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"feelingly" Definitions
  1. with strong emotion

31 Sentences With "feelingly"

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

These are fine actors, and if Ms. Miller's dialogue is less than spontaneous, they speak it feelingly.
Whereas Madboots favors poetry and dance, "THEM" is the prose of physical theater, imaginatively and feelingly deployed.
Often the action stops while the musicians play, however feelingly, which gives the show a stuttering rhythm, a mismatched shape.
Adiga writes feelingly about the adolescent confusion over acknowledging one's sexual orientation and the responses — condemnation, abuse, patronizing sympathy — it elicits.
The play begins in 2015 with a group of Revolutionary War re-enactors in Massachusetts who speak — feelingly, nasally — about their hobby.
She feelingly conveys the shock, horror and grief he felt as he filmed what was supposed to be a happy home movie.
She has written feelingly in the past about the anguish, the pangs of professional envy that are wont to beset an obscure writer.
In a late-night conversation with Michael, he describes, simply and feelingly, what he saw there and why he can't and won't forget.
" She spoke feelingly of an African-American teenage girl who came to "Great Comet" and confided to the show's choreographer: "Denée was a princess up there.
An exploration of "God of Vengeance," a Yiddish drama that became the subject of an obscenity trial, the play speaks feelingly to ideas of culture, censorship and freedom.
A majority of the 20 performances were by young artists, singing songs about social justice and speaking feelingly about why they support the self-described Democratic Socialist from Vermont.
The dancers interact companionably but feelingly, as if they had known one another for a long time and didn't have to tell us, maybe couldn't tell us, what it was all about. ♦
The first two sets of traditional material, "Struggle" and "Redemption," feature piano arrangements mostly by H. T. Burleigh, with a few by Hall Johnson and Roland Hayes, deftly and feelingly performed by Nathaniel Gumbs.
She writes feelingly about the frustrations of being awake when you don't want to be: the bleak thoughts that are apt to beset a person lying silent in the darkness at 3 A.M. ; the intense loneliness; the desperation brought on by the impossible project of trying to relax .
Growing up in Worcester, Massachusetts, he worked part-time as a prison guard, and he often speaks feelingly in public about the country's over-incarceration of the underprivileged; he says that, had he not been lucky enough to come from a family that kept him in check, he might have been incarcerated himself.
But for all their possible clumsiness, when held against completed films, unfinished ones  can seem more animate, even electrified, in the sense that they seem to mime more faithfully the insecurity — the fluctuations, frustrations, and losses — of human experience, and also more feelingly attest to those specific instances when risk and catastrophe have intruded upon this very experience.
Reviewers from IBNLive wrote: "It's faster than the original, otherwise the rest of the elements are similar to the original". Bollywood Hungama's Rajiv Vijayakar found the version a "bit toned down but much more feelingly sung" than the original.
He was a fine type of Australian manhood, tall and straight as a rush, and was the embodiment of everything that was fair, and generous. In cricket he came directly under my control, and I can write feelingly of his splendid qualities and untimely end. — Jack Worrall, 16 September 1916.J.W., "Football: The Season's Review", The Australasian, (Saturday, 16 September 1916), p.25.
Mary's drama consists of carefully described objects, such as flowers. Furthermore, her characters do not speak in soliloquy—except in Percy's poems—rather, "nearly every speech is directed feelingly toward another character and is typically concerned with describing another's emotional state, and/or eliciting an emotional reaction."Richardson, 125–26. Dialogue in Proserpine is founded on empathy, not the conflict more typical of drama.
His items were very well received, particularly Non Piu Andrai from Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro and Credo from Verdi's Otello. His several encores included the spiritual Were you there when they crucified my Lord? which was most feelingly sung in Welsh. He was a permanent guest artiste at the Glyndebourne Festival for over two years, appearing in Il barbiere di Siviglia, Fidelio, Don Giovanni, L'Elisir de Amore, among others.
Altho' my bed were in yon muir; A verse of a Song forgot - Vide Page 34 Look not alone on youthful prime; Syme comments indifferent & G.B. says it is a parody of an old Scotch Song. 41\. Sept } Another Fragment in imitation of an old Scotch Song ... and comments on having forgotten the tune and words. Alluding to the misfortunes he feelingly laments before this verse. When clouds in skies do come together.
I believe that composer Daron Hagen and his co-librettist > Barbara Grecki have [done this] with their new two-act opera. ... Hagen's > score feelingly captures the deep contradictions of its story and its > characters in music that evokes the beauty and mystery of an exotic > landscape, the dangerous and deceptive sensuality of its inhabitants, and > the intense violence that is always just beneath the surface of a culture > that threatens and terrorizes women.
Mothers of Today was reviewed in 1939 by Film Daily: > Heavy tragedy, which seems to be an essential basis of all Yiddish dramas, > is done to a turn in this new film and it should please the dyed-in-the-wool > Yiddish fans. [...], the film has considerable merit. Cast members, with the > exception of the talented Esther Field, were recruited from the stage for > their initial appearance on the screen, and they give Miss Field adequate > support. Henry Lynn directs the film feelingly.
