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54 Sentences With "insightfully"

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

You've been covering Silicon Valley insightfully for a long time.
To the Editor: Mary Pipher writes insightfully about the upside of being a woman in her 70s.
If you aren't familiar with A Star Is Born and its history, Mark Harris wrote about it insightfully here.
Isbell, formerly of the alt-country group Drive-By Truckers, sings straightforwardly, but insightfully, about addiction, anxiety and the South.
With this quiet act of rebellion at the ­center of the novel, Hicks insightfully examines the dynamic of conqueror and conquered.
Eventually, I traced the insightfully simple line back to Bone, a collection of poetry released in 2014 by Yrsa Daley-Ward.
Onstage for two and a half hours, his Aubrey ruminated insightfully on the lives of English worthies of his Elizabethan age.
A particular asset for this world premiere is the attractive wardrobe provided by Michael Bevans, the costume designer, who dresses the characters insightfully.
Russian literature is replete with powerful memoirs of childhood: Tolstoy, Gorky, Nabokov, Mandelstam and Tsvetayeva all wrote movingly and insightfully about growing up.
The rediscoveries in the insightfully curated series "Woman with a Movie Camera: Female Film Directors Before 1950," playing at Anthology Film Archives Sept.
Part exegesis, part history, largely speculation, the book insightfully examines themes of gender, class, power, and beauty, against the backdrop of Belle Époque Paris.
Even a cliché, "so lame and unexciting on the surface, actually expresses a great and terrible truth," Foster Wallace explained in his insightfully bleak address.
As Mr. Brooks so insightfully wrote, this is a tragic and painful part of the American experience that is not shared by other ethnic groups.
The Economist insightfully notes that graduates of elite schools that admit fewer than one in four applicants make more than those from all other institutions.
Derek Fordjour, whose painting work with cheerleaders and professional athletes I've written about and continues to strike me as timely and insightfully conceived, was there.
Perhaps most insightfully he takes on the tracking technologies used for the headset and controller, noting areas where they are actually steps back in user experience.
The resulting album — "Sunday Night at the Vanguard," just out on Palmetto — confirms that he's still one of the most insightfully lyrical searchers in his field.
Listening, as Molesworth spoke about it, is an active, not a passive action, one which artists can use to insightfully reflect on what is going on in society.
To expect the same from writers doing their best to honestly and insightfully assess your work or your public image is a misunderstanding of what we're trying to accomplish.
Not so in Paradoxe de la Jouissance ("Paradox of Pleasure"), the chutzpah-packed exhibition of Fernandez's controversial late work insightfully curated by Jeanette Zwingenberger at the city hall of Paris's fourth arrondissement.
Annabelle posted or responded at least 15 times in the different forums, and every one of her comments insightfully summed up or furthered an idea, yet was phrased gracefully to keep the conversation going.
The Miami-based orchestral academy for young musicians arrives at Carnegie Hall this week to perform two programs that insightfully balance the old and the new, as part of Tilson Thomas's curation of Carnegie's Perspectives series.
" As a result, Hynes explained insightfully, "Movies are made of proven entities to minimize risk, but that transfers the stakes from making something good to making something that meets the expectations for what it's supposed to be.
Some of this might be familiar if you read about venture capitalist Ben Horowitz backing SuperPhone, but I think Leslie spoke insightfully about his own experiences, how they led to the creation of SuperPhone and where the company goes from here.
While his conversation with curator Sabine Eckmann insightfully framed his work within art historical and political contexts, none of the connections between his role as a dissident and activist and St. Louis's own recent history of uprisings were broached at all.
"I think that you could have made this documentary about any group of teenage girls from anywhere and they could have been able to speak insightfully about themselves and reflect on themselves and show the level of intimacy which we did," she said.
However, as Cavin-Morris co-founder Randall Morris, a noted researcher and collector in these fields, insightfully points out, Dizzy and Daley's achievements can — and should — also be appreciated in the broader cultural-historical context of the African diaspora in the Caribbean and the Americas.
Talking heads — one's introduced as a "fear researcher," another as a "hell expert" — chime in insightfully, and Mr. Trejo injects a bit of personal experience as well, as when he discusses the emergence of the idea of Satan as a specific being who tempts us to misbehave.
This hefty history of the rise of consumerism insightfully analyzes daily luxuries over five centuries—from the drinking-chocolate paraphernalia popular in eighteenth-century northern Europe to the televisions bought by postwar Japanese, who followed an ethic of "virtuous consumption" in order to boost domestic manufacturing.
Maybe he mentioned me?) I still recall how he shook my hand, chatted insightfully with our small group for a few minutes and then wowed us by recognizing the obscure arrangement the jazz quartet was playing (although I always suspected the musicians had been asked to play it for just that purpose).
And while Milov is often a bit hard on GASP, critiquing its adoption of the rhetoric of "liberation" even while ensconced within the "safe confines of suburban liberalism," she insightfully charts how its members and other activists simultaneously scored big wins and let the cigarette companies off the hook in the process.
And while present and future generations will come to their own conclusions about Billy Graham and the legacy that his commitment to Christ has left behind, no one can speak more insightfully or authoritatively on that subject than a son who grew up in the shadow of his father's life and the examples of his father's love.
