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17 Sentences With "indomitably"

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

If it has also shed a little of the freshness of its first youth, it remains indomitably funny.
Or, reflexively, it's not entirely clear what was so indomitably Christian about Spicer's salsa to the Spice Girls.
My cabdriver, Roshan, led me past an entrance guarded indomitably by Shiva and his colossal trident to approach Ganga Talao, Mauritius's answer to India's sacred Ganges River.
"She pursued her life and career confidently, indomitably and even defiantly," her biographer, Mark Miller, wrote in "High Hat, Trumpet and Rhythm: The Life and Music of Valaida Snow" (210).
Kollwitz is the more appealing, with a style of masterly touch and tender pathos, notably in delicately shaded images of mothers and children indomitably bonded in poverty or facing unspecified threats.
" Calling out Trump's vacillating stance on issues such as immigration and abortion, Rabinowitz, placing him as a foil for his opponent, extolled Clinton as "experienced, forward-looking, indomitably determined and eminently sane.
Playing Wilde in the lonely gloaming of his life in David Hare's "The Judas Kiss," which opened on Tuesday night at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Rupert Everett only rarely budges from an indomitably seated position.
Of all the things President Donald Trump has broken in his time in office — norms, records for unpopularity, his supporters' love of football — few expected that he would break the indomitably sunny spirit of America's favorite rhyming history teacher, Lin-Manuel Miranda.
Her still-girlish puff of a voice is perfect for Winnie's indomitably chipper spirit as she spends her long hours babbling merrily, keeping up a bright sheen of optimism, expecting every day to be a happy day, in benign acceptance of her strange predicament.
Still, like Mr. Snyder or Mr. O'Neill or the talents behind Death to Tennis or Willy Chavarria, the soulful and indomitably gifted Mexican-American designer who lives in Denmark and yet insists on showing in Manhattan, Mr. Hart is determined to stick it out here.
Scattered comments by the president and his aides imply an alternative explanation: the administration envisages a grand diplomatic bargain with Russia that encompasses arms control, counter-terrorism, the status of Crimea, economic sanctions and relations with China, an arrangement in which the two leaders indomitably face down all comers like some maverick geopolitical wrestling team.
He makes his plans far ahead, and is indomitably persevering in carrying them out. He has had a difficult situation to deal with throughout his career on the Northern Pacific. The road when he took charge of it was not in very good physical condition, and he very greatly improved it. Its mileage was 5,111 miles and he increased it to 6,032 miles. Its revenue freight train load was 326 tons, and he increased it in 1912 to 511 tons.
Boromir is portrayed as a noble character who believed passionately in the greatness of his kingdom and fought indomitably for it. His great stamina and physical strength, together with a forceful and commanding personality, made him a widely admired commander in Gondor's army and the favourite of his father Denethor. As a member of the Fellowship, his desperation to save his country ultimately drove him to betray his companions and attempt to seize the Ring, but he was redeemed by his repentance and brave last stand. Commentators have remarked Boromir's vainglory and desire for the Ring.
Despite opening to positive reviews, the film failed to match expectations at the box office, although Arya's performance was praised by critics, claiming that "powerful, menacing, quiet yet indomitably spirited" in his role while another reviewer claimed he outshone Allu Arjun. His next venture was the period film Madrasapattinam depicting a love story from the 1940s, co-starring newcomer Amy Jackson and directed by A. L. Vijay. The big budget film progressed with its schedules with little publicity for a year, with Arya portraying the role of Ilamparithi, a dhobi situated in a community of Washermanpet who falls in love with the daughter of a governor. The film gained mostly positive reviews from critics and became successful at the box office, although most reviewers agreed his performance was outshone by Jackson's.
Instantly taken under fire by the garrison of a supporting > pillbox and further assailed by the slashing fury of hostile rifle fire, he > fell under the impact of a second enemy grenade but, courageously > disregarding painful shoulder wounds, staunchly continued his heroic 1-man > assault and charged the second pillbox, annihilating all the occupants. > Subsequently returning to his platoon position, he fearlessly traversed his > lines under fire, encouraging his men to advance and directing the fire of > supporting tanks against other stubbornly holding Japanese emplacements. > Held up again by a devastating barrage, he again moved into the open, rushed > a third heavily fortified installation and killed the defending troops. > Determined to crush all resistance, he led his men indomitably, personally > attacking foxholes and spider traps with his carbine and systematically > reducing the fanatic opposition until, stepping on a land mine, he sustained > fatal wounds.
If you can open yourself emotionally to so relentless a self- exploration, you can gain considerable insight into the marrow of the jazz experience and into Coltrane's own indomitably resourceful musicianship through this whirlpool of blues." Eric Nisenson wrote that on "Chasin' the Trane", "Coltrane's playing is the most intensely emotional of his career... Analyzing the tune technically is beside the point - it is an experience, a catharsis shared by Coltrane and his audience, and it is unlike anything that preceded it... 'Chasin' the Trane' is especially hair-raising because it is clear that Coltrane has dug deeply into his psyche to create this music - 'cleaning the mirror,' as he would put it a few years later. The music sounds as if it is a portrait of the raw stuff of his inner being, music so frankly confessional we feel slightly embarrassed listening to it. It is, in its subjectivity, in the tradition of the most innovative twentieth-century art and literature.
Born at Acton Green, London to a working-class family (his father a staunchly left-wing tram-driver),Last of the Summer Wine: The Inside Story of the World's Longest-Running Comedy Series, Andrew Vine, Aurum Press, 2011 Owen made his first film appearance in 1945, but did not achieve lasting fame until 1973, when he took the co-starring role of William "Compo" Simmonite in the long-running British sitcom Last of the Summer Wine. Compo is a scruffy working-class pensioner, often exploited by the bossy characters played by Michael Bates, Brian Wilde, Michael Aldridge and Frank Thornton for dirty jobs, stunts and escapades, while their indomitably docile friend Norman Clegg, played by Peter Sallis, follows and watches with a smirk. He wore a woollen hat and spent much of his time lusting after dowdy housewife Nora Batty. The series, starting in 1973 and finishing in 2010, is today the world's longest-running comedy series.

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