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"felicitously" Definitions
  1. in a way that is very suitable; in a way that gives a good result

30 Sentences With "felicitously"

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

Less felicitously, she uses similar shortcuts in forging relationships among her characters.
"You, son, are going to learn to look up," Watts lectures his felicitously christened scamp.
We had to coexist with him being a writer, and it ended up very felicitously.
"Joan" felicitously reunites Mr. Byrne with his director on that production, the ferociously inventive Alex Timbers.
He has also, less felicitously, framed the story with an opening scene in which the characters talk over one another in three languages.
A new word was needed to describe the lucky Mississippians, they were called "millionaires", the equivalent of today's less-felicitously named "ultra-high net worth individuals".
"Felicitously, the tide has clearly turned over the past year and we genuinely welcome Google's recent initiatives, though we will need to check against delivery," Thomson told BuzzFeed News.
In May 22020, Trump proffered seven well qualified, mainstream nominees, who enjoyed a smooth August Judiciary Committee hearing and felicitously captured September panel approval, but their nominations expired on Jan.
BEN BRANTLEY Watching "Fences," I was pleased to note how felicitously Denzel Washington, the film's star and director, acknowledged the importance of speech as the shaper of the Wilson universe.
Felicitously, on a recent evening, a slight man with an Eddie Munster haircut, wearing a sweatshirt with rainbows in the hood and around the elbows, took his seat behind the piano.
Like those fables, Adebayo's "Stay With Me" — a beautifully produced book with a Matisse-inspired jacket that felicitously captures the spirit of the author's writing — has a remarkable emotional resonance and depth of field.
In the felicitously timed "Uri", a lurid recreation of an actual Indian retaliatory raid in 2016 that is believed to have left some three dozen Pakistan-based guerrillas dead, he is portrayed as a wise, stern commander-in-chief.
The Democrat who wins the party's presidential nomination will be the Democrat who fits most felicitously into a Trump-stamped and Trump-ravaged landscape, and if that Democrat goes all the way, it will be a destiny decreed largely by Trump.
Felicitously, she is offered a job at a Chicago-area lab researching snow, ice and permafrost, and accepts despite a warning from her boss that presages latter-day military policy: "With regard to your inclinations," it's no concern of mine, he says.
David Hooper and Kenneth Whyld, The Oxford Companion to Chess, Oxford University Press (2nd ed. 1992), p. 145. .The essay appears in Marcello Truzzi (ed.), Chess in Literature, Avon Books, 1974, pp. 14–15. .The essay appears in a book by the felicitously named Norman Knight, Chess Pieces, CHESS magazine, Sutton Coldfield, England (2nd ed.
The quadrangle and cloisters are enclosed within elaborately carved walls faced with stone, "felicitously sited amid landscaped grounds".Simmins p. 103 Until the Laidlaw Wing was completed in the 1960s, University College was a U-shaped structure that was open on the north end. Before the fire of 1890, the building was laid out such that the east wing provided access to the convocation hall, the museum and the library, and contained an entrance to the quadrangle.
The question/answer paradigm shown in (3)–(5) has been utilized by a variety of theorists to illustrate the range of contexts a sentence containing focus can be used felicitously. Specifically, the question/answer paradigm has been used as a diagnostic for what counts as new information. For example, the focus pattern in (3) would be infelicitous if the question was ‘Did you see a grey dog or a black dog?’. In (3) and (4), the pitch accent is marked in bold.
The Reminder (formerly The Flin Flon Daily Reminder and The Daily Reminder) is a weekly newspaper published every Wednesday in Flin Flon, Canada, a city located on the border of Manitoba and Saskatchewan.Sun Media to buy Stratford Beacon Herald, CBC News, November 10, 2000 ("The list of independent dailies in Canada keeps dwindling. Others remaining ... and the felicitously-named Flin Flon Reminder in Manitoba") It is the only locally published newspaper in the area (which includes adjacent Creighton, Saskatchewan, Denare Beach, Saskatchewan and Cranberry Portage, Manitoba).
A ' is the smallest and oldest administrative division in France. "Commune" in English has a historical bias, and implies an association with socialist political movements or philosophies, collectivist lifestyles, or particular history (after the rising of the Paris Commune, 1871, which could have more felicitously been called, in English, "the rising of the City of Paris"). There is nothing intrinsically different between "town" in English and ' in French. The French word ' appeared in the 12th century, from Medieval Latin ', for a large gathering of people sharing a common life; from Latin ', 'things held in common'.
Andreas Silbermann built a fairly small organ for Saint-John's between 1717 and 1720. It was altered a number of times, not always felicitously, and was badly damaged during World War II. In 1961 it was replaced by an electro-pneumatic traction organ built by Ernest Mühleisen of the . But the neo-classical style of this organ soon went out of fashion, and in spite of a thorough revision by the builders in 1988, it did not age well. In 2005This date of the start of the planning of its replacement from .
Prose calls the book "manipulative melodrama", and considers Angelou's writing style an inferior example of poetic prose in memoir. She accuses Angelou of combining a dozen metaphors in one paragraph and for "obscuring ideas that could be expressed so much more simply and felicitously". Many parents throughout the U.S. have sought to ban the book from schools and libraries for being inappropriate for younger high school students, for promoting premarital sex, homosexuality, cohabitation, and pornography, and for not supporting traditional values. Parents have also objected to the book's use of profanity and to its graphic and violent depiction of rape and racism.
