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75 Sentences With "gets the impression"

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

One gets the impression that for many podcasters, audience size is almost irrelevant.
One gets the impression that Egan found herself with piles upon piles of research.
Although the laws have changed, Xu gets the impression that they have not received enough publicity.
One gets the impression that Boyle simply glances around and sees stories everywhere his eyes alight.
Though she is only twenty-seven, one gets the impression that she has lived well beyond her years.
One gets the impression of a diminutive woman with shoulders squared, delivering an oratory from her woodwind pipe.
For example, some intermediaries that are not financial in nature still have influence over who gets the impression.
Just to be sure nobody ever gets the impression this is just about the will of the people.
If the public gets the impression that scientists are liberal crusaders, it will be a hard mental image to break.
Watching Netflix's growth, one gets the impression that the company is trying to carve out a space in every single genre.
One gets the impression that Geys, as much as any artist ever managed to, achieved an integration of art and life.
One gets the impression that he, as much as any artist ever managed to, achieved an integration of art and life.
Listening to the media elite or to Wall Street's free-trade cheerleaders, one gets the impression that the sky must be falling.
"No." One gets the impression that Wright might actually save himself a headache or two if he just came clean one way or the other.
They take a good point — that capitalism needs to be reformed to reduce inequality — and they radicalize it so one gets the impression they want to undermine capitalism altogether.
One gets the impression that a similar situation surrounded the recording of Monotheist—that a visionary band had finally accrued the experience and the tools they needed to release their ultimate testament.
Scanning all the unrealized projects on view here, one gets the impression that Lequeu, after whole-heartedly leaping into the vast visionary art abyss, found it only went up to his knees.
I'd prefer it if the DeX settings were more easily accessible in the drop down menu, but one gets the impression that Samsung's still working out some of the kinks on this one.
"One gets the impression that you are taking the whole company out of the hands of the management board," said fund manager Winfried Mathes of Deka Investment, which owns 0.8 percent of Linde shares.
"One gets the impression that since 2014 we have been convinced that sanctions are painless for our economy," said Kirill Tremasov, head of research at Loko-Invest and former director of the Russian Economy Ministry's forecasting department.
Although it's easy to disagree with Trump on many foreign policy issues, one gets the impression from Pompeo's announcement that Trump is not gung-ho about another war in the Middle East or a military confrontation with Iran.
READING the first 25 pages of Chief Justice John Roberts' opinion in Department of Commerce v New York, one gets the impression he sided with the Trump administration in its quest to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census.
"One gets the impression that the President doesn't understand or he willfully disregards the fact that the attorney general and law enforcement in general -- they are not his personal lawyers to defend and protect him," one GOP senator told CNN.
"One gets the impression that the government doesn't perceive that the population is fed up," Antoine Karam, a Socialist who represents French Guiana in the Senate, the upper house of the French Parliament, told the BFM TV news channel on Monday.
From the hints dropped by the subpoenas, one gets the impression that the inauguration was a shambolic grabfest in which people with money tried to turn it into power and people who suddenly had power tried to turn it into money.
Reading the memoir, one gets the impression that its author longs for the heyday of Obama's early presidency, when more Democratic politicians tiptoed around Wall Street investors, when Joel Klein ran New York City's education department, when Waiting for Superman was making a splash.
A giant plastic giraffe greets us as we enter Unbarlievable, where a solo cover singer with an acoustic guitar takes requests from four or five people gathered; one gets the impression he'd be happy to play anything from ABBA to ZZ Top just to keep us around.
To be Candor about it (using Divergent-speak), this is far from a Dauntless enterprise, and despite four credited writers one often gets the impression that "Allegiant" was designed by an algorithm trying to please the maximum amount of viewers with the minimum amount of flair or intelligence.
After a while, one gets the impression that Benjamin resents Martin's ascendancy for reasons to do not at all with stagecraft but with straightforward envy: cue the libidinous Benjamin putting the make on Martin's wife, Gina (Naomi Frederick), and sending shock waves through the young couple's faltering marriage.
One gets the impression that even the most fleeting of pieces in "Essays One," such as a few paragraphs about her favorite short stories, written for a British tabloid, has been given the precise and playful Lydia Davis treatment: "Subtly, or less subtly, you always want to surprise a reader."
The band's current, most grandiose form is certainly the most mature that Primordial has ever sounded; one gets the impression that, much like many other bands who started in the 80s and weathered the ensuing decades, this is what Averill would've been doing all along had circumstances and technology allowed for it.
