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"familiarly" Definitions
  1. in a friendly and informal manner, sometimes in a way that is too informal to be pleasant
  2. in the way that is well known to people

108 Sentences With "familiarly"

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

Worth's third and final chart comes in a familiarly bullish shape.
Today, it's Oxford, Mississippi and the answer, familiarly, is OLE MISS.
Peter Maxwell Davies, familiarly known as Max, was born on Sept.
What's most striking about the report is the familiarly of the arguments.
Menge is more familiarly known to Sheridan people as Hot Tamale Louie.
After that, there's something familiarly fishy about this whole stolen cossack wheat story.
Or more familiarly: the K.G.B., the Soviet Union's intelligence agency and secret police.
One suggestion from me would be to avoid stories that are too familiarly dystopian.
But that ability to feel familiarly inspiring is itself a privilege reserved for men.
The familiarly mangled, elongated bronze figures emerge toward the back of this prologue display.
But Dusan Mramor told Reuters it could end up being a familiarly drawn-out affair.
Formally known as microvascular decompression, it is familiarly known among surgeons as the Jannetta procedure.
This would be his low-stakes chance to demonstrate some graciousness in a familiarly awkward situation.
As we bought rounds of beer, we passed the islands and they spoke familiarly of them.
Safina writes: After hundreds of millions of years, we encounter beings familiarly strange, yet strangely familiar.
Now we're back in familiarly Orientalist territory, the rescue of a white woman from the feral indigenous.
The prince was born with the name: Henry Charles Albert David, but he's familiarly known as Harry.
For a while, "Yesterday" feels like a familiarly Richard Curtis-y type of winsome, self-deprecating Brit-com.
The book's opening chapter is at once familiarly "realistic" and heavy with the ironic fatalism of the folktale.
Formed in 21, with headquarters in Atlanta, it was called the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, familiarly known as SLICK.
Many, for the sake of business, serve only a small group of familiar dishes, in familiar presentations, in familiarly decorated spaces.
I may make Julia Moskin's recipe for gong bao chicken with peanuts, more familiarly known to most as kung pao chicken.
The essay "Now We Are Five" poignantly discusses, in Mr. Sedaris's familiarly discursive way, the suicide of his troubled sister, Tiffany.
You may feel more in tune with nature, given its familiarly floral and earthy aroma, or at the very least more relaxed.
It can be sweet, like the Matthiasson blend, and, more familiarly, like the often innocuous products used in cocktails like the manhattan.
The children tested positive for the drug benzodiazepam, a type of medication described as a tranquilizer and familiarly known as Valium and Xanax.
But in both cases the visible light produced is accompanied by a lot of infrared—or heat, as it is more familiarly known.
Sprung A Leak is a vision of the near-future that, somewhat familiarly, balances itself precariously on the borders of order and disorder.
FEMINIST AVANT-GARDE of the 1970s could be seen at the Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig Wien (familiarly known, in lowercase, as mumok).
What does have a familiarly thirties ring to it is the combination of elite-rot and discredited ideas that Mr Trump feeds on.
The fare was underwritten by the French social security system, known familiarly as la Sécu, which also provides health insurance for all residents.
More familiarly known as the technology behind the bitcoin digital currency, blockchain has emerged from the shadows of bitcoin with a new, solo image.
"1999 prequel that grossed over a billion dollars, familiarly" is EPISODE I, but I'm proud that I was at least in the right series.
Eos, as they are known more familiarly, are a type of white blood cell that can be seen in eczema or other allergic reactions.
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, known familiarly as R.P.I., is a university located in Troy, N.Y., and is known primarily for its engineering and technology programs.
The high-level government committee, familiarly known as CFIUS, investigates proposed acquisitions of U.S. companies by foreign buyers on national security and intellectual property grounds.
And Mr. Blake's latest, "The Colour in Anything" (Republic), is familiarly meditative and aching; he's an austere singer who finds swing in minimal electronic compositions.
The stacks of paper in the office rise familiarly around him; his assistant, Ida Van Lindt, has been with him since he became district attorney.
And although he was familiarly called Zbig and could be very engaging, he was quick to smack down reporters who dared to challenge his ideas.
It features familiarly noodly, metal-inflected guitars and, of course, Cedric Bixler-Zavala wailing like he's trying to melt off your face with only his voice.
"Nowhere2go" and "The Mint" find him in familiarly dark territory, with an accompanying news release explaining that the album will reference the death of his father.
It was one of a chain of grocery stores so familiarly central to English life of the 1950s that it came to be memorialized in poetry.
