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"genially" Definitions
  1. in a friendly and cheerful way
"genially" Synonyms
nicely considerately thoughtfully graciously kindly well courteously politely benevolently decently reasonably respectfully cordially civilly decorously obligingly tolerantly amicably affably understandingly merrily cheerfully gaily happily cheerily jovially heartily mirthfully jocosely brightly gleefully smilingly gayly joyfully gladly blithely sunnily jollily buoyantly chirpily altruistically bigheartedly magnanimously philanthropically charitably chivalrously nobly unselfishly wholeheartedly candidly unreservedly warmly enthusiastically generously majestically ungrudgingly unstintingly favorably(US) favourably(UK) positively approvingly agreeably helpfully sympathetically admiringly appreciatively with approval without prejudice with approbation with cordiality in a kindly manner constructively encouragingly optimistically tender lovingly affectionately devotedly passionately tenderly adoringly dotingly fondly deeply amorously sweet with affection mildly softly delicately gingerly calmly imperturbably meekly mollifyingly quietly soothingly tepidly lightly carefully gently pacifically slightly faintly smoothly airily temperately balmily clemently moderately equably pleasingly restfully coolly blandly benignly peacefully pleasantly welcomely goodly delightfully desirably felicitously hearteningly promisingly gratefully opportunely pleasurably propitiously refreshingly smartly intelligently astutely cleverly sharply wisely brainily brilliantly precociously savvily cannily craftily ingeniously sagely acutely keenly knowingly knowledgeably perceptively More

76 Sentences With "genially"

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

" Smiling genially, she added, "Besides, we all look good.
"They're like moths," said Mr. Frühauf, genially, of his customers.
However genially a project might begin, they end up feeling betrayed.
Tall and lanky, with closely-cropped hair, James genially returned our greeting.
"Before Stonewall, I was the only homosexual in the world," Leitsch said, laughing genially.
Throughout the film, Elwood genially frustrates a series of plots to have him institutionalized.
Genially hilarious in Raising Hope, laconically terrifying in Justified and Deadwood … Dillahunt is the best.
He genially acknowledged that he had gone out of his way to attack the ear. Why?
Van Wagenen, a smooth-talking agent who has become a smooth-talking general manager, smiled genially.
Negan relentlessly bounces back-and-forth between genially belittling Rick and threatening real violence on the Alexandrians.
Though Mr. Trump ended the meeting genially, the accusations clearly stuck with him, Mr. Comey's memos showed.
It was the Age of the Mustache — and of men who acted genially boyish while exuding testosterone-fueled swagger.
Levy genially serves it for dinner anyway to a friend, her own daughter and some of her daughter's friends.
"Damn fool," Pearson said to me genially, though by now he had turned bright red and was sweating majestically.
I didn't even dislike it, as I do some styles, for being overbearing or for not pairing genially with food.
An era defined by a free-spirited way of unconventional thinking, the time genially welcomed the wildest imaginings from artists.
Ms. Madley Croft was relatively voluble, and Mr. Smith almost entirely self-effacing; Mr. Sim genially, patiently measured his words.
" Former Google CEO, Eric Schmidt, also makes an appearance, genially commenting that "under [Eustace's] mild manner, is a man of steel.
And he remains genially philosophical about his mission: "I'm just a messenger to bring hope, love and peace to girls and boys."
Graze was humming like a well-oiled engine, with staff gliding deftly by each other, managing to genially keep ahead of orders.
Needless to say, the message swiftly went viral, as people started sharing it and genially mocking the politician for tweeting his own name.
The reunion went better than the summer impasse would have presaged, as Pierre-Paul was genially welcomed back by management and his teammates.
Seller replied, genially enough, that he thought that would be a complete waste of money, considering all the free publicity the show was attracting.
His predecessor, George W. Bush, had his photo taken in the Roosevelt Room, and while his eyes were crinkled genially, his smile was contained.
Through his optimism — he genially shows off bullet wounds he's earned on front lines — and his narrative arc, he emerges as the movie's center.
In a 1989 interview with The Times, Mr. Schrier genially defended his practice of singing the Evangelist roles in Bach passions while also conducting.
In 1998, he started the Silk Road Project, dedicated to genially exploring cross-cultural artistic connections, out of which emerged the constantly touring Silk Road Ensemble.
Go: In Michael Mayer's revitalizing revival of "Little Shop of Horrors," the genially gruesome classic becomes a sly morality tale for the age of universal celebrity.
As he boarded his plane to go home, well wishers waved their hats at him and he genially removed his Minnesota Twins cap and waved back. Mrs.