Interviewing the two of them feels for all the world like chatting with a couple of old friends at a bar; there's an openness and vulnerability to them that they're unafraid to share, but one gets the impression that any whiff of bullshit would be summarily smacked down with the utmost Southern charm.
Looking at this rich collection of precedents (including some from nonwhite-majority countries like Nepal, the Philippines and South Africa), one gets the impression that the justices have tried to gaze beyond India, doing the homework for future courts in other countries that will decide similar cases, based on similarly vestigial colonial-era impositions.
One gets the impression King was just waiting for a major disaster like this to hit Texas, not so much to pat himself on the back for his promised generosity, but to slam Senator Cruz at his state's most vulnerable time over a battle that took place five years ago over aid to victims of Hurricane Sandy that hit the East Coast hard in 2012.
David gets the impression Alan was the assassin and breaks up with him.
One gets the impression that he would cheer the readvance of continental glaciers.
Because of the expansion and contraction during the dissolution, the viewer gets the impression that the zebra is breathing. The film is influenced by German Romanticism.
Desperate Housewives. ABC. January 11, 2009. Season 5, no. 12. In the fifth season episode "Home is the Place," Susan wakes up next to Lee and gets the impression that they had sex.
He gets the impression that Gale is making a pass and she reacts accordingly. At her invitation they both enter the doorways into the folly to meet in the middle. Charlie does so enthusiastically, but Gale sneaks off. Charlie instead meets Marsha, now fully dressed as the clown, "Mr. Chortles".
The > smile is false, and the face is a strong mixture of the old and the > childish. But there is still something naïve about her. One gets the > impression that this little lady is trying hard to look chaste. The dress > which is extremely well painted, is a heavenly blue.
The viewer gets the impression that he has a profound love for gardening and for plants in particular. As the show draws to an end the garden is completed. Before and after pictures are shown with an overview of the major features of the new garden. The homeowners are consulted and are usually very pleased.
His bloodtype is A. birthday is March 31 (Aries). Although he acts like a rebel and tends to find things bothersome, he somehow always ends up taking care of Kanade. He gets the impression people compare him to his brother Ritsu and hates that. He actually wanted to quit playing the violin whenever he wanted.
Ross and Monica's cousin, Cassie, visits, and Chandler becomes attracted to her. As a result, she moves from Monica's to Ross' apartment. Unfortunately, Ross gets smitten by her looks as well. When he and Cassie are watching a movie together, Ross gets the impression that Cassie wants to have sex with him, so he reaches out to kiss her.
As the storyline develops; Texas and Dodger agree to help Jodie out with her dance assignment. However, Texas cannot dance and Theresa takes her place. Hendrickse-Spendlove told Inside Soap's reporter that Texas sees Theresa as a threat. Texas gets the impression that Jodie and Theresa are into each other because they get on well during dance rehearsals.
She allows him to call her "Millie" as long as she can call him "Captain Wombastic McFlingFlang the Third." Upon describing his occupation, Retrab gets the impression that he is a treasure hunter, but Markesh states bluntly that Race is a thief. Race sells what he finds in Academy ruins. He is well-travelled and amuses Retrab with jokes.
Their struggle is interrupted by a maid and Stevenson flees, getting hit by a car during the frantic chase. Herbert follows him to the San Francisco General Hospital emergency room and mistakenly gets the impression that Stevenson has died from his injuries. Herbert meets up with Amy Robbins again and she initiates a romance. Stevenson returns to the bank to exchange more money.
However, the office fails to impress Robert with their ideas. Kevin Malone (Brian Baumgartner) details an idea he has about cookie placement in the vending machine, but Robert gets the impression that he is extremely clever and is speaking only in metaphors. The employees try to offer analogies to Kevin's words, but Robert gives credit to Kevin. Ryan Howard (B.
Andy and his best friend Danny find everyday things to play with over the house. As the reader gets the impression of a beginning reader's story, the font size of the story is big. Andy and Danny play with a fan, milk, toilet paper and their dog. Seeing the mess, Andy's parents get upset so they have to suck up all of the mess they have created.
Due to the orality in The Buddha, the historical events, and the many dialogues full of colloquialism, the reader gets the impression of realism. The novel is highly episodic; Kureishi uses juxtaposition and collage. The suburbs are "a leaving place" from which Kureishi's characters must move away. To Karim, London—even though it is geographically not far away from his home—seems like a completely different world.