While it seemed familiarly subdued at first, its unusual layering of space and its intricate combination of whimsical details morphed it into something infinitely more magical.
Known more familiarly as keto diets, they are extremely low-carbohydrate, high-fat regimens, with as much as 90 percent of daily calories coming from fats.
There Dulcy joins the genteel Sacajawea Club, takes a writer-lover with "chocolaty hair," plants an ambitious garden and reinvents herself in the familiarly modern way.
This is how we live, among kitchen sinks and highways, water hoses and roadside stands, which, in these instances, are often rural, often Southern, familiarly human.
Chief among them are Harriet (Ngozi Anyanwu) — familiarly known as Harry — and a slave named Vivian, played by Tesiana Elie in a smoldering, cartwheeling, show-stealing performance.
That was when Albert Hofmann, a Swiss chemist searching for a drug to combat circulatory ailments, happened to synthesize lysergic acid diethylamide: LSD or, more familiarly, acid.
Instead, they unwittingly go after Mr. Bridges's character, a bearded stoner layabout who is familiarly known as The Dude but who formally shares the rich man's name.
The speaker was Prince Asiel Ben Israel, chief spokesman for the Original African Hebrew Israelite Nation of Jerusalem, a religious group familiarly known as the Black Hebrews.
My relationship with alcohol is a complex one, and if I'm honest, there was a two-year period back there where I was drinking too much, too familiarly.
Again, this is a narrator whose speaking voice is immediately recognizable, ringing familiarly throughout the audiobook like that of a friend you haven't spoken to in a minute.
Asymmetry is a debut burnished to a maximum shine by technical prowess, but it offers readers more than just a clever structure: a familiar world gone familiarly mad.
In New Orleans, you can drive on what's familiarly called Jeff Davis Parkway, and from there turn onto a street named for the slavery champion John C. Calhoun.
The title track employs Burial's familiarly haunting vocal samples while the B-side, "Nightmarket," nods to 80s film score with racing, urgent synth arpeggios disappearing into haze and static.
I found it a relaxing relegation of duty to sit several yards from my production, effortlessly (and somehow familiarly) swiping left or right to tamp or fan my flame.
LORD CLARK OF SALTWOOD, who was ennobled by Harold Wilson in 1969 after the triumph of his epic television series "Civilisation", became known more familiarly as Lord Clark of Civilisation.
In this familiarly dystopic setting, a few collectives of rebellious women intersect and debate until they eventually unite over the apparent suicide of a young black woman under police custody.
But even as their original duties have shrunk, agents — once familiarly known as token clerks — have been assigned few significant new responsibilities for helping passengers get where they are going.
It's also the home of the Random House publishing group (the official title is just Random House, which seems willfully confusing), which includes the Random House imprint, familiarly known as Little Random.
The compound is known familiarly as Steidlville, and his employees liken a stay there to entering a submarine: the door closes irrevocably behind you, and there is nothing to do but descend.
The compound is known familiarly as Steidlville, and his employees liken a stay there to entering a submarine: the door closes irrevocably behind you, and there is nothing to do but descend.
And the good news came with what has become familiarly disturbingly caveats: Winds remain perilously high, there is not a drop of rain in the forecast, so conditions could always turn bad.
Lopez conjures a familiarly urbane world in which men attend lavishly prepared brunches, are oppressed by their season tickets to BAM , and feel the necessity of having an opinion on German Expressionism.
Dr. Pachauri, known familiarly as Patchy, was a vegetarian, both because of his religious commitment as a Hindu and because of his views on the impact of meat production on the climate.
This past spring, she dazzled alongside Nicole Kidman and Reese Witherspoon as Big Little Lies' high-powered executive, Renata Klein — a familiarly overstretched working parent desperate to catch her daughter Amabella's mysterious bully.
President Nicolas Maduro's socialist government and Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A., familiarly known as PDVSA, have repeatedly vowed to take steps to combat corruption, which has affected Venezuela and its oil industry for decades.
In interviews, Mr. Tomita expressed his gratitude at being able to write for Miku, as she is familiarly known, a cyber-celebrity whose singing was by then garnering millions of views on YouTube.
Two Times publishers came from the third generation: Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, more familiarly known as Punch, who was Arthur Jr.'s father; and Orvil E. Dryfoos, who was married to Punch's sister Marian.
The drug has killed thousands of Americans, including the rock stars Prince and Tom Petty, but the lethal risk it poses has barely deterred addicts in Kingston Upon Hull, known familiarly as Hull.
