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80 Sentences With "has the air of"

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

Bejerano, 71, has the air of a kindly Cuban grandmother.
By contrast, Gusto's office has the air of a meditative retreat.
It has the air of a place suspended in the moment.
It has the air of an old Los Angeles fast-food restaurant.
She has the air of a master at the top of her game.
Dakota Fanning is now 23, yet still has the air of a fragile child.
"You want to get me irate?" he screams, which has the air of a threat.
CHARLOTTE AMALIE, V.I. — The United States Virgin Islands no longer has the air of paradise.
"He has the air of a man in control of what is happening," Wright said.
"House of Tan Ky Study" (2015), in gouache on Tyvek, has the air of the dream.
Laufer has the air of an anarchist preacher, albeit one who sometimes wears a tie to work.
He was followed by Mr. Gavin, who, at 17, already has the air of a lifelong preacher.
Watching Trump bat the issue around for cheap populist huzzahs has the air of an absurdist nightmare.
Bayern Munich has the air of a club that feels it has wasted enough time on emotion.
In some of Allah's lands, the war on women and on couples has the air of an inquisition.
She has the air of both a person capable of great delight and one who doesn't suffer fools.
The Masked Singer definitely has the air of a show that nobody quite expected to become this big.
"Nothing negative goes unanswered because, for Trump, an unanswered slight has the air of concession or surrender," he said.
Here, we analyse Chelsea's early-season revival under Antonio Conte, who has the air of a vintage Bond villain.
In this latest phase of his career, Bowien has the air of an enlightened artist, complete with monkish shaved head.
Inside sits an ultrasound machine in a small, narrow room that has the air of a back alley medical facility.
Fyre Fraud has the air of a "gotcha," and truthfully, if anyone deserves to be gotcha'd, it's probably Billy McFarland.
Despite being butch as a bunch of power tools, Willow (hot name) has the air of a hopeless dad about him.
Rubio has the air of Marie Antoinette, who apologized for stepping on the executioner's foot as she climbed to the scaffold.
Regardless of its comedy and wistful concept, The Five Stages Of Climate Change Grief still has the air of a documentary.
But that has the air of semantics: CLASSICS itself assigns the same "remedies" as copyright infringement as punishment for the same crime.
He has the air of an excitable gnome, with a mop of black hair, thick seventies-style eyeglasses, and a wicked laugh.
Like Paris, Vienna has the air of a world capital, which it was until Austria lost its empire after the First World War.
The Parliament complex, a series of giant concrete structures, has the air of a fortress, with the reservoir surrounding it resembling a moat.
And besides, a fight between McGregor and Nick Diaz, despite its anatomical obstacles, has the air of the possible in this new UFC era.
He has the air of a man who is being accused of theft but is too stoned to talk his way out of it.
Where Mourinho had scowled and sneered through public engagements, Solskjaer has the air of a man living a dream, good-natured and good-humored.
It has the air of an older teenager looking back on her earlier self rather than a kid looking forward to what's to come.
Cruz has the air of the preacher who promised a miracle but can't deliver; his people will go straight up the ladder to the strong man.
The dimly lit dining room has the air of an anonymous hotel lobby, with strange columns of flimsy-looking white-washed wooden bricks and indoor trees.
Neville's squad has the air of what the Germans call a "tournament team," a unit that picks up speed as it climbs farther up the hill.
In person, he has the air of a prince in exile, despite being at home — reserved but regal, the hint of a laugh often in his eyes.
This, too, has the air of a marketing ploy: Those games are sold as winner-takes-all showdowns, seismic clashes that will make the very earth shake.
The recent selling - bitcoin has plummeted by a third in a month and is 75 percent off its peak last December - has the air of investor capitulation.
Roy is a bit paunchy and disheveled, with an amiable, jowly face; he has the air of a college professor who likes taking students out for a drink.
Megan Fairchild, making a role debut in green, has the air of a self-sufficient party girl, enjoying the attentions of men but untroubled when they leave her alone.
Despite all his policy-paper annotating, Newsom, who built a fortune on a consortium of hospitality businesses, has the air of a man who just sauntered off a yacht.
Increasingly, in these fixtures, he has the air of a man not quite sure what to do, someone who does not — in this one specific context — trust his usual, impeccable instincts.
But the renewed bickering over the terms of Greece's latest bail-out, complete with threats of a snap election if its creditors don't give more ground, has the air of a duff sequel.