The late manuscript hs1 (S3), created for Margaret of Savoy has been extensively illuminated, with around 201 miniatures. Nearly every stanza of the poem is accompanied with an illumination. The illuminations are very similar to each other on each page, showing every stage of the poem's narrative, so that one gets the impression of a series of film stills. The illuminations appear to be from the workshop of Ludwig Henfflin.
He is well-published. In addition, his narrative career account reveals that he has spent a lot of time in all sorts of countries working on international cultural policy in some form or another. :As presented in the proposal, the project is strongly conceived, defined, and organized. Noteworthy is Dr. Mulcahy's enthusiasm for the project one gets the impression that this is a labor of love as well as a scholarly pursuit.
The violin develops the melody, he shapes the phrases and introduces tiny pauses. The cimbalom sets the rhythm, indicates accelerations and de- accelerations, and affects the volume. Violin – There doesn’t exist an instrument called “Gypsy violin”. Players in gypsy style have a preference for violins with a dark tone-quality from which they can draw a special sound. The listener gets the impression that he hears a “Gypsy violin” but that is not so.
In "S.W.A.K.", Rocko has been vying for the attention from the pretty kangaroo mail-lady that comes to his door every day; he writes her a love note that he is too scared to send so Heffer does it for him instead. Rocko fails to retrieve the letter and gets the impression that the mail-lady would rather go out with Heffer. This turns out to be a joke on the mail- lady's part and she actually returns Rocko's feelings.
A rapport with his models was necessary, and while at work, Freud was characterised as "an outstanding raconteur and mimic". Regarding the difficulty in deciding when a painting is completed, Freud said that "he feels he's finished when he gets the impression he's working on somebody else's painting". Paintings were divided into day paintings done in natural light and night paintings done under artificial light, and the sessions, and lighting, were never mixed.NPG, V It was Freud's practice to begin a painting by first drawing in charcoal on the canvas.
However, Sophie (Brooke Vincent) and Rosie are unhappy because they want Sally to get back together with Kevin. Rosie devises a plan to split up Jeff and Sally: she dresses in revealing lingerie when Jeff calls to the house to see her about modelling work and deliberately spills a drink on his trousers. Just as she is trying to pull Jeff's trousers off, Sally walks through the door and immediately gets the impression that Jeff has been trying to seduce Rosie. Later, Rosie is forced to admit the truth and Sally reconciles with Jeff.
While Ava is trying to piece together her missing 28 days she discovers blood stains on her floor. Ava's family is of little help, as Ava gets the impression they are hiding something. Her only clue to the person's identity is an engraved watch that leads her to Ben (Lou Taylor Pucci), who tells her that it belonged to his father. Sure that he is dead as a result of her, Ava lies to Ben about how she found the watch but ends up spending time with Ben.
Aiden, angry that Marcus agreed to move to London with him and then changed his mind, assumes Sean has been causing trouble. Sean gets the impression that Marcus wants him back and is horrified to find Marcus kissing Maria. He struggles to accept that Marcus is now in a straight relationship and tells Jason, who is furious that they lied to him. In November 2013, Marcus and Maria decide to buy a house together, away from the street so that there are things like boating lakes and playgrounds for Liam.
He asks the doctor for her name, and she reveals to him that it is Dr. Marcott. The viewer gets the impression that Marion dreamed of how her family had died while in a coma, and that the hearse not picking her up was her dream telling her that she would live. As the doctor tries to leave, her car fails to start, and the man who found the family offers her a lift in the same hearse from Marion's dream. As the credits roll, two workers are seen sweeping up debris from the crash.
Norman Knight, who are close friends to Bertha and Harry. Guest, Eddie Warren, is an effeminate character, who adds an interesting mix to someone who Bertha is mysteriously drawn to for reasons unknown to her at the start. The interesting thing is that Bertha's husband is presented to the reader as Bertha perceives him in her mind. Because Bertha is so naive, the reader first gets the impression that Harry is a crude, disinterested person who has a strong dislike for Pearl by his conversational tone and curtness towards her as the conversation unfolds.
His affable and wholesome nature makes those around him protective of him. At Stanford, Bryce protects Chuck from a life that he thinks will destroy Chuck, though this does cause Chuck some pain."Chuck Versus the Alma Mater" Sarah immediately gets the impression that Chuck is a good guy after they meet, which leads her to protect him rather than suspect him of being a villain, and breaks protocol repeatedly (even risking her career and freedom) to help Chuck."Chuck Versus the Broken Heart""Chuck Versus the Marlin""Chuck Versus the Colonel" Casey has trouble bringing himself to kill Chuck, even on orders.