Christopher Hume, architecture critic for the Toronto Star, described it as "a hybrid of classical, neo-gothic, and Georgian...mixed together and applied - incongruously but felicitously - to 20th-century-sized structures." Its most striking feature is the 14-storey archway that connects the two tallest towers. Buildings containing a pastiche of historical styles were at their most popular in the late 1980s an early 1990s, but that coincided with a sharp downturn in the Toronto real estate market that saw few buildings erected. Thus the Grand Harbour is one of only a few such condo towers in Toronto from that era.
Quintus Horatius Flaccus (8 December 65 – 27 November 8 BC), known in the English-speaking world as Horace (), was the leading Roman lyric poet during the time of Augustus (also known as Octavian). The rhetorician Quintilian regarded his Odes as just about the only Latin lyrics worth reading: "He can be lofty sometimes, yet he is also full of charm and grace, versatile in his figures, and felicitously daring in his choice of words."Quintilian 10.1.96. The only other lyrical poet Quintilian thought comparable with Horace was the now obscure poet/metrical theorist, Caesius Bassus (R.
When Mag Uidhir saw the deceit practised on him, he went forward to Gort-an-fedain. There a battalion of kern and a battalion of gallowglasses of the people of Ua Ruairc overtook him. Then Mag Uidhir and Brian Mag Uidhir, with the six that were on horses and the three score kern, turned on them and routed the people of Ua Ruairc spiritedly, felicitously on that occasion and inflicted the defeat of Ath- Conaill and of the Graine, namely a river that is between Fir-Manach and the Breifne, upon them. Mag Uidhir and his people then, returned with spoils joyfully.
At last her parents, seeing her so inclined and disposed to painting, provided an art master to teach her design." Being a Carmelite tertiary nun, she was free to live outside the convent walls and away from the constraints of family ties. It appears that she was a quick study who flourished under Preti's tutelage. Giovannantonio Ciantar observes that "under his [Preti's] direction she worked well and as he was painting the ceiling of the Church of St John he allowed her to paint some of the female figures; in doing this she succeeded almost more felicitously than the master.
The car then goes up a steep hill as the car loses control for a bit on the country road and a dangerous path road with a mechanical siren in the distance, but is felicitously stopped, by a log, at an ideal picnic site. Buddy sets up the luncheon whilst Cookie takes up her guitar; Baby Elmer finds his way into the picnic basket, finding a sausage inside the basket. Before that outdoor animals such as frogs, worms, and bees made a big role of trying to kiss his animals girlfriend. Happy the Dog whimpers for some food, so Elmer immediately shoved a piece of sausage inside Happy's mouth.
Oxford marked Zaharoff's generosity by conferring upon him an Honorary Doctorate of Civil Law (DCL) in October 1920. News of the donation was announced in The Times on 21 November 1918, shortly after Foch was one of the signatories of the Armistice with Germany on 11 November that ended hostilities. The Times said that the name of the professorship was "most felicitously chosen", commemorating the "recent great events" and preparing for the "intellectual entente of the coming years." It also noted that French language and literature, for the first time, would be "enthroned in Oxford side by side with Greek and with Latin" – professorships in both subjects having existed at Oxford for many years before Zaharoff's donation.
Every year, from July to September, Lapeyre used to escape from his urban, Parisian existence. In 1931, for example, he was at Péréyrol in the Dordogne, and in 1935 in the Vendeix valley near La Bourboule, which inspired many delicate, lush landscapes. In the following decade he painted in Argentan (1941), at Saint Honoré in the Orne (1945), in the Nièvre, and at Vic-sur-Cère in Cantal (1947), returning here with his wife, Madeleine Charlot, in June 1950. Vue depuis notre chambre depicts this holiday. This image from the end of a full career, a window at Vic open onto both the street and the surrounding countryside, seems to encapsulate the artist’s productive and felicitously cultivated duality as a painter of both fashionable women and country folk.
There a battalion of kern and a battalion of gallowglasses of the people of Ua Ruairc overtook him. Then Mag Uidhir and Brian Mag Uidhir, with the six that were on horses and the three score kern, turned on them and routed the people of Ua Ruairc spiritedly, felicitously on that occasion and inflicted the defeat of Ath- Conaill and of the Graine-namely, a river that is between Fir-Manach and the Breifne-upon them. Mag Uidhir and his people then, returned with spoils joyfully. And the kern of Mag Uidhir carried with them sixteen heads of the nobles of the people of Ua Ruairc to the town of Mag Uidhir and they were placed on the palisade of the court-yard of Mag Uidhir and so on.
To these fundamental yet opposed pulls of the > biosphere, Angyal has given the names of autonomy and homonomy, > respectively. Autonomy is the relatively egoistic pole of the biosphere: it > represents the tendency to advance one's interests by mastering the > environment, by asserting oneself, so to speak, as a separate being. > Homonomy is the relatively 'selfless' pole of the biosphpere: it is the > tendency to fit oneself to the environment by willingly subordinating > oneself to something that one perceives as larger than the individual self. > In place of the words autonomy and homonomy, Angyal has also used the terms > self-determination and self-surrender to describe these opposing yet co- > operating directional trends of the biosphere, and he has felicitously > summed up the individual's relationship to them with the remark that, "the > human being comports himself as if he were a whole of an intermediate > order".

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