Trungelliti has the air of a man on a mission, and with better preparation for that second round match his family might well consider extending their trip to take in a most unlikely chapter.
The newsroom has the air of a frat house, though one where closeted lesbian and closeted liberal Jess Carr (a fictional character played by Kate McKinnon) can stick around if she keeps her mouth shut.
How to remember the past In a quiet corner of Tokyo's Koto ward a two-story building that has the air of a residential home in fact houses the Tokyo Air Raids Center for War Damages.
In light of the resurgence of the far right in Germany, her measure of the process known as Vergangenheitsbewältigung — the nation coming to terms with complicity and guilt — has the air of both progress report and challenge.
With its oversize format (it measures 27 by 38 centimeters), uncoated Italian paper and unfussy layouts, Luncheon has the air of a 1950s issue of Vogue or Life: It is elegant, but in a deliberately non-glossy way.
These loyalties have upended the Tea Party-versus-establishment divide, which has dominated fratricidal primary seasons since 2010 but increasingly has the air of fins on the back of a car, a quaint relic from an earlier era.
The last vestiges of drama are in Group B, where Benfica, Napoli and Besiktas can all still qualify; Group G, where Porto and Copenhagen retain hope; and Group H, where Lyon against Sevilla has the air of a shootout.
He has the air of a man who has accidentally wandered away from Milan Fashion Week and ended up in the manager's dugout, but who's so totally aloof that he's just gone with it and, accordingly, won the World Cup.
It is mainly a gathering for customers and developers but also has the air of a music festival cum party congress: it featured U2, a rock band, numerous Buddhist monks and a socially minded speech by the firm's chief executive, Marc Benioff.
The young women greet most customers, and when the room gets full it has the air of a celebratory gathering, with people calling out to one another as they arrive and Ms. Alemayoh drifting from table to table, offering embraces and conversation.
As Italy tried, on Tuesday, to digest the idea that it would not be present at a World Cup for the first time in 60 years, the country embarked on that journey that comes as an inevitable consequence of a sporting failure that has the air of a national humiliation.
Gaetz, who is only 37, has the air of a guy you might run into at a 10-year reunion, bragging about babes and brewskis while droning on about a vast luxury SUV he'd only been able to afford because he'd inherited an auto dealership or pizza chain from his dad.
While he is better in situations like town-hall-style meetings that appeal to his wonkish policy instincts, in debates he has the air of an enormously rich fish who, having been forced to leave the comforts of his pond, finds himself under attack by a herd of noisy, angry land mammals.
I know it's sold out in minutes and I know people were queuing around the block in London to get one and I know it looks great in those soft filter Instagram-ready promo shots, but it's a little too deliberate for me: It has the air of the novelty jersey, the deliberately wacky.
Photograph by Cole Wilson for The New Yorker There is a small à-la-carte menu, as well, which might do more to court regulars were it not served only in what's called the barroom, which is behind the main dining room and has the air of a solarium, with a glass ceiling and glass walls.
Here she demonstrates the same keen eye for telling detail: paunchy middle-aged Fascists squeezed into their old black-shirt uniforms for an anniversary celebration that has the air of a college reunion; a young expectant mother who prays to have a girl so the child will not be dragged off to war; the blank expressionless look of the local peasants, men who have mastered the art of hiding their feelings, as they listen to Mussolini's declaration of war.
Compared with the floweriness and pomposity of much preceding French fiction, Madame de La Fayette writes in a pared-down prose which almost has the air of a dispassionate observer.
A review in The New York Times in 1990 said, "The rough-hewn little theater has the air of both a place where hard and serious work is done and a cozy family living room." The Center closed in 1995 due to limited funding.
The Down Beat review by Bradley Bambarger states "Although one must be open to a certain exposed-nerve intensity to fully appreciate it, Vessel In Orbit has the air of an abstract drama, the three storyteller- improvisers utterly in sync."Bambarger, Bradley. Vessel in Orbit review. Down Beat May 17: page 56. Print.
On the upper floors an almost cubist form of architecture is suggested. The 20th-century appearance is further offset by louvred glass sloping walls. Critics of the design have suggested the building has the air of a municipal, public, civil building. This same charge, though, could be levelled at any 18th-century Palladian building.
2006 USGS photo of the former Walker Army Airfield Today Walker AAF has the air of a ghost town. Almost all of the concrete airfield still exist, runways and taxiways in various states of deterioration, almost totally complete. In September 1986 there was an unsolved murder of Kenneth Gross. Large craters in the 04/23 runway exist, filled in now by vegetation where the Air Force conducted cratering tests.