"Believe It or Not, Joe's Walking on Air" is the third episode of the sixth season of the American animated television series Family Guy, an episode produced for season 5. It originally aired on Fox in the United States on October 7, 2007. Joe Swanson (Patrick Warburton) gets the impression that his wife Bonnie (voiced by Jennifer Tilly) is tired of being married to a handicapped person, so he decides to get a leg transplant. Excited about his new ability to walk, Joe dives head first into extreme sports and begins to hang around more active friends.
In 2007, a group of researchers observed a tendency for users to rely on Google Search exclusively for finding information, writing that "With the Google interface the user gets the impression that the search results imply a kind of totality. ... In fact, one only sees a small part of what one could see if one also integrates other research tools." In 2011, Google Search query results have been shown by Internet activist Eli Pariser to be tailored to users, effectively isolating users in what he defined as a filter bubble. Pariser holds algorithms used in search engines such as Google Search responsible for catering "a personal ecosystem of information".
She agrees to give them the land or money, whatever is convenient to them. (One gets the impression that at the late time of her life Bhavani is leading a lonely, guilt-ridden life, having destroyed the lives of both the brothers -- she married Anandan who commits suicide, probably due to unhappy marriage.) Venu returns to Calcutta and reveals his identity to Aunt Arthi. She is pleasantly surprised; she and Damayanti finally feel a sense of security and belonging in their lives. But Arthi rejects the financial help from her husband's family who hadn't allowed her to enter the compound of the house when she visited them years back.
He was brought up in a > world of hunting and snipe-shooting, of threatening letters and houghed > cattle, where you were for the Government or against it, where you passed > every day the results of lawlessness in the blackened walls of empty houses. > It was a world very different from the mild and ordered life of southern > England...One gets the impression [of O'Dwyer when at Balliol] of a man who > seldom opened a book without a purpose, whose keen hard brain acquired > quickly and did not forget but had little time for subtleties.Philip > Woodruff, The Men Who Ruled India. Volume II: The Guardians (London: > Jonathan Cape, 1954), p. 236.
Burke is widely viewed as a leader of the conservative wing of the Church, and de facto leader in the United States to those that oppose the reforms under Pope Francis. Shortly after Pope Francis did not reappoint him to the Congregation of Bishops, Burke said, "One gets the impression, or it's interpreted this way in the media, that he thinks we're talking too much about abortion, too much about the integrity of marriage as between one man and one woman. But we can never talk enough about that."Distant, Daniel, "Cardinal Raymond Burke Replaced by Pope Francis: Conservatives Out, Moderates In ", The Christian Post, December 18, 2013.
He fishes his boat out of the river and is occupied with its repair for some months, during which a sudden fire destroys a grass shed full of materials used to trade with the natives. While one of the natives is tortured for allegedly causing the fire, Marlow is invited in the room of the station's brick-maker, a man who spent a year waiting for material to make bricks. Marlow gets the impression the man wants to pump him and is curious to know what kind of information he is after. Hanging on the wall is "a small sketch in oils, on a panel, representing a woman draped and blindfolded carrying a lighted torch".
St Petersburg, ARKA Gallery Publishing, 2019. P.39. Known Russian art historian Vitaly Manin considered that «What in our time is termed a myth in the works of artists of the 1930s was a reality, one,moreover, that was perceived that way by real people. Another side of life did exist, of course, but that does not annul that the artists depicted. ... One gets the impression that disputes about art were conducted before and after 1937 in the interests of the party bureaucracy and of artists with a proletarian obsession, but not at all of true artists, who found themes in the contemporary world and did not get embroiled in questions of the form of their expression».
At the beginning of the 1990s, DAIM developed his 3D-style: The artist gained publicity with his trademark of creating the four letters of his name in three-dimensional style. Outlines that are commonly used in graffiti cannot be seen in this style. In fact, by applying light and shadow effects, the colours are placed in such a way that one gets the impression the letters are floating in the air and are tangible. DAIM had been making photorealistic drawings also before his career in graffiti and was influenced by artists like Salvador Dalí and Vincent van Gogh to not place outlines, but rather create forms with shadings and thus present them three-dimensionally.