At length the troops and people in the vicinity assembled; and, advancing upon the enemy, drove them after a gallant fight to their ships, with a loss in killed and drowned of more than four hundred men. Nine, if not more, beautiful women, however, were carried off, whose dreadful fate is feelingly deplored by their contemporaries. The sailors of the Cinque Ports, however, took thirteen French ships, laden with wine and other provisions. These proceedings excited terror, if not dismay, throughout the realm.
The same year his book titled Towards A Poor Theatre appeared in Danish, published by Odin Teatrets Forlag. It appeared in English the following year, published by Methuen and Co. Ltd., with an Introduction by Peter Brook, then an Associate Director at the Royal Shakespeare Company. In it he writes feelingly about Grotowski's private consulting for the Company; he/they felt Grotowski's work was unique but equally understood that its value was diminished if talked about too much, if faith were broken with the consultant.
In May 1926, having made the feeling relationship in the "here-and-now" central to his practice of psychotherapy, Rank moved to Paris where he became a psychotherapist for artists such as Henry Miller and Anaïs Nin and lectured at the Sorbonne (Lieberman, 1985). Nin was transformed by her therapy with Rank. On her second visit to Rank, she reflects on her desire to be "re-born," feelingly, as a woman and artist. Rank, she observes, helped her move back and forth between what she could verbalize in her journals and what remained unarticulated.
Lodge's first published novels, evoke the atmosphere of post-war England (for example, The Picturegoers (1960)). The theme occurs in later novels, through the childhood memories of certain characters (Paradise News, 1992; Therapy, 1995). The war is covered in Out of the Shelter (1970), while Ginger, You're Barmy (1962) draws on Lodge's experience of military service in the 1950s. The Guardian review of the 2011 reissue of Ginger, You're Barmy, called the novel "an impressively humane and feelingly political indictment of a tawdry postwar compromise" and "a moving glimpse of a world on the cusp of change".
Prince Adolf was married on the 19 November 1890 in Berlin to Princess Viktoria of Prussia. She was a daughter of Frederick III, German Emperor, and as such Adolf was a brother-in-law to the last German Emperor, Wilhelm II. The wedding was attended by the Emperor Wilhelm, along with his wife Augusta Viktoria of Schleswig-Holstein and Victoria's mother, the widowed Empress Victoria. As Princess Victoria's mother was a member of the British royal family, many of her relatives also attended, including Princess Christian of Schleswig-Holstein. After the ceremony, the couple held a banquet, at which Emperor Wilhelm feelingly assured the pair of "his protection and friendly care".
The incident is > recalled by Wordsworth: > >> Call Archimedes from his buried tomb Upon the plain of vanished Syracuse, And feelingly the Sage shall make report How insecure, how baseless in itself, Is the Philosophy, whose sway depends On mere material instruments;—how weak Those arts, and high inventions, if unpropped By virtue.—He, sighing with pensive grief, Amid his calm abstractions, would admit That not the slender privilege is theirs To save themselves from blank forgetfulness! —William Wordsworth (1770-1850), The Excursion (Book Eighth: "The Parsonage", lines 220-230) > > Virtue, Cicero insisted, is nothing but nature perfected and developed to > its highest point, and there is therefore a resemblance between man and God: > "Est autem virtus nihil aliud quam in se perfecta et ad summum perducta > natura; est igitur homini cum deo similitudio".
During the 1988 English cricket season, Slack suffered a number of blackouts on the field or in the nets, but exhaustive tests had failed to identify the cause. One such incident, witnessed by Mickey Stewart, took place during a net session in Tasmania, during the 1986–7 England tour of Australia:Cardiac screening should be mandatory Cardiac Risk in the Young, (Cricket World – Winter 2002) > One minute I looked and he was fine, the next minute he had passed out and > we had to rush him to hospital ... There was no indication that what he was > suffering from was life-threatening. He died at the age of 34 after collapsing during a game in The Gambia. A popular figure in the game, Slack's Wisden obituary commented on the response to his death: > He was particularly popular among fellow-cricketers, who spoke feelingly of > their respect and sorrow when he died.
He does not know how to make a gun, or in fact anything that would make him useful in the medieval castle community into which he has fallen. Instead, Mr. Sorrel finds that a golden cross which he carries causes him to be mistaken for a Greek miracle-worker – which has many advantages in Medieval society, including enjoying the unlimited hospitality of a castle and having beautiful ladies vying with each other for his love. He also inspires the ladies to take up arms and hold a tournament in competition with their knightly husbands – and being a fair horseman, makes a credible effort at becoming a knight himself. It is the reverse of A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, but the details of daily life are rendered more feelingly, including the quite earthy and mercenary motivations of many of the Medieval characters (for example, the small-minded power struggles taking place in a nunnery, under a very thin veneer of piety).

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