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"floridly" Definitions
  1. with too much decoration or detail

45 Sentences With "floridly"

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

The first act tends toward modal tonality, with floridly expressive vocal lines.
Invoke his floridly named sixth child, Sixtus Dominic Boniface Christopher Rees-Mogg?
He was deemed "floridly psychotic" by doctors who testified at his trial.
In context, it ... still looks pretty weird, honestly, if maybe a little less floridly so.
Nunez vehemently denied both charges; needless to say, the arguments on either side were floridly complicated.
" Jones mimicked, floridly but recognizably, Rubio's braying giggle and called the senator "a little frat boy.
It's been 13 years since a floridly psychotic black man named Andre Thomas was sentenced to die.
My colleagues and I spend long hours chasing lawmakers through dank basements and floridly decorated hallways of the Capitol.
As I watched Tilda Swinton as Lady Ottoline Morrell, so floridly poised, that dark backdrop disappeared into the surrounding void.
Our storied C.D.C., now annexed by politicians, continues to insist that only the most floridly symptomatic patients be tested for the virus.
Poor Roderick, inwardly and outwardly maimed by the war, teeters floridly toward madness and alcoholism, but what about Caroline and her mother?
" Angus responded floridly in the same newsletter, "I had been lost and confused before, unaware I was always yours, oblivious to my reason to exist.
Saucedo, who emigrated from Mexico and became a US citizen more than 50 years ago, cursed floridly in Spanish at the mention of Donald Trump.
Vetements's is a motley crew — street-cast, scowling, of floridly unflattering haircut — whose appearance is a tonic rejoinder to the usual manicured parade of fashion-week beauties.
"'Insatiable" is an unexpected little gem, a series so floridly over the top as to feel like a send-up of 1980s soap operas on 21st-century steroids.
Despite the fact that he plays the most floridly unsexy position in the sport it's easy to see how the NFL could tell his story for both fun and profit.
Before this race, Gillespie was as establishment as an establishment Republican could be, aligned closely with George W. Bush, who has made his distaste for Trump's floridly divisive politics clear.
He chastises his colleagues for blaming terrorism on economics or geopolitics when it is obvious that "many of the precepts of Islamic doctrine" are "floridly anti-humanistic," like religion in general.
Here, the floridly decorative neo-Classical Tinkertoy aesthetic of Robert Venturi and the Memphis Group gives way to a more elemental and elegant form, as reimagined by Syrette Lew of the Brooklyn-based studio Moving Mountains.
Vaslav Nijinsky (1889-1950), the great Polish-Russian dancer who, in his early twenties, introduced modernism into ballet and then went floridly insane, is a subject that was just waiting for the experimental theatre director Robert Wilson.
After all, as Thompson is keenly aware and mentions in her book, before tattooing evolved into a floridly expressive art form in Japan, in the early Edo period, magistrates marked criminals' faces or arms with simple, punitive motifs.
This is, strictly speaking, some floridly psychotic music—there is the league's familiar rum-dummy-dum gladiator-movie rhythm section, but there are also a half-dozen squalling solos being played over it concurrently at any given time.
The audio of Waldman floridly losing her shit at the stadium that day became a sort of proto-meme, a shared joke grounded both in Waldman's deliriously and undeniably over-the-top performance and some other, uglier elements.
Domino, who died in Louisiana at 89, both embodied and extended the New Orleans piano heritage of styles that are at once unswervingly propulsive and floridly improvisational; he also infused early rock 'n' roll with New Orleans syncopations.
One was in a Chicago Bulls bomber jacket, the other had a frayed cast on his wrist and a round, ugly, floridly freckled face, their heads cocked back with their mouths open, contemplating the overhead screens of the menu.
Introduced wearing a floridly patterned robe with matching ascot, Bogart is less formidable than the tough guys he played in the 1940s, marginalized by a colorful parade of character actors including the unexpectedly droll Gina Lollobrigida, appearing in her first major English-language film.