She genially answered my questions, telling me that she had never been to the center before, though she had lived in the neighborhood for a long time.
Ronald Reagan genially defied his base on occasion, offering amnesty to illegal immigrants and doing business with Mikhail Gorbachev, and left George H. W. Bush to reap the whirlwind.
" Over a farewell handshake, Rubio told the vice president, "We have a good chance to do some good things here," to which Biden genially responded, "Keep the faith, man.
After two days of Republicans genially congratulating their colleague on his nomination, Lewis bitingly argued that what mattered was Sessions's views, not his personality: It doesn't matter whether Sen.
His co-host is Bill Sorensen, a former mayor of Bismarck who specializes in genially hokey humor, the kind designed to make the children in the audience laugh, too.
But she answered her phone in Marathi, the state language and her mother tongue, genially weaving into the interview a seemingly nonstop series of other interviews with local news outlets.
" He must have seen that I was ready to take this as a compliment, because he quickly added, as genially as he could, "I don't mean in the good way.
Patrick Mulvey does get the character's strange combination of fecklessness and charisma just right; he moves genially from adventure to adventure without building much of a life along the way.
"Manuelzhino," for example, is a fond but exasperated complaint, in a landowner's voice, about an inept gardener—"half squatter, half tenant (no rent)"—who genially fails at every assigned task.
Grinning genially and standing comfortably next to Warner, Burr told reporters that the "ground rules" for their appearance were that neither he nor Warner would take questions about the House panel.
Genially, self-deprecatingly and in charmingly accented English — he pronounces the "w" in "answer" — he tells the story of how he became captivated by what are evidently someone's silent home movies.
Much of what happens isn't surprising, but Dan Sterling and Liz Hannah's script is consistently, genially funny, filled with patter and nonsense, and spiked with sincerity and a few gross-out flourishes.
Gustave Newman, a goateed criminal defense lawyer in a host of headline-grabbing cases who genially cajoled skeptical juries and cowed hostile witnesses with his booming baritone, died on Monday in Manhattan.
Billy's great ambition is to be a writer, and he sets out to achieve his dream almost immediately, leaving behind a friend, Margo (a genially wry Hannah Elless), who secretly pines for him.
"I had other things to do," Mr. Greenberg said, smiling genially as he generally shrugged off about 45 minutes of follow-up questions about why he did not delve personally into the deal's status.
Everyone's favorite bar for bluegrass and roots music, the genre-bending, boxlike Station Inn sits genially amid the shiny high-rises of the Gulch, a little like an architectural Luddite — but that's part of its charm.
In "Dunhuang V," one of the most genially infectious works in the show, materiality is pushed even further, with patterned vertical strips woven into the right and left edges of the horizontal sheet, lending it a sculptural objectness.
Things had quickly gotten a little chaotic, in a good-natured way, and stayed there, with Howe and the other panelists genially talking over each other about reptilian species, light beings, the significance of ancient artifacts, and, ultimately, Jesus.
It was an attempt to bring out the lighter side of the chest-thumping leader, and Mr Modi responded genially to scripted questions about mangoes (he loves them) and sleep (never more than three and a half hours a night).
Traveling 1,200 miles along the Rio Grande, from El Paso to the Gulf of Mexico, the director, Ben Masters, and four friends slowly and genially build an ecologically devastating case against the construction of President Trump's much-ballyhooed border wall.
An elderly man — who we suspected was shoehorned into guide service by the office, given his sweater vest and loafers — genially led us down valleys of flowering walnut groves, through mud-walled villages, to a door opened by his daughter.
After days of genially bombastic interactions with the news media on North Korea and the shortcomings of congressional Republicans, Mr. Trump on Saturday condemned the bloody protests in Charlottesville, Va., in what critics in both parties saw as muted, equivocal terms.
" He protested, genially, about the restaurant's noise and its uncomfortable seats, praised some dishes, and continued, "Too much of the cooking at Nishi is self-referential, inward looking, and so concerned with technique that you can't help being conscious of it.
On any given afternoon or evening, players of all ages (most seem to be in their 83s) shove pucks and genially trash-talk each other on any of the club's 28 outdoor courts (eight other courts are currently being used as a dance floor).
Eric Swalwell, a 38-year-old congressman from California, labeled Biden a relic of the party's past by genially recalling an event he attended as a child, when Biden told a Democratic audience the time had come to pass the torch to the next generation.
The Celtics' crowd was genially profane, several times serenading the Cavaliers misdemeanant J.R. Smith — who committed a dangerous intentional foul earlier in the series against Al Horford and later admitted, "I blatantly pushed him" — with a chant suggesting he committed a physically impossible act.