During the English Civil War, the burgesses of the borough supported Parliament, while the ruling gentry were Royalist. As a result, there was considerable conflict, and the town changed hands five times.Miles, p 177 There followed a period of stagnation in which the comparative status of the town declined. Haverfordwest today has the air of a typical small country market town, but the centre still conveys the feel of the important mediaeval borough.
This speed of delivery helps paper over a few cracks. The characters are functional class/race archetypes, while their dialogue has the air of 'real' conversations culled from players under pressure, rather than being considered character-developing speech. The plot pushes everything on at such a rate that many questions are left unanswered." Webb went on to say that "The resolution of cliffhangers is often illogical and regularly beyond the control of the central cast.
Bosley Crowther of The New York Times wrote that some parts were "well done", including the Greek descent from the Trojan horse which "has the air of great adventure that one expects from this tale", but "the human drama in the legend ... is completely lost or never realized in the utter banalities of the script, in the clumsiness of the English dialogue and in the inexcusable acting cliches."Crowther, Bosley (January 27, 1956). "Screen: 'Iliad' Revisited". The New York Times. 21.
The following testimony was written in 1970 by José Maria de Amorim, the first clerk of Erechim, who lived there from 1924 until the date of his death on December 12, 1978. He recounts the design aspects of the city, its origin and its setbacks, which are not yet recorded in the official history of the county. Today Erechim, with its ups and downs, is still thriving and flourishing. It has the air of a big city, with its cobbled streets and low buildings, and is increasingly known as the Capital of Friendship.
On the opening evening she recognises one of the punters as her son (Peter Coke), now married and whose photographs she has seen in newspapers. He has the air of a compulsive gambler, and Carol engineers proceedings to prevent him from losing large sums of money in wagers. She takes him under her wing and helps him repair his relationship with his wife, who had been aghast to discover his gambling habits. Carol never reveals that she is his mother, and soon contact between them is lost again.
It features 16th-century rafters, inglenook fireplaces, and beer brewed locally (Shepherd Neame at Faversham), and a garden that looks up to the Hilly Field. Above the field stands the 12th-century manor house, Champion Court, still an apple farm, though employing few people now and an abundance of modern science, overlooking the valley. The other pub-restaurant is much newer but has the air of a barn converted from use on the Syndale vineyard. From its garden there is another striking view across the village past the oast house, now converted from drying hops for beer into a private home.
He is a tall, broad and powerful man, with Lyra noting that in rooms he has the air of a "wild animal held in a cage too small for it". In the film adaption he has a beard, though no mention is made of it in the books. He is also mentioned to have lively, "black" eyes, glittering with "savage laughter", indicating that beneath his cold and harsh appearance he is really a man with powerful emotions. As one of the characters remarks, he accomplishes things in his relatively short lifetime that some would not be able to do in hundreds of years.
The lower stories only, > containing the living-rooms, are built of stone; from the top of their walls > rise large upright beams supporting an immensely broad roof. The spaces > between the beams are not filled up, and the whole edifice has the air of > having been begun on too large a scale, and temporarily completed, and > roofed in. > The great upstairs barn is used as for the storage of wood, hay, corn, and > all sorts of inflammable dry goods. The roof being also of wood, the > lightning finds it easy enough to set the whole mass in a blaze, and fires > arising from this cause are of common occurrence.
It is believed the town was named by miners from Como, Italy, who worked the coal fields of the area. In 1879, the town became the location of a depot of the Denver, South Park and Pacific Railroad, which was extended over Kenosha Pass to reach the silver mining areas during the Colorado Silver Boom. Later, the town served as a division point for trains going northward over Boreas Pass and southward toward Garos and over Trout Creek Pass at the western end of South Park. The town has many historic weathered structures, including the roundhouse, hotel, and depot and has the air of a ghost town that is still nevertheless populated, by twenty people.
Thécla's brother Gustave was a diplomat and mayor of Juvisy and married Pauline de Württemberg, illegitimate daughter of Prince Paul - uncle of Mathilde Bonaparte - and of Lady Whittingham. However, the couple quickly separated on grounds of incompatibility of temperaments. Vigorous, majestic and with a certain air to him, to which he joined physical presence, a great amenity, well-spokenness and the art of compliment - he thus became known as the "beautiful Batavian" ("beau Batave"). He was adored by women (one declared "He has the air of a resting lion"), as the Goncourts affirmed in their Journal of 10 November 1863 - "he at once resembles Charlemagne and a handsome chasseur behind the cars".
