cars were banned from the loop drive in January — are more than sensory delights; they evince ecological conversations among trees, insects, microbes and people.
But with no shortage of either, Mr. Wuorinen's self-satisfied defense of "Western art" and his quick dismissals of nonclassical music do not evince the kind of careful analysis that he claims is necessary to appreciate his own work.
Adding to the intrigue, both artists' solo contributions to the exhibition evince a ruminative tranquility that occupies a different tonal register than the collaborative works of toilet humor ("Toilet Joke I," 2020; "Study for Toilet Joke II," 2020) that bookend them.
"The results do not evince the striking difference one might expect if the apologetic Canadian stereotype was strongly true," Martin Day, an assistant professor of psychology at Memorial University of Newfoundland in St. John's and a collaborator on the research.
Except for her student sketches of nudes — classically composed contour drawings that evince a tactile sense of form — and a listless foray into still-life photograms, these works all display various degrees of wrongness, often exhilarating, sometimes simply off the mark.
In a pass-oriented league, the 22ers handed the richest contract for a fullback in league history to Kyle Juszczyk, so San Francisco could run the ball — or evince the impression it was running — regardless of what the defense presented.
These tall, stacked vases, named for the black iron slip that gave them their deep metallic surfaces, evince a new, more restrained way of working — one influenced by Minimalism and postpainterly abstraction, and by Voulkos's evolving interest in bronze casting.
Strong works by Susan Rothenberg and Terry Winters—schematic horse shapes in her case, botanical ones in his—evince the careful evolution of painters who entered the eighties with loyalty to the rigor of the New York abstract artists of the fifties.
Performed at Pioneer Works in Brooklyn on a chilly February night, with Mr. Wooley alongside Susan Alcorn, Mary Halvorson and Ryan Sawyer, it did evince a sense of camaraderie amid gloom, of quiet exaltation and dread in the face of the great beyond.
Early works by Robert Morris, Richard Serra, Bruce Nauman and Mark di Suvero (the subject of the Green's first solo, and one of just a handful of artists Bellamy represented at the time of his death) evince an intuitive response to sculpture.
Given how commonly women evince arousal noncordance — how often their bodies indicate arousal without being accompanied by a subjective sense of feeling turned-on, or vice versa — it's understandable that this approach is generally positioned as the more feminist or otherwise women-friendly option.
Yet only rarely does anyone in this musical production, which features Tex-Mex ditties for piano, guitar and banjo (all played with vernacular ease by Mike Brun), evince the quivering chin that betrays that these performers think that what they're doing is at all funny.
Despite privation and a lack of means to express to each other the staggering uncertainty of their situation, they nonetheless exchange talismanic gifts (the thimble) and are capable of loyalty and protectiveness that evince a humanity greater than any shown to them by society.
His office accoutrements evince a similar flair: a framed shot of Errol Flynn from 103's The Adventures of Robin Hood, an Apple IIe just like the one he wrote his first Star Trek spec script on, old maps and employee patches from Disneyland.
But parts of his legislative record, in addition to remarks about wealth and his own personal fortune — more than $60 billion from the creation of his eponymous media company — evince a different type of politician, one more concerned with the plight of business owners than their workers.
HENRY A. LOWENSTEIN New York To the Editor: It feels unseemly to dive so soon into the political ramifications of Justice Antonin Scalia's unexpected passing, and though it may evince a bygone decorum, I am dismayed by those on both sides of the aisle who have done so.
Even in her saucier films, Day manages to evince a combination of sexual appeal and proper womanly chastity — such as in this scene from 1959's Pillow Talk, where she expresses overt horror and disgust when confronted with a bachelor pad and intimations of out-of-wedlock sex.
LaFleur's work has evolved to evince a richness and a prismatic quality, and curators and critics are definitely taking notice: she currently has a solo exhibition at Conduit Gallery in Dallas and is included in a group show at the Czong Institute for Contemporary Art (CICA) in South Korea.
They also don't evince Franz Hals's insight into or judgment of his characters' personalities, although in this series, Wiley captures the self-possession of Carrie Mae Weems really well — perhaps because a self-regard that can read to the naked eye as hauteur is the emotional theme of show.
This is important work, because we're still developing a way to talk about all the things between enthusiastic consent and rape—sex that is consensual but bad in a way that seems to evince a basic lack of respect for you as a human being, for instance, or encounters where consent is more difficult to define.
Despite the improvisational feel of each work, the motifs stringing the portraits together (the landscapes, the vertical streaks, the lens flares in the upper right, the sliced-up surfaces, the children's drawings, the diamond-shaped formats) evince an overarching sense of purpose, of creating a cohesive emotional and material density that pushes the imagery into a wider experiential arena.
Although, come to think of it, it is a bit terrifying to consider the stratospheric prices for sky-kissing condos, and to acknowledge that such buildings evince a desire for a separate enclave of class-based living/lifestyle perched on Olympian heights, far removed from the teeming mass of mortals that make up the urban dross.
"Defendants seek a mistrial because the Court's evidentiary rulings and comments throughout this trial evince a cumulative abuse of discretion that has deprived Defendants of their Fifth and Sixth Amendments rights to a fair trial, to an adequate defense, and to confront the witnesses against them," lawyers for Menendez and Melgen formally asserted in Sunday's motion.
For the leading Republicans to promise to keep people at their desks until the age of 65, give up the 35-hour week or abolish the wealth tax risks antagonising the very voters they will need to win over if they are to defeat the FN. This is why any candidate aspiring to beat Ms Le Pen must evince trustworthiness.
So imbued with grace were the remarks of Mr. Cummings, so devoid of polish or signs of preparation, so piercing and haunting a cry for a better America that they stood in stark difference to the party of Donald Trump, whose members demonstrated that they could only evince belligerent snark, ad hominem attacks and an utter lack of concern for the truth.
If he falls short, it is in those works, fueled by the urgency of his image-making, that evince signs of haste: the unconvincing brush marks depicting the pike that pierces the neck of the decapitated "Vietnamese Head" (1970), or the undercooked portrait of General Geisel, in which the Brazilian dictator's suit jacket is dashed off with a few sketchy lines that fail to excite the figure/ground relationship — especially when compared with its solidly painted companion piece, in which a smirking Geisel thrusts his chin forward in a gesture we recognize all too well from our own crypto-autocrat.

No results under this filter, show 131 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.