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31 Sentences With "in a whirl"

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

The ceremony and reception can pass by in a whirl of emotion and interactions.
Gallery guests interact with the art piece In a Whirl (Studies in Perceptual Glitching) by Elaine Buckholtz.
Trump's policy strategy since has been surprisingly linear and coherent for an administration that has unfolded in a whirl of chaos.
The morning and early afternoon had unfolded in a whirl of big balloons, stuffed animals and multicolored carnations from a $1 flower sale.
A system of this size and scope needs a fast indexing engine to cover the number of documents in a whirl of changing content.
The injuries to his legs were treated with chlorhexidine baths in a whirl pool that belonged to the Dermatology service, which seemed to improve his spirits.
Grotesque. They are always creaking out of museums, or revived by some ancient magic, or blustering around in a whirl of sand, causing devastation wherever they go.
Another tech adds a simple saline solution, shakes it up in a Whirl-Pak bag, and freezes the liquid—ready to send to doctors and researchers across the country.
Before we know it, the two chefs are out the door in a whirl of long winter coattails, leaving the cozy smells of sage, lemon and prosciutto in their wake.
Her final film, "Pinball" (2013), sets her largely abstract paintings — which flash by in a whirl of imagery — to music that George Antheil composed for Fernand Léger's film "Ballet Mécanique" (1924) and subsequently revised.
"Zora" moves with cautious energy, as a dusty, delayed piano loop stutters over breezy, cymbal-heavy drums; she keeps adding fuzzy electronic whooshes with each chorus, so the song ends in a whirl of frizz and flicker.
That is especially the case since his presidency has unfolded in a whirl of scandal, legal showdowns and questionable constitutional power grabs that are hardly conducive to good governance and respect for the impartiality of the Justice Department.
Bowie's last glam single, 1974's "Rebel Rebel" isn't exactly subtle about its references to the subculture — "You've got your mother in a whirl / she's not sure if you're a boy or a girl" — but it's also a bit weary of them.
Lost in a whirl of weeds, trees, and shimmying leaves, relieved by spots of sky — and spotted light trails resulting from intentionally projecting the sun's rays back through the lens during a long exposure — the "artificial" photographic process captures the trunk of a tree in the middle of a Japanese forest.
But the hints were already there in the lyrics for "Wake Me Up", which he had played at Earl's Court in 2014 in a whirl of eight layers of lasers and a diamond-shaped screen that reflected light as fractals: I tried carrying the weight of the worldBut I only have two hands.
These are merely a few of many strong moments and powerhouse contributors in this show — others include "Totality" (2016) by Katie Paterson, a vertigo-inducing (but nonetheless irresistible) disco ball constructed from the photo negatives of all known footage of eclipses, thrown, in a whirl of reflected lights, onto the walls of a small gallery; "Hair Portrait #20" (2014), an entire wall of Lauryn Hill rendered in grayscale rhinestones by Mickalene Thomas; and the jaw-dropping "Drawing" (2005) by Nancy Rubins, a wall-mounted paper form layered so densely with pencil graphite as to make it almost indistinguishable from a chaotically crushed sheet of lead.
Only the tiny, darting, blind eyes were red, rubied in a whirl of white.
The Blue Collar Worker and the Hairdresser in a Whirl of Sex and Politics (, also known as The Worker and the Hairdresser) is a 1996 Italian comedy film directed by Lina Wertmüller.
Hazelnut Swirl: A whole roasted hazelnut in a whirl of milk chocolate. Strawberry Temptation: Milk chocolate with a smooth strawberry filling and a layer of vanilla creme. Fudge Duet: Vanilla flavour fudge covered with milk chocolate. Orange Truffle: Orange segment-shaped chocolate truffle with a hint of orange flavour, enrobed in milk chocolate.
The Greatest Hits of Ike & Tina Turner is the first greatest hits album by R&B; duo Ike & Tina Turner, released on Sue Records in 1965. It contains songs from their albums The Soul of Ike & Tina, Dynamite!, Don't Play Me Cheap, and It's Gonna Work Out Fine. One song, "Mind In A Whirl," was a non-album track released as the B-side to the single "The Argument" in 1962.
Azalea Garden at Daikōzen-ji Autumn foliage on the grounds of Daikōzen-ji The Chigiri-en (契園), behind the main hall, is a forested botanical garden at the foot of Mount Chigiri on the border between Chikushino in Fukuoka Prefecture and Kiyama in Saga Prefecture. In the gardens, in the latter half of April and the early half of May about 50,000 azalea plants are in bloom here in a whirl of color attracting hundreds of flower lovers.
29 Bowie's most-covered track, it was his farewell to the glam rock era. The song features guest guitar from Alan Parker who, according to Pegg, "added the three descending notes at the end of each loop of the riff". It features gender-bending lyrics ("You got your mother in a whirl / She's not sure if you're a boy or a girl"). Although Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic praised the song, he felt it did not contribute to the overall theme of the album.
His support of the conservatives came at a price however, and he was no longer viewed as the possible leader of a political movement. According to historian Charlotte Zeepvat, Ernest became "increasingly lost in a whirl of private amusements which earned only contempt from outside". Ernest and his only full sibling, his younger brother Prince Albert (consort to Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom), were raised as though twins. They became closer upon the separation and divorce of their parents as well as the eventual death of their mother, Princess Louise of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg.