But much of their work, at least what was presented here, was genially suave Latin pop standards — a bit lulling in this large dose, though lifted by the passionate singers and warmly subtle accompaniment from the guitarists Pancho Navarro and Brendan Cowan and the percussionist Leonardo Granados.
Zak tries to cover up his desperation and bring his powers of persuasion to bear on Richie, genially reminding him of his obligations to his family and his partners — in return, Richie uses his newfound kung fu moves, thrusting his open palm at Zak and breaking his nose.
Hassan and Sara have returned to Pakistan, where they genially recall a sun-burnished Connecticut that never was, while Hassan tries to picture the younger siblings whom Hina left behind, wandering their American living room, "content in their kingdom," before the Old World and its ancient demands intrude.
That's the last we'll hear from him for quite a while, but these first 40 pages of "The Institute" — low-key and relaxed, an unaffected and genially convincing depiction of a certain uncelebrated walk of life — demonstrate how engaging King's fiction can be even without an underlying low whine of dread.
Elsewhere, his confessional moments ache: "The Way Life Goes" — a midtempo ballad that reassures the heartbroken, "I know it hurts sometimes but you'll get over it/you'll find another life to live" — saunters genially to a tune whose deliberate major-key simulations of care and concern add sweetness to the wobbly synthesizer underneath.
His genially skew-whiff posture for the camera may be intended to deflect easy attempts to get an angle on him.
Who could not talk for fifteen minutes on " the old > flail". A groan of mortal anguish escaped Mr. Chaplin as, in eloquently > rounded periods, the honourable member for Cavan turned over, ogled, turned > over again, and genially touched upon the beauties of flails. At length the > hour struck. Mr. Biggar sank down victorious, and Mr. Chaplin rushed in > anger from the House.
The Twonky did poorly at the box office; critics saw the poor production values as a major problem. When interviewed in 1970, Hans Conried recalled that he told the producer that The Twonky would probably bomb at the box-office (which it did), whereupon the producer genially replied "That's all right. I need a tax write-off this year anyway."Erickson, Hal.
In his latter years, before he died, McFadden freely admitted using the tactic. “It won me,” smiled the aging McFadden genially, “a lot of fights”. New York Journal sportswriter and cartoonist Thomas A. Dorgan agreed. “McFadden should use four gloves in the ring,” he said, “One on each fist and one on each elbow!” Another favourite tactic of McFadden, who was certainly not afraid of fouling, was to heel an opponent with the open glove.
HAL became operational in Urbana, Illinois, at the HAL Plant (the University of Illinois's Coordinated Science Laboratory, where the ILLIAC computers were built). The film says this occurred in 1992, while the book gives 1997 as HAL's birth year. In 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), HAL is initially considered a dependable member of the crew, maintaining ship functions and engaging genially with its human crew-mates on an equal footing. As a recreational activity, Frank Poole plays chess against HAL.
Many of the corporation's programmes were broadcast from places such as Bristol and Weston-super-Mare in the West Country and Evesham and Bedford in the Midlands.Longmate, pp. 66–67 The BBC Variety department was moved first to Bristol and, in 1941, to Bangor in North Wales. ITMA resumed, its running time reduced to 30 minutes, and now Handley and his colleagues caught the public mood with shows that genially satirised many of the irritating features of wartime existence and generated catchphrases that became common currency.
Jerome K Jerome wrote of "the rather uninteresting river residence of my newsagent - a quiet unassuming old gentleman, who may be met with about these regions, during the summer months, sculling himself along in easy vigorous style, or chatting genially to some old lock-keeper, as he passes through". The newsagent in question was W H Smith whose residence was Greenlands. Caleb Gould's gravestone at Remenham has the elegy > This world’s a jest, > And all things show it; > I thought so once, > And now I know it.
As the mailman walks up the path towards the front porch, however, a brief close-up of his arm reveals that he is, in fact, a zombie. Rockwell emerges onto the porch to receive the paper, which the mailman genially hands over. As the mailman brings his other arm around in an attempt to strike, Rockwell has just enough time to notice that he is not human. Due in part to the popularity of the music video, the song is sometimes used for Halloween celebrations, with cover versions found in various collections of Halloween music.
While she was a student, she received praise in festivals in Amsterdam, Strasbourg and Prague. She was described as a genially gifted woman, and her music was promoted by the great supporter of contemporary music, Hermann Scherchen. Her music was performed by the most important chamber ensembles and orchestras, and she was offered by Alois Hába a post of the associate professor at the Department for quartertone music at the Prague State Conservatory. World War II disrupted her international career so she spent most of her life in Belgrade, where she focused on composing more works.