In 1914, Arthur Jerome Eddy examined what made Archipenko's sculpture, Family Life, exhibited at the Armory Show unique, powerful, modern and Cubist: > In his "Family Life," the group of man, woman, child, Archipenko > deliberately subordinated all thought of beauty of form to an attempt to > realize in stone the relation in life that is at the very basis of human and > social existence. Spiritual, emotional, and mathematical intellectuality, > too, is behind the family group of Archipenko. This group, in plaster, might > have been made of dough. It represents a featureless, large, strong male—one > gets the impression of strength from humps and lumps—an impression of a > female, less vivid, and the vague knowledge that a child is mixed up in the > general embrace.
Neuhaus, Richard J. "Nixon: The Education of a Politician 1913-1962, by Stephen E. Ambrose" (book review), Commentary magazine, August 1987. "Nixon is competently, sometimes brightly, written, and one gets the impression that Ambrose is striving, above all, to be assiduously fair."Apple, R.W., Jr., "Beyond Damnation or Defense: The Middle Years", New York Times, November 12, 1989. Retrieved 2018-06-09. A visit to a reunion of Easy Company veterans in 1988 prompted Ambrose to collect their stories, turning them into Band of Brothers, E Company, 506th Regiment, 101st Airborne: From Normandy to Hitler's Eagle's Nest (1992). D-Day (1994), built upon additional oral histories, presented the battle from the view points of individual soldiers and became his first best seller.
The rival lovers (erastai) of the title are an athlete, and a young man devoted to the humanities, mousikē (music) in the original text, a term that in ancient times included music, poetry, and philosophy. The dialogue opens with Socrates entering a grammar school, as a couple of young boys were quarrelling about something related to learning. Socrates asks the person next to him, who happened to be one of the boys lover, to tell him whether their quarrel was about an important issue in philosophy. Judging by his reply, Socrates gets the impression that this man is rather dismissive of philosophy altogether, a view that is immediately reinforced by the second interlocutor who interrupts to explain that his rival specialises in "chokeholds" (τραχηλιζόμενος), rather than philosophy.
It turns out Oswin has written a history of the company but so far has not found a publisher. Talking to Oswin and to other people he meets, either by chance or by design, Flood more and more gets the impression that Roger Colborn is a dangerous man who has something to hide, and that Jenny must be saved from the clutches of the Colborn family before it is too late. Thus, Flood's interest in the affairs of a now defunct company is fuelled by his desire to win back Jenny, so much so that his professional life is affected. Trying to dig up dirt on the Colborns, he is drawn into a quagmire of events he cannot make head or tail of and eventually misses an evening's performance without giving any notice.
Kratkofil Plus 2012 Open Air Theatre in the prime-time evening slot International Film Festival Kratkofil Plus was held from 18 to 22 July and the main locations in the city for movie lovers were Youth Center and fortress Kastel. This year's festival was held under the motto "Motorso", with the following explanation: Because, while trying to discover traces of all those tendencies that appear in man’s head and which set in motion its controlling activity, one gets the impression that those tendencies move from downward to upward. Triggered by driving force of your heart, stomach and genitalia, the tendencies flood from torso into the head. One could say that the moving complex inside your torso gives drive to the controlling complex inside your head, like a motor, like “motorso”.
Washizaki talks to one of his superiors, presumably Mukai or Aneyama, before he gets the impression that he is being betrayed given the fact that they want to take Nachi, his most important piece of his plan, as well as his daughter for seemingly no reason. This betrayal prompts Washizaki to go on a homicidal rampage, killing people for no reason whatsoever - usually he at least requires them to mildly annoy him or fail him. Washizaki goes so insane that he puts on face paint and straps a pair of flashlights to his head in an imitation of the way candles are worn in certain Shinto rituals rather than his usual peaked cap. Due to Nachi's godlike powers, maggots are generated in Washizaki´s flesh and they start tearing through his face during his fight with Riki-Oh, in order to push him even further in his madness.
He does not believe that Alberti rises above the level of his models, such as Góngora and Guillén in Cal y canto - in other words he sees Alberti as a parodist rather than as an original poet.Cernuda: OCP vol 1 Rafael Alberti p 221 The reader gets the impression that he envies the fact that Alberti became so successful so rapidly, using him as an example of a poet who found his public immediately. These thoughts were written in his essay in Estudios sobre poesía espaňola contemporánea on Alberti and seem to derive from Eliot's essay "Tradition and the Individual Talent", because he goes on to draw a contrast between writers who are readily accepted by the public with writers who are more original, who modify the tradition with their own experiences of life and who have to wait for the public to accept them. Cernuda ends up by praising his poetic fluency and virtuosity while stating that he had nothing to say and that his work is basically deprived of passion and emotion.

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