Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

67 Sentences With "had the air of"

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

Again, the whole thing had the air of a public execution.
That night in Paris had the air of a final curtain.
By the end, the game had the air of a collaborative effort.
With so little at stake, the election had the air of a fair.
That first clash had the air of a game the world was watching.
He had the air of a jovial, portly uncle presiding over a family gathering.
Clinton and denunciations of foreign foes, often had the air of a prize fight.
With his beard and strong jaw, Will had the air of a mountain man.
The pensive Mr Müller, 64, rarely had the air of a man enjoying the limelight.
His outburst had the air of a performance, perhaps for the benefit of someone else.
The event had the air of a presidential debate—albeit one that began at 10 a.m.
It had the air of a street fair, with homemade peace signs and other colorful touches.
The young staff members in the office had the air of committed soldiers in the conservative cause.
Some of the locals made wine, but they had the air of farmers, not investment bankers. Mrs.
Ivy was affectionate, exuberant, and highly competent; at times, though, she had the air of an abandoned child.
"Raúl always has had the air of a chargé d'affaires rather than an ambassador," says a diplomat in Havana.
The Calderón has always had the air of a place that would be wonderful, if only they could finish it.
Thursday night's state dinner — the first for a Canadian prime minister in nearly two decades — had the air of a family reunion.
To many, even before Croatia arrived in Russia, it had the air of a team that could pose problems for most opponents.
Rather, she had the air of someone you'd like to call an old friend, someone you'd meet for coffee on a Thursday night.
Served on a silver platter, it had the air of something unearthed from an attic, resembling nothing so much as Marie Antoinette's bouffant.
Back at the shortlived demonstration, a Kurdish commander, who refused to give his name, had the air of a man resigned to his fate.
He was Turkish and Syrian but grew up in Syria and had the air of someone who liked to tell it like it is.
Our conversation had the air of a confessional: of Roy admitting that he and his intellectual comrades had gone wrong, had failed, had sinned.
The campus's cafeteria had the air of a disaster bazaar, with overflowing boxes of bottled water, gas masks, goggles and paper towels, organized by category.
As a group and as individual acts, the collective's members developed a strong touring presence, and their sold-out shows had the air of religious gatherings.
If Labour's conference last month felt at times like a student rally, the Tories' Manchester get-together this week had the air of an old people's home.
It had the air of a foregone conclusion after the feedback they'd received about the difficulty of groups, though they insisted the issue had been personal, not professional.
Dizzy's, part of Jazz at Lincoln Center, is one of the more coveted rooms on New York's jazz circuit, and the night had the air of an audition.
He'd had the air of a country boy, which, in a way, he was: he'd grown up in a dilapidated farmhouse, though his parents weren't farmers but artists.
She had the air of a woman who could balance a checkbook, and who knew a good deal when she saw it, and who would tell off whomever needed telling off.
It wasn't a movie premiere, but the exhibition opening for "Spitzmaus Mummy in a Coffin and Other Treasures," which Mr. Anderson and Ms. Malouf curated, certainly had the air of one.
Sunday's regular-season finale had the air of a spring training game, with veterans pulled after one or two at-bats and little urgency on the field or in the stands.
Mr. Ocean moved constantly, but rarely in relation to the crowd — everything had the air of improvisation, the do-it-yourself feel of a warehouse show or an experimental-music room.
She sometimes had the air of the slightly disheveled college professor sorting through her papers, as a curtain of hair fell around her face, with strands getting entangled in her glasses.
Presenting a movie at Cannes can be big business and the army of Sony Pictures employees handling this offensive had the air of people worried about fumbling the most delicate of rarities.
The next year, he got the "Broad City" role, but he still had the air of the conservatory about him, at least to the "Broad City" stars Ilana Glazer and Abbi Jacobson.
It had the air of moderator Megyn Kelly's Republican primary debate moment four years ago with then-candidate Trump, where she asked him about calling women "pigs" and "slobs," among other things.
As they looked for lunch, Woodward was gently mocking; Jones had the air of a man trying, with some success, to hold on to his dignity in the face of mild disrespect.