The principal character, the young Icelandic poet Steinn Elliði, who shares many essential experiences with his author, engages the reader in a whirl of often paradoxical and conflicting ideas.'Peter Hallberg, 'Halldór Laxness and the Icelandic Sagas', Leeds Studies in English, n. s. 13 (1982), 1-22 (p. 4). The novel is divided into eight books and one hundred chapters; the number of the chapters echoes the number of cantos in Dante's Divine Comedy, and it too 'records its young protagonist's own heaven, hell, and purgatory'.Hallberg Hallmundsson, 'Halldór Laxness and the Sagas of Modern Iceland', The Georgia Review, 49.1 (Spring 1995), pp.
She is the sort of person who will pile up files on the floor because there is no room on her desk, and who breezes past in a whirl of Post-its. However she insists that she can tell you where everything is, maintaining order in apparent chaos. Ramani is often running late, but she is incredibly effective as a copper and has a real instinct, which serves her well and makes up for her lack of organisation most of the time. Ramani arrives quite rightly confident of her own abilities and soon finds herself running the show with some brilliant suggestions for the Unit.
Summing up his writing career in an article on his 70th birthday, Barrett said: "I can remember a time in my early twenties when I lived in London, Frankfurt, Paris, and Tangier and, for a while in Tunisia and Libya, when I genuinely lived in a whirl of such oblivion that it appeared unlikely that I would ever witness my thirtieth birthday. For this reason I wrote at that time like one possessed and I still believe my work of that period represents the high points of my creative output. ... While the poetry and fiction that came later tends to be more cautious and formal than the fiction and poetry of my youth, in my journalistic output I seem to have become increasingly attached to formal reportage.""Reflections at 70", NBF News, 15 September 2011.
Born in Milan, the daughter of a voice actress and of a stage director, Pivetti is the sister of the politician Irene Pivetti. She started her career as a voice actress at 8 years old, specializing in dubbing anime and cartoons. After several appearances in the variety show Quelli che... il Calcio, in 1995 Pivetti made her film debut, chosen by the actor and director Carlo Verdone to play her wife in the box office hit Viaggi di nozze. After appearing in several more films, notably Lina Wertmüller's The Blue Collar Worker and the Hairdresser in a Whirl of Sex and Politics, Pivetti later focused her activities on television, playing main roles in a number of successful TV-series, including Commesse, Il maresciallo Rocca and Provaci ancora prof.
She felt Fulvimari's illustrations made the book look like "a party invitation with his pictures of a garlanded, girly existence: each English rose a fashion-plate, with a doe-eyed stare, caught up in a whirl of blue butterflies, yellow clouds and fairydust." A reviewer for Publishers Weekly compared Fulvimari's illustrations to the images in Vogue while saying the story was preaching in nature. David Sexton from the London Evening Standard criticized Madonna's decision to write the story, including making the character of Binah a beautiful looking girl, since he believed that in reality "the children who suffer wounding rejection from their peers are not the beautiful, the clever and the sporty, but the ugly, the dull and the awkward". The images were described as "sub-Warholian" and "distinctly perverse", with Sexton panning the characters for looking anorexic.
Some of the participants in the Contention mocked the principal debate between Tadhg and Lughaidh; for example, Ó Heffernan used the fable of a cat and a fox (Eremonians and Eberians) that were bickering over a fat piece of meat (Ireland) when a wolf came along and snatched it all. In June 1617, Tadhg had suggested in a letter to Lúghaidh and the northern poets that a decisive face- to-face poetic disputation be convened in order to resolve the Contention. It is not known if the suggestion was acted upon, but it appears to have marked the moment of greatest controversy. The Contention came to a head in a whirl of extreme sarcasm from the poet Mac Artúir, who defended the bards' tradition in a novel, run-on free-form, which contrasted with the traditional form in which Tadhg wrote.
But I was > fooling myself: no sooner had I stepped into the noonday bath than I was > seized by such desire to write Lohengrin that, incapable of lingering in the > bath for the prescribed hour, I leapt out after only a few minutes, scarcely > took the time to clothe myself again properly, and ran like a madman to my > quarters to put what was obsessing me on paper. This went on for several > days, until the entire dramatic plan for Lohengrin had been set down in full > detail. By 3 August 1845 he had worked out the prose draft. Wagner, with his head in a whirl, wrote to his brother, Albert, the following day, 4 August 1845: > ...it was in this frame of mind yesterday that I finished writing out a very > full & detailed scenario for Lohengrin; I am delighted with the result, > indeed I freely admit that it fills me with a feeling of proud contentment.
The words, as sung by Billy Murray, are as follows: Verse 1 :Young Johnny Steele has an Oldsmobile :He loves his dear little girl :She is the queen of his gas machine :She has his heart in a whirl :Now when they go for a spin, you know, :She tries to learn the auto, so :He lets her steer, while he gets her ear :And whispers soft and low... Verse 2 :They love to "spark" in the dark old park :As they go flying along :She says she knows why the motor goes :The "sparker" is awfully strong :Each day they "spoon" to the engine's tune :Their honeymoon will happen soon :He'll win Lucille with his Oldsmobile :And then he'll fondly croon... Chorus :Come away with me, Lucille :In my merry Oldsmobile :Down the road of life we'll fly :Automobubbling, you and I :To the church we'll swiftly steal :Then our wedding bells will peal :You can go as far as you like with me :In my merry Oldsmobile.

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