Mickey's English wife Rosalind, played by Michelle Dockery of "Downton Abbey," is described as a "Cockney Cleopatra to Mickey's country Caesar" by the film's floridly verbose quasi-narrator: a tabloid journalist impersonated by Hugh Grant, who unspools the film's plot like he's pitching a nutso screenplay.
Both the Title IX report from N.Y.U. and a lawsuit that Mr. Reitman filed this week against the university and Professor Ronell, as well as a statement that she issued on Thursday evening in response, include floridly worded communications between the two that suggest an unusually intense relationship.
" Their proximity conflates Shkreli's naked greed (like Trump's, far more blatant and boorish than the financial sector, as personified by Blankfein, can countenance) with the floridly violent fantasies (à la Carpenter and Myers) that Trump indulges when he speaks of bringing back waterboarding and "a hell of a lot worse.
He is vain and cruel and vastly stupid; if he is not alone among contemporary politicians, or even in this campaign, in being willing to immiserate or immolate a thousand people in order to prove some petty point about himself to himself, he is also floridly and multiply defective enough as a human being to stand out among those peers.
Farrar rather floridly recounting her daughter's many accomplishments. In 1967, Farrar died in Ridgefield, Connecticut of heart disease aged 85, and was buried in Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla, New York. She had no children.
Kern once remarked: "I really was a contralto. I started to exercise the voice a little more floridly, and the voice really started to travel up very easily. As a result, most of my time was spent in the higher, lighter mezzo range." Kern's stage personality was described as engaging and sympathetic.
The present structure was built between the 12th and 13th centuries. The facade is floridly decorated with ornamental figures, animals, and reliefs. Some of the scenes related events in the life of the saint, while others are moral tales, for example, a deer battling a snake. The main portal and the bas-reliefs.
Malcomson, p. 47. In a floridly worded proclamation, published on 10 November and addressed "To The Men of New York", Smyth wrote that, "in a few days the troops under my command will plant the American standard in Canada" and he urged New Yorkers not to "stand with your arms folded and look on in this interesting struggle" but to "advance…to our aid. I will wait for you a few days."Cruikshank, pp.
Hergesheimer published his first novel, The Lay Anthony, in 1914. Three Black Pennys, which followed in 1917, chronicled the fictional lives of three generations of Pennsylvania ironmasters and cemented the author's style of dealing with upperclass characters through a floridly descriptive style he referred to as "aestheticism." Three Black Pennys was also the first original American novel published by the newly formed Alfred A. Knopf publishing house. Hergesheimer also received critical recognition for his novels Java Head (1919), Linda Condon (1919), and Balisand (1924).
The church is briefly mentioned in Jerome K Jerome's 1889 comic novel, Three Men in a Boat. While the church does contain a memorial to Susanna Thomas (d.1731) on the east wall of the south aisle, Paul Goldsac, in his book River Thames: In the Footsteps of the Famous, states there is little that is funny, or even remarkable about it. However, the tomb is floridly classical, with partly draped female figures which may have surprised some Victorians and amused others, including J K Jerome himself.
Christoph Willibald Gluck thought that both opera buffa and opera seria had strayed too far from what opera should really be, and seemed unnatural. The jokes of opera buffa were threadbare and the repetition of the same characters made them seem no more than stereotypes. In opera seria the singing was devoted to superficial effects and the content was uninteresting and stale. As in opera buffa, the singers were often masters of the stage and the music, decorating the vocal lines so floridly that audiences could no longer recognise the original melody.
Comparison of the recordings of The Keel Row and Holey Ha'penny with his manuscripts of the same pieces, and his notes on how to play them, suggests that most of the pieces in his huge repertoire were played much more floridly than he notated them. Unfortunately, by the time portable tape recording became available in the 1950s, he had largely given up playing owing to severe deafness. However, the three surviving HMV recordings are a testament both to his virtuosity and to the expressive power of the traditional close-fingered style.