Seeing each other in the restaurant, at our little market gathering supplies for an uncertain future, it had the air of the last day of school, stretched tight over a well of panic.
The trip to Hong Kong last week of a former president of the Philippines, Fidel Ramos, to meet senior Chinese officials and try to improve roiled relations, had the air of a vassal's visit.
Over the weekend Republican bigwigs, including Senator John McCain, un-endorsed him in droves, a mini-stampede that had the air of a medieval court's chaos when a king seems mortally ill (with added Twitter).
However, the president has softened a lot of that rhetoric since, and even last week met with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, in what had the air of a mostly cordial gathering of world leaders.
The performance had the air of a good, clean lark in the park, as opposed to the air of an ultra-violent police siege-come-hostage situation which Mourinho has sought to foster in recent times.
Chicago had managed only two hits to that point, following a two-hit effort in Game 2, and Rizzo was mired in a postseason-long slump, but this moment had the air of a corrective to it.
The first client, an African-American woman of around thirty, was clearly thrilled to see them; she lived in the subsidized apartment complex overlooking the hospital and had the air of somebody getting a fresh start—new job, new place.
LONDON — With his silken shirt, violet diamanté loafers and fingers and wrists laden with heavy gold jewelry, the master perfumer Roja Dove had the air of a magician as he sat recently in the mirrored salon above his Burlington Arcade boutique.
Wearing a baseball cap emblazoned with tiny images of Andy Warhol in drag, Mr. Bratton had the air of an affable tourist guide whose expertise just happened to be coffee shops that were once pornographic film stores and leather sex shops.
In a freewheeling, at times emotional conversation that had the air of a family Thanksgiving dinner, the group candidly discussed Mr. Tambor's behavior on set, reflecting in particular on the time he blew up at Ms. Walter, his onscreen wife.
Aside from the physical assault of a protester carrying an American flag and the chants of "lock her up" directed at an alleged victim of sexual assault, an early afternoon event at an outdoor amphitheater in Greensboro had the air of a picnic.
Mr. Trump had the air of a winner, noting that he was set to receive an endorsement on Friday from a former rival, the retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, and suggesting that more voters were taking part in the Republican primaries than ever because of him.
He barely exchanged a word at work with colleagues whom he'd known for years, and his home, which he shared with his extraordinarily longsuffering wife (who had problems of her own), had the air of a monastery, where words were exchanged only by necessity.
It wasn't a peace summit—asked after the game if the two were now on speaking terms, Westbrook said, "Nah"—but it had the air of two neighbors trading timid hey there's a few days after one had hit the other's dog with his car.
"This matchup — two bombastic figures in their respective sports wed in the oddest of spectacles — certainly had the air of a carnival right from the start," Randy Archibold, the deputy sports editor, said of The Times's decision to send two writers and a photographer to cover the fight.
It had the air of a turning point: A Chelsea win would have moved Manager Antonio Conte and his players within realistic touching distance of the Premier League title; a Liverpool victory might have proved the point at which Chelsea's advantage at the summit of the league standings started to erode.
It has both an upgradable CPU and GPU, removing the two biggest compromises to settling for a gaming laptop over a traditional tower-style PC. But when it was first announced at CES last year, it had the air of one of those trade show prototypes that made for good headlines, and yet, it seemed as if it might be too impractical to warrant turning it into a full-fledged consumer product.
She had the air of a naturally effervescent person good-heartedly striving for a more somber tone.
You had the air of suffering, of needing to > confide in someone. That hurt me to see you like that, you with your fame, > to have fallen so far. A sort of complicity began between us. Afterwards, in > 2002, we had a good battle for the polkadot jersey.
Clinton's longtime aide Huma Abedin was in charge of managing each event. The tour events had the air of campaign stops. Each brought considerable local media attention. The independent SuperPAC known as Ready for Hillary parked a "Hillary Bus" nearby and handed out stickers and posters and signed up volunteers.
In Bordeaux, Spears and Sir Ronald Campbell went to see Reynaud at his dimly-lit offices. According to Spears, he was approached in the darkness by de Gaulle, who said that Weygand intended to arrest him. Reynaud told the British that Pétain would be forming a government. Spears noted that it would consist entirely of defeatists and that the French Prime Minister had 'the air of a man relieved of a great burden'.