During the 1860s, he produced at least 18 full-length operettas, as well as more one-act pieces. His works from this period included La belle Hélène (1864), La Vie parisienne (1866), La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein (1867) and La Périchole (1868). The risqué humour (often about sexual intrigue) and mostly gentle satiric barbs in these pieces, together with Offenbach's facility for melody, made them internationally known, and translated versions were successful in Vienna, London and elsewhere in Europe. Offenbach became associated with the Second French Empire of Napoleon III; the emperor and his court were genially satirised in many of Offenbach's operettas.
In 1984, he wrote and directed the motion picture Reno and the Doc starring Kenneth Welsh and Linda Griffiths, which in 1985 was nominated for four Genie Awards. Also in 1984 he co-authored a screenplay of his novel The Next-to-Last Train Ride for a film which was directed by Richard Lester and released under the title Finders Keepers. Vincent Canby in The New York Times described it as "a genially oddball comedy of a sort not often successfully made these days." In 2004, Dennis was the voice of Rico in Disney's animated feature Home on the Range.
Their initial experiment was to pressure law-abiding and credulous passers-by into presenting their identity papers for inspection, and the apparent success earned Urmuz an unexpected following in school (his fans even heckled Vivat Dacia into accepting poultry heads as means of payment, before the society dissolved itself with ceremony).Ciprian, p.49 Another colleague, future traditionalist poet Vasile Voiculescu, recalled young Urmuz as "genially knavish", his humor being "cerebral, harder to detect and appreciate".Cernat, Avangarda, p.344 The core group of Urmuzian disciples, organized as a secret society, comprised Ciprian (nicknamed "Macferlan" by Urmuz), Alexandru "Bălălău" Bujoreanu and Costică "Pentagon" Grigorescu, together known as the pahuci.
The Negotiations at Angoulême In The Negotiations at Angoulême, Marie de' Medici genially takes the olive branch from Mercury, the messenger god, in the presence of both of her priests, as she gives her consent to have discussions with her son concerning her clash to his governmental direction. Rubens uses several methods to portray Queen Marie in precisely the light that she wanted to be seen, as her young son's guardian and wise advisor. Enthroned on a pedestal with sculptures of Minerva's symbols of wisdom and two putti holding a laurel wreath to represent victory and martyrdom, the representation of Marie de' Medici is quite clear. Her humble, yet all-knowing gaze conveys the wisdom that she holds.
Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune gave the film a rating of 3 out of 4, saying "While I wish van Heijningen's Thing weren't quite so in lust with the '82 model, it works because it respects that basic premise; and it exhibits a little patience, doling out its ickiest, nastiest moments in ways that make them stick". Andrew O'Hehir of Salon.com called it a "Loving prequel to a horror classic", saying "It's full of chills and thrills and isolated Antarctic atmosphere and terrific Hieronymus Bosch creature effects, and if it winks genially at the plot twists of Carpenter's film, it never feels even a little like some kind of inside joke." James Berardinelli gave it three stars out of four, saying that it "offers a similar overall experience" to the 1982 film, but "without replicating styles and situations".
Entertainment Weekly In the New York Daily News, Elizabeth Weltzmen gave the film 2 1/2 stars (of 4), writing, "... even those unimpressed with [Cheech and Chong's] genially lowbrow work will be intrigued by the political tenor of this portrait." She continues, "Gilbert blatantly takes Chong's side, so your level of empathy will rise or fall depending on how strongly you connect with his subject." Wesley Morris of the Boston Globe wrote, "This isn't a great piece of nonfiction filmmaking, but it has its moments", stating that Chong's presence in the film lent "a serene counterpoint to the farce Gilbert makes of the Justice Department...", but, "the movie does succeed in showing us the graying cult star as a gratuitous drug-war casualty". At review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a score of 71% among 21 selected critic reviews.
' For the jubilee a biography – the first ever made for a living Tsar – was published, which depicted him as an overlooking father of his people, keeping a compassionate and earnest watch over their needs. It also wrote that he devoted special care to the development of the peasantry, and that he often visited their huts to 'partake their milk and black bread', that he would talk 'genially' with the peasants at official functions, whereafter the peasants would cross themselves and feel happier the rest of their life. It wrote of the 'thousands of invisible threads centr[ing] in the Tsar's heart, and these threads stretch to the huts of the poor to the palaces of the rich.' He was also depicted as wearing peasant robes, eating peasant food like borscht and blinies, and sharing their habits.

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