Rufus Wilmot Griswold, Poe's literary executor, wrote the most famous obituary of Poe as well as his first full biography. On October 9, the day of Poe's burial, an obituary appeared in the New York Tribune. Signed only "Ludwig", the obituary floridly alternated between praising the dead author's abilities and eloquence and damning his temperament and ambition. "Ludwig" said that "literary art lost one of its most brilliant, but erratic stars" but also claimed Poe was known for walking the streets in delirium, muttering to himself and that he was excessively arrogant, assumed all men were villains, and was quick to anger.
The main hall of the City of London's Guildhall where oaths were taken During the sermons, the articles of deposition were officially presented to the assembly. In contrast to the elaborate and floridly hyperbolic accusations previously launched at the Despensers, this was a relatively simple document. The King was accused of being incapable of fair rule; of indulging false counsellors; preferring his own amusements to good government; neglecting England and losing Scotland; dilapidating the church and imprisoning the clergy; and, all in all, being in fundamental breach of the coronation oath he had made to his subjects. All of which, the rebels claimed, was so well known as to be undeniable.
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde received mostly positive reviews upon its release. Mordaunt Hall of The New York Times wrote an enthusiastic review, comparing it favorably to the John Barrymore version as a "far more tense and shuddering affair" than that film. Hall called March "the stellar performer" in the title role while praising the acting of the entire supporting cast as well, and called the old-fashioned atmosphere created by the costumes and set designs "quite pleasing". Film critic Leonard Maltin gave the film 3 out of a possible 4 stars, calling it "exciting", and "floridly cinematic", also praising March's and Hopkins performances.
Los Angeles Times critic Marc Weingarten found that the "abiding, uncynical" view of love expressed in Wainwright's lyrics does not come off as "mawkish" due to his considerable skills as a songwriter and arranger. NME reviewer John Mulvey called the album "floridly impersonal" and "grandiosely arranged", but also criticized Wainwright for being "too overwrought and naff". Greenwald complimented Martha's backing vocals on the song "In My Arms", as well as Parks' "positively sterling" string arrangement on "Millbrook". Furthermore, he praised the vocal duet between Rufus and Martha on "Sally Ann", claiming that a similar sibling performance had not been heard since The Everly Brothers.
" Jeffrey Kluger, senior writer at Time, has criticized McCarthy several times. In an open letter article referring to their past conflicts, he reproved her and rejected her denials: > "Jenny, as outbreaks of measles, mumps and whooping cough continue to appear > in the U.S.—most the result of parents refusing to vaccinate their children > because of the scare stories passed around by anti-vaxxers like you—it's > just too late to play cute with the things you've said. You are either > floridly, loudly, uninformedly antivaccine or you are the most grievously > misunderstood celebrity of the modern era. Science almost always prefers the > simple answer, because that's the one that's usually correct.
6, § 3: "while he was still a boy"; comp. Rashi on Sanh. 92b Rava states in the Babylonian Talmud that although Ezekiel describes the appearance of the throne of God (Merkabah), this is not because he had seen more than the prophet Isaiah, but rather because the latter was more accustomed to such visions; for the relation of the two prophets is that of a courtier to a peasant, the latter of whom would always describe a royal court more floridly than the former, to whom such things would be familiar.(Ḥag. 13b) Ezekiel, like all the other prophets, has beheld only a blurred reflection of the divine majesty, just as a poor mirror reflects objects only imperfectly.
The lowest World, Assiah ("Action"—Divine rulership), is the realm guided by the lower channels of the Ophanim (humble "ways" in realised creation). The Rabbinic Talmud compares Ezekiel and Isaiah's visions of God's Chariot-Throne, noticing that Ezekiel gives a lengthy account of details, while Isaiah is very brief. It gives an exoteric explanation for this; Isaiah prophesied in the era of Solomon's Temple, Ezekiel's vision took place in the exile of Babylonian captivity. Rava states in the Babylonian Talmud that although Ezekiel describes the appearance of the throne of God, this is not because he had seen more than Isaiah, but rather because the latter was more accustomed to such visions; for the relation of the two prophets is that of a courtier to a peasant, the latter of whom would always describe a royal court more floridly than the former, to whom such things would be familiar.

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