Rice dancer Laurie Cameron appears for the circa 1930 > fantasy La Peri (by either St. Denis or Miriam Winslow, who took over the > Boston Denishawn school of the Braggiotti sisters), wafting swags of > material that depend from her cap. The heelwork that Dansarté's Jean-Marie > Mellichamp beats out in Viva Faroan has the air of flamenco without its now > familiar complexities. In the early 20th century, what did American > audiences know or care about authenticity? On these fine programs, you can > see the influence of Isadora Duncan in Chopin dances performed with lovely > sincerity by the Rices, or get a whiff of German modernism in Miriam > Marmein's circa 1932 mime, Argument des Boulevardiers, in which Valerie > Farias Newton and Rebecca Rice wear mannish attire and gesticulate with > rhythmic fury.
Cisternino di Pian di Rota designed in 1827 Villa Badoer designed by Palladio in 1557 The smaller Cisternino di Pian di Rota, in the Pian di Rota area of the city, was begun in 1845, although it had been planned as early as 1827. While, like the architect's other works, it is strictly speaking in the neoclassical style, the Cisternino di Pian di Rota also has the air of a Palladian villa of the Veneto. The symmetrical facade is dominated by a massive prostyle portico clearly based on that of the Pantheon in Rome while the composition of the facade could be emulating Scamozzi's Villa Rocca Pisani or Palladio's Villa Badoer. Whatever the inspiration, the architect's vision of achieving Utopian ideals in architecture by emulating the temples of antiquity is very evident.
On first publication in October 1937, The Hobbit was met with almost unanimously favourable reviews from publications both in the UK and the US, including The Times, Catholic World and New York Post. C. S. Lewis, friend of Tolkien (and later author of The Chronicles of Narnia between 1949 and 1954), writing in The Times reports: > The truth is that in this book a number of good things, never before united, > have come together: a fund of humour, an understanding of children, and a > happy fusion of the scholar's with the poet's grasp of mythology... The > professor has the air of inventing nothing. He has studied trolls and > dragons at first hand and describes them with that fidelity that is worth > oceans of glib "originality." Lewis compares the book to Alice in Wonderland in that both children and adults may find different things to enjoy in it, and places it alongside Flatland, Phantastes, and The Wind in the Willows.
Montgobert Castle lit up in red during an evening of the summer of 2009 The Château de Montgobert in the midst of the Forest of Retz, near Soissons, in Montgobert, Aisne, Picardy, is a neoclassical French château that was built for Antoine Pierre Desplasses between 1768-1775 on the site of an ancient seigneurie. The château, which has the air of an English Palladian house, with four Ionic columns under an arced pediment, raised upon a high rusticated basement, was owned by Pauline Bonaparte, Napoleon's sister and wife of General Charles Leclerc who employed Pierre-François-Léonard Fontaine to raise the house by adding an attic storeySee French Wikipedia: "Pierre-François- Léonard Fontaine" and reference about 1798 and transformed the parterre into a terrace overlooking the park, which was re-landscaped in the naturalistic fashion, à l'anglaise, with meadows and clumps of trees and specimens against a background of woodland. He died in Santo Domingo in November 1802; his ashes were returned to Montgobert and a tomb in the park was designed by Fontaine and executed by a certain Laudier,Apparently a local stonemason. but never finished.
The album contains several pieces which recall the complexity and despair of Rock Bottom, but much of the record echoes the relaxed, almost silly feel of earlier Wyatt efforts such as The End of an Ear or his work with Matching Mole. This becomes evident from the choice of title (a pun on "truth is stranger than fiction") onwards; the two sides of the original LP release were not labelled "Side A" and "Side B", but rather "Side Ruth" and "Side Richard" respectively. The songs on Side Ruth all have more traditional structures; the rollicking "Soup Song" (derived from the Wilde Flowers song "Slow Walking Talk", of which Wyatt had recorded a version with Jimi Hendrix) has the air of a pub singalong. The remaining songs are all covers or collaborations; the Mongezi Feza trumpet piece "Sonia", featuring a guest appearance by Feza himself (as do a number of other songs on the album) in the last year of his life, "Team Spirit" (written with Phil Manzanera, who would record the same song on his album Diamond Head under the title "Frontera") and a cover of "Song for Che" by Charlie Haden round off the album.

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