Ms. McDaniel greeted Mr. Parnas and Mr. Fruman familiarly, in the manner of a politician who shakes the hands of thousands of people whose acquaintance she may — or may not — have previously made.
Long before Alabama — and now Clemson — rose as proud football powers, the 122 University of the South football team, familiarly known as the Sewanee Tigers, provided a blueprint for Southern college football domination.
The most successful and popular fair in Southeast Asia thus far has been ArtJog, an annual artists' led fair held since 2008 in one of Indonesia's established art centers, Yogyakarta, familiarly known as Jogja.
"My sister and I used to shop here," Ms. Deyn said wistfully as she darted past a wall festooned with leather and chains, making her way familiarly toward a rack of concert T-shirts.
Just a couple of things: 30A: "Extra job in the gig economy," like driving for Uber or Lyft, is familiarly known as a SIDE HUSTLE, which makes its New York Times Crossword debut today.
This whole gift-bag situation definitely skirts around familiarly frustrating territory: Why is it that the few people with enough money to pay for such luxuries are the only ones that get them for free?
From Kimmy Schmidt and Titus Andromedon's familiarly seedy New York basement to the D.C. townhouse in House of Cards, to the dilapidated mansion on Arrested Development, see how much Netflix' most-watched homes actually cost, ahead.
The clue "The People's Princess, familiarly" seems to be a bit off in terms of its timeline, but it was easy enough to know that it was asking for some reference to Diana, Princess of Wales.
On Saturday, an army of clipboard-wielding enumerators fanned out across the 250 acres of New York City's most beloved green space in search of a skittering quarry: Sciurus carolinensis, familiarly known as the Eastern gray squirrel.
An incredibly detailed 1984 terracotta installation by Alexander Mikhailovich Belashov at the Moscow Paleontological Museum shows more familiarly lithe and reptilian dinosaurs, but the whole scene of Earth evolution is crowned by the Virgin Mary and Jesus.
She has known all along "that that hand of M. Emanuel's was on the most intimate terms with my desk; that it raised and lowered the lid, ransacked and arranged the contents, almost as familiarly as my own".
The Moravian Night is a houseboat — a Haus-und-Fluchtboot, "a house- and escape boat" — belonging to a "former writer" who's familiar, or familiarly inscrutable, from Handke's previous work: He's the Handke-who-isn't, the author's epithetical double.
But in its familiarly inscrutable first two hours, shown Sunday night on Showtime, it still has the ability to turn your TV into that box — a quietly menacing portal through which something horrifying or wondrous might burst at any moment.
At the EE British Academy Film Awards, familiarly known as the Baftas, this month, Ms. Stone managed to make a tea-length embroidered smoke gray organza dress over above-the-ankle pants (Chanel haute couture, mind you) seem like kismet.
ESI is calling its rather familiarly named product a "smartphone for the desktop," a fancy way of saying that it's an office phone with a 7-inch touchscreen tablet built in for accessing contacts, recording, teleconferencing and watch and recording visual voicemail.
Trump, a Republican, did not mention that failure at the reception nor did he offer specifics on how he planned for lawmakers to reach a consensus on a healthcare bill that would repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, familiarly known as Obamacare.
The iconography is familiarly national and symbolic, from Alberto Korda's classic photograph of Che Guevara (1960) to Juan Francisco Elso's "Pan America (José Martí)" (1986), but also parodied (Alejandro Aguilera's "Che and Carlos Santana" [19533]) and debased (Tomás Esson's scatological "Cuban Flag" [1990]).
" Next, Trump laid out familiarly harsh proposals for illegal immigration: mass deportations, biometric technology to track migrants, and values testing, proposing "an ideological certification to make sure that those we are admitting to our country share our values and love our people.
The judge would not consider how Layleen was put into so-called restrictive housing (known familiarly as solitary confinement) as corrections officers do to many transgender people who are incarcerated, and so was in isolation in the days leading up to her death.
Yet the Aldine press went on to thrive against this background of upheaval, and the books produced by Aldo, as he was to become familiarly known among the cultivated classes in Europe, played a central part in the flowering of the Venetian and European Renaissance.
Trump, a Republican, did not mention that failure at the reception nor did he offer specifics on how he planned for lawmakers to reach a consensus on a health-care bill that would repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, familiarly known as Obamacare.
Based loosely on McGee's experiences growing up in Londonderry, Northern Ireland, in the early 1990s, in the waning years of the sectarian violence familiarly dubbed "the Troubles," the show acknowledges the era's mounting tensions while also telling lighthearted, hilariously profane stories about teens being teens.
