Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

46 Sentences With "have an air of"

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

They have an air of remoteness, a whiff of futurology.
Those have an air of communal creation, grounded intent, natural suture.
Sitcom relationships like this always have an air of destiny to them.
Useful for those who want their new company to have an air of history.
His abrupt acts and swerving meditations have an air of unplotted inevitability about them.
It helps to have big names, of course, and teams that have an air of dominance.
It was also Indian independence day and the Sri Lankan Tamils still have an air of scariness.
Semmelhack wrote that these shoes are relatively simple, but they have an air of elegance to them.
Big victories have an air of deserved triumph, and big failures are losses felt at the level of relationships.
There are a hundred employees, most of them young and well educated, who have an air of higher purpose about them.
Amid this cultural history, Fink's photographs have an air of spiritual devotion, as if they are yearning towards the status of religious icons.
The world's biggest festivals, despite being televised and, now, livestreamed for all to see, do tend to have an air of mystery about them.
Yet the reader has to concede, perhaps ruefully, that bewilderment on his part must be his own problem, for the poems have an air of sovereign intelligence.
Mr. Ratmansky's deft, intriguing arrangements for the corps de ballet have an air of Busby Berkeley as he brings every last bit of the stage to life.
Both have an air of playfulness that's shot through with confrontation: The images dare the viewer to grapple with the ways they scramble common expectations of identity.
Most effective is the quiet motionlessness of the scenes; they have an air of finality that suggests the end of the story, or perhaps the very beginning.
Such deals, which have become well-known in recent years for helping shield corporate abuses (sexual and otherwise), have an air of relative novelty in a religious context.
Online, even the people who deny that daddy issues have anything to do with calling their partner "daddy" during sex have an air of doth-protesting-too-much.
Rat Film falls somewhere between the former's montage-based, essayistic method and the latter's use of electronic music to generate unexpected connections that have an air of menace.
These stories usually have an air of romance and excitement about them; the ones where the adventurous couple gets caught, on the other hand, have a slightly different feel.
" The buildings have an "Air of Delicacy and Exquisiteness in the Work"; never had the group seen stone carving "so Bold, so Lively, and so Natural, in any place.
Climate summits will always have an air of despair because it is easy for nations to agree on ambitious collective goals even as, individually, governments are much more reluctant to promise robust action.
And the perpetrators, who often get killed or commit suicide, are perhaps well known in their communities but have an air of the mysterious, encouraging the wider public to project strange, sinister motives onto them.
These days, South Shore's bungalow blocks have an air of besieged respectability: Iron bars on windows, dogs pacing behind high fences, alarm company signs and speed bumps mark the hardened boundaries between the two dispensations.
This is because, as the polling company behind the poll explained, eHarmony seems to have an air of respectability because it's associated with long-term picket fence-style monogamy, while Tinder is just associated with hookups.
Western religions certainly have their share of practitioners in Japan, but those faiths still have an air of exoticism about them: Vaguely familiar, yet foreign enough to spice up a work with a dash of mystery.
"Occasionally you run across people from the Justice Department who have an air of superiority toward agents, and Bruce had none of that," said Chris Swecker, a former senior F.B.I. official who worked with Mr. Ohr.
Jack Mendenhall's photorealistic paintings of mirrored, 1970s and '803s middle-class interiors have an air of precision-built chaos, which is also found in Robert Strini's two wood sculptures made from what looks like disassembled designer furniture.
The classes, held in an apartment on the grounds of Shandong University, have an air of brotherly camaraderie — the students, huddled together on a floral couch scribbling in notebooks, practiced real smiles and flirtatious banter with their coaches.
Both have traveled far, but King-Lu's journeys have an air of cosmopolitan adventure: Born in China, he made his way to Oregon by way of London and other world capitals, and dreams of opening a hotel in San Francisco.
"The risk is that if the minutes were to have an air of optimism or a sense of hawkishness, that could boost the chance of a rate hike this year and brighten prospects for the dollar," said Joe Manimbo, senior market analyst at Western Union Business Solutions.
While a parallel between a relatively diminutive affair like Unravel and the epic, open-world adventure of The Witcher 3 might seem unlikely, consider that both games are set in northern Europe, and each have an air of magic about them, and it's not such a difficult comparison to appreciate.
Domestic abusers or even someone like a rogue coworker could potentially turn on device tracking to stalk a target, and the fact that these apps have an air of legitimacy makes it less likely that victims will notice, especially since there aren't many warnings or notifications when a trusted user initiates tracking.
Mary Wesley, Second Fiddle, p. 166. "Better...to love them as they are, stop judging".Mary Wesley, Second Fiddle, p. 174. Wesley's heroines often seem to have an air of elusiveness about them (the young Calypso in The Camomile Lawn, Rose in Not That Sort of Girl, Hebe in Harnessing Peacocks and Laura Thornby in Second Fiddle).