Wolfgang Zuckermann met Belt on a visit to his workshop in Center Conway, part of the research for his book The Modern Harpsichord (1969). Along with a positive review of Belt's professional work, Zuckermann (a steadfast New Yorker) remarked that Belt "had the air of a farmer about him".Zuckermann (1969) Given where Belt chose to live, it seems indeed likely that he preferred rural locales.Viz., the small towns of Hagerstown, Elwood, Center Conway, Battle Ground, and Pawcatuck.
Excerpts from the book were released in advance of its publication. Clinton staged an extensive promotional tour for the book, which had the air of a political campaign with groups both for and against her appearing at book-signing events. Hard Choices reached #1 on the New York Times Best Seller List, but sold considerably less than her 2003 memoir, Living History. Interpreting what sales of the book meant for her possible political future became a subject for discussion among interested parties.
As a frequent speaker in the Assembly, Robespierre voiced many ideas in support of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (1789) and constitutional provisions for the Constitution of 1791 but rarely attracted a majority among fellow deputies, according to Malcolm Crook. Robespierre, who never gave up wearing a culotte and always 'poudré, frisé, et parfumé', seems to have been nervous, timid and suspicious. Madame de Staël described Robespierre as 'very exaggerated in his democratic principles'. He supported the most absurd propositions with a coolness that had the air of conviction.
The trip had the air of a punishment detail and was dubbed the "liability cruise"; conditions on board were reportedly appalling. According to Russell Miller, "The crew worked to the point of exhaustion, the food was meager and no one was allowed to wash or change their clothes. Mary Sue enforced the rules rigidly but shared the privations, and was scrupulously fair and popular." The entire crew was forced to wear gray rags to symbolize their demotion; it was said that even Mary Sue's corgi dog, Vixie, had a gray rag tied around her neck.
The producer initially sought actor Richard Griffiths to succeed Baker, but when he proved unavailable, cast Peter Davison, with whom he had previously worked on the popular drama series All Creatures Great and Small. Davison was very different from his four predecessors, being much younger, in line with Nathan-Turner's desire for the Fifth Doctor to be completely unlike the popular Fourth, so that the public would not draw unfavourable comparisons between the two. Davison's Doctor was arguably the most human of them all, and the one whose vulnerability was emphasised the most. The Fifth Doctor, more often than not, reacted to circumstances around him rather than being proactive, and had the air of a young aristocrat about him, in contrast to Baker's bohemian personality.
Faced with the Habsburgs' loss of the Imperial crown upon the assassination of his grandfather King Albert I of Germany in 1308, Rudolf was one of the most energetic and active rulers of Austria in the late Middle Ages, and it was said of him that as a young man he already had the air of a king. In 1357 he was married to Catherine of Bohemia, daughter of Emperor Charles IV. Eager to compete with his mighty father-in-law, who had made the Kingdom of Bohemia and its capital Prague a radiant center of Imperial culture, Rudolf desired to raise the importance of his residence Vienna to a comparable or greater height. Ducal Crypt of the Stephansdom in Vienna. The text is written using the Alphabetum Kaldeorum, a code he probably invented.
" Though Pauline resolves to stay and reunite with her family in the end, she does not get the chance, as she collapses and dies in the middle of Albert Square, leaving both characters and viewers in uncertainty about the cause of her demise. The Christmas Day episodes, written by Simon Ashdown, drew on the show's early history to mark the occasion of Pauline's exit, which was particularly emphasised by the use of flashback vocal snippets of several members of Pauline's deceased family. The critic for The Times, Tim Teeman, commented that "Wendy Richard as Pauline had the air of the departing diva, queen of all she had loved, lost and laid waste to, her face set in a silent snarl." In addition, her parting scene with the other EastEnders long-serving "grand dame" Dot Cotton (played by June Brown) has also been praised, with Teeman commenting: "The really choking scene came in the launderette between Pauline and Dot ... Here the two grand dames had worked, bitched and consoled for years.

No results under this filter, show 67 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.