The little blue pill, as it's familiarly known, was created by British scientists at Pfizer in 1989 under the chemical name sildenafil citrate as a heart medication for the treatment of high blood pressure and angina, a type of chest pain associated with coronary heart disease.
Lines coalesce and collide in a familiarly hazy way, but the odd moment of dissonance or minor chord suggestion makes the whole thing feel a little more sinister, like you might start to cough and splutter if you spend too much time soaking in these sounds.
So begins a new year of "Veep," the HBO comedy that offers satirical refuge from governmental gridlock and democratic despair with its depiction of a fictional if familiarly dysfunctional Washington, led by President Selina Meyer, the ambitious and vulgar former vice president, played by Julia Louis-Dreyfus.
Democratic leaders are unified against the bill while some conservative Republicans have criticized it for not doing enough to dismantle the Affordable Care Act, the measure familiarly known as Obamacare which was passed in 2010 and was the signature domestic achievement of former President Barack Obama.
Instead of taking the easy route, though, Cough's ambition takes flight; songs like the familiarly venomous "Possession" are counterbalanced by the sun-scorched and weary melancholy of "Let it Bleed," which could almost be called a ballad if it didn't dissolve into something so gnarly by its filthy end.
Before the start of the quarterfinal match we were to see, he threaded his way familiarly through the backstage corridors, transformed by huge posters of the players, nests of television cables and a press room full of journalists staring at screens and transmitting real-time results and match analysis.
This is not to argue that Rose had no acceptable reason — a "family issue," he said — for missing the Knicks' 110-96 loss to the New Orleans Pelicans at Madison Square Garden on Monday night, the team's eighth defeat in nine games in a season turning familiarly sour.
The US State Department on Tuesday blasted Russia for targeting Saleh's group, known familiarly as the White Helmets, as well as Moscow's deliberate targeting of homes, medical facilities and camps for internally displaced refugees in a statement, saying it was "alarmed" by the recent escalation of violence in northwest Syria.
As someone who is not a reader of Sports Illustrated, I had no clue who Ms. Vyalitsyna was, or that she was referred to familiarly as ANNE V. #NowIKnow • 49A: The clue for ITS ("Possessive often containing a mistaken apostrophe") reminded me of this cartoon from Bob the Angry Flower.
Ducking into the House Republican Cloakroom -- essentially a small, private waiting room connected to the House Chamber -- I found that a room I had not visited in five years was familiarly claustrophobic, with members and staff bumping into each other like the old magnetic football table top game of the 1970s.
I have to believe he is right, and not just out of shameless sentiment or because I have relied on S&T, as it is familiarly known, over the years for straight-talk about the heavens and the gritty details about how telescopes and other gadgets by which astronomers observe the sky are made.
The Carpetbagger The frothy musical "La La Land" continued its run as an awards favorite on Tuesday, picking up 11 nominations from the EE British Academy Film Awards, but there were surprises in the competition, familiarly known as the Baftas: The extraterrestrial drama "Arrival" and "Nocturnal Animals," Tom Ford's twisty tale-within-a-tale, drew nine nominations apiece.
It's a geode inside the unlikely sediment of The Wizard of Oz, one in which an even angrier Wicked Witch of the West derides both Dorothy and Glinda for associating so familiarly with Munchkins -- plump squeaky creatures who will in no way prepare them for battle against her for she has flying motherfuckin' monkeys and a goddamn army of uniformed badasses!
The film's epilogue, "Conversing with Mother," invokes the movie's one familiarly Pirandellian touch—the appearance of Pirandello as a character, returning to the deserted family home in Sicily and mentally summoning his mother in order to hear a tale from her youth that he has tried and failed to write, one of political persecution and exile that's also a story of joyful abandon and natural wonder.
This is the bicentennial of the creation of DeWitt Clinton's successful Canal Commission (familiarly, the crucial bill came to a vote on the last day of the legislative session), which is as good a time as any to reflect on the canal's significance not only to the Port of New York, but also in tipping the upper Middle West against slavery by populating it with transplanted New Yorkers and Yankees.
He got medium-size laughs with a medium-grade Bernie Sanders joke — ''He'll be the first president in history to broker a nuclear deal with a mustard stain on his shirt'' — then grew more familiarly challenging as he defended Donald Trump's proposed wall along the Mexican border: ''You don't just have an open wall at your apartment, like, 'I like my neighbors to be able to come in if they feel oppressed.

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