Pencil, pastel and coloured pencil on paper, 40 x 32.1 cm, Brussels: Royal Museum of Fine Art Though Delville frequently wrote about his ideas, he almost never discussed his paintings. He left the interpretations to the viewer, and as a result his best pictures have an air of mystery and intrigue. One of the most mysterious is his Portrait of Mrs. Stuart Merrill.
It was reviewed favorably by Chris Henderson in the December 1983 issue of Dragon Magazine (#80). Henderson praised Copper for having achieved a difficult task in writing a "new, almost fresh, werewolf story". The characters are "fresh and stimulating" and have "an air of realism". In closing, he noted that: "For that fan of horror stories in your household, this novel is a must.".
Shortly thereafter, both boys discover that putting on the rings enables them to enter Perim. Perim is a place of great adventures and epic tales. It is inhabited by five tribes of creatures: the Danians, The Deep Ones, the Mipedians, the OverWorlders, and the UnderWorlders. The OverWorlders and UnderWorlders are constantly warring, while the other tribes keep to themselves and have an air of mystery about them.
Although Matsumoto drew in a wide range of styles, certain features remain consistent. His characters have an air of intelligence without melancholy, and of cheerful optimism that is never saccharine. Other popular illustrators of the day were better suited to the niches in which Matsumoto was not in his element. The multi-talented and enormously popular Jun'ichi Nakahara () drew girls who were intelligent and stylish, but humor was not his forte.
In an interview with BBC News, Helen Fielding was inspired for this book by the way the world responded to the September 11 attacks. She once spent some time in the Sudan as a journalist and loved her time there. In light of the invasion of Iraq, Fielding wondered why they had not sent a female spy in to interview the perpetrator. She felt that women have an air of innocence around them that men lack.
Highfields is a former coal mining village, located south of the model village of Woodlands, in South Yorkshire. Historically part of the West Riding of Yorkshire, it is part of the Metropolitan Borough of Doncaster. The village is located in the Adwick ward of Doncaster MBC. Although it does not currently have an air of prosperity, Highfields was built so that most houses either overlooked farmland or woodland, the ornamental Highfields Lake, or the greens in the centre of the village.
Sam also has a connection with another character. On Salt's casting, series producer Nikki Wilson commented, "Charlotte and Oliver are incredibly talented, much sought-after actors and we're delighted to welcome them to the new Casualty set in Cardiff. Both new characters are set to inject a shot of excitement into the emergency department and, as ever, both will have an air of intrigue about them." Sam makes her first appearance in the series 26 episode "Mea Culpa", first broadcast on 15 October 2011.
The regional mood also affects the subject of the folk songs, e.g. folk songs from the Caspian Sea are lively in general and express the customs of the region. Songs about betrayal have an air of defiance about them instead of sadness, whereas the further south travelled in Azerbaijan the more the melodies resemble a lament. As this genre is viewed as a music of the people, musicians in socialist movements began to adapt folk music with contemporary sounds and arrangements in the form of protest music.
For this reason, memorial services have an air of penitence about them.For instance, the Panikhida does not have the chanting of "God is the Lord..." as the Moleben does; but instead uses, as at matins on Saturdays when the dead are remembered, the "Alleluia" of the Dead in place of "God is the Lord". They tend to be served more frequently during the four fasting seasons.Great Lent, Nativity Fast, Apostles' Fast and Dormition Fast If the service is for an individual, it is often held at the deceased's graveside.
Cringe comedy is a specific genre of comedy that derives humor from social awkwardness. Often a cringe comedy will have an air of a mockumentary and revolve around a serious setting, such as a workplace, to lend the comedy a sense of reality. The protagonists are typically egotists who overstep the boundaries of political correctness and break social norms. Then the comedy will attack the protagonist by not letting them become aware of their self- centered view, or by making them oblivious to the ego-deflation that the comedy deals them.
The Telegraph explained that the song should have an air of "desperate hope" and that Bowles should feel like "someone teetering on the edge of despair." Talkin' Broadway said Maybe this Time' serving as Sally's internal monologue in response to Cliff's plea", adding that the song "is the only time we see the real person beneath the frivolous girl for whom life is a neverending party (cabaret, whatever). As we're privy to Sally's unspoken thoughts here". What's On in Cape Town described Sally Bowles as a Manic Pixie Dream Girl, writing "Her iconic solo, 'Maybe This Time', can be considered the MPDG theme song.
Her poems are typically about unrequited love and loss and often, the death that followed such an unhappy state of affairs. Many of them have an air of autobiography or confession. Details on her life are not easy to find due to her relative lack of letters, but Lesley Blanch, in her book Under A Lilac-Bleeding Star, included some biographical information that drew on unpublished memoirs written by her son. In Diaries and Letters from India, Violet Jacob provided some information about the Nicolsons and their milieu, although most of what is known of Violet, as she came to be known, had to be gleaned through her poetry.

No results under this filter, show 46 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.