Her insightfully thoughtful posts on Jewish ethics, philosophy, and culture convinced me to be brave and reach out to ask her to work on Rosenstrasse—a serious game with that has been transformational to us both in so many ways, and one that is doing interesting things for games in new dimensions - we are even showcasing it for the US Holocaust Memorial Museum educational staff.
Lil Yachty—whether insightfully or instinctively—combined a few prevailing ideas at just the right time: the cartoonish yet plaintive Auto-Tuned fantasia of music like Speaker Knockerz and Soulja Boy's "Zan with That Lean," the way that sound intersected with the ambient pastiche of the various ambient electronic waves that show up in a crawl through Soundcloud, the matter-of-fact simplicity of artists like iLoveMakonnen and Migos, the positivity and enthusiasm of Lil B. He understood the power of connecting with the right influencers to push his brand in a way corporate entities can only dream of, and he naturally tapped into a teen understanding that the idols of the present are not the people your parents tell you to pay attention to but rather whoever happens to be famous in the present, even if that person is A$AP Rocky instead of Tupac.
Lil Yachty—whether insightfully or instinctively—combined a few prevailing ideas at just the right time: the cartoonish yet plaintive Auto-Tuned fantasia of music like Speaker Knockerz and Soulja Boy's "Zan with That Lean," the way that sound intersected with the ambient pastiche of the various ambient electronic -waves that show up in a crawl through Soundcloud, the matter-of-fact simplicity of artists like iLoveMakonnen and Migos, the positivity and enthusiasm of Lil B. He understood the power of connecting with the right influencers to push his brand in a way corporate entities can only dream of, and he naturally tapped into a teen understanding that the idols of the present are not the people your parents tell you to pay attention to but rather whoever happens to be famous in the present, even if that person is A$AP Rocky instead of Tupac.
Block, D. (2007). Second language identities. London/New York: Continuum In this monograph, Block insightfully traces research interest in second language identities from the 1960s to the present. He draws on a wide range of social theory, and brings a fresh analysis to studies of adult migrants, foreign language learners, and study-abroad students.
She achieves this by emphasizing the eyes, using them as a connecting point among the dancers on stage as well as with the audience. To organize her movement, she is interested in “constructed chaos,” a carefully structured work that appears to lack structure. This method makes her creations insightfully detailed while remaining well organized. Ochoa enjoys working with a wide range of dancers, and also enjoys working with actors.
95, No. 8, July 1986 at p. 1601 This article has inspired many discussions on the relationship between law, language and violence. He also published the brief "Your Law Baseball Quiz" on the editorial page of The New York Times on April 5, 1979, amusingly and insightfully comparing Supreme Court Justices to baseball players. It spawned an underground cottage industry of law-baseball and law-other metaphorical devices that still persists.
Concepts such as brain functions, energy minimisation, and brain-based leadership matrix are woven through stories of everyday leadership. Brain-Based Leadership: The Models A sequel in the Brain- Based series, this book dives deeper into the connections between the brain and leadership. It introduces three comprehensive models: B.A.S.E., S.I.M.G.A.R.D., and F.I.G.H.T to help leaders address challenges of leading self and others. The book insightfully integrates the art and science of leadership.
Aaron Mead found that, "the novel addresses the question of how to hold on to old friendships without stifling them, and it insightfully brings out the stabilizing effect that new friendships can have in the effort to preserve or reclaim old ones". He noted that the novel deeply helps children in middle school. Crewdson opined that the book deals with the "intricacies of friendship". This theme of friendship is explored when Sal abandons his friendship with Miranda after Marcus hits him.
His volumes thus begin with the Pre-Socratics and trace metaphysical investigations insofar as they are connected with issues of Philosophical Psychology up to but not including twentieth-century theories. He presents the metaphysics of Psychology insightfully but not always adequately, failing, for example, to appreciate the depth of Aristotelian and Kantian Philosophical contributions to Psychology. R S Peters revived Brett'swork by carrying our a successful abridgment of his three volumes into one. In this work, Peters added reflections on twentieth-century Theories that attempted to follow the pattern of Brett's earlier volumes.
A review of Werner Erhard in Kirkus Reviews similarly concluded, "Too entranced to be truly objective, Bartley is nonetheless an insightfully partial observer." Booklist stated that Bartley, as an est student, had made the "mistake of being too close to his subject to be objective or critical." In Psychology Today, Morris B. Parloff stated that Bartley had written his biography of Erhard "carefully, lovingly, and well".Psychology Today, "How Werner Got It", by Morris B. Parloff (chief of psychotherapy and Behavioral Intervention Clinical Research Branch), National Institute of Mental Health, November 1978. p.
"Description of the book, Zoran Stefanović, Amazon.com Publishers Weekly: "First published in Yugoslavia in 1993, Knežević's novel takes the form of a postmodern sword-and-sorcery adventure to comment insightfully on the nature of heroism and aggression. Its nameless narrator, a persecuted young Serb, bargains with a captive wizard to obtain the strength he needs to defend himself. (...) The allegorical intent of the story becomes clear only gradually, insofar as Knežević deliberately jumbles the order of his narrative, alternating early and later chapters in such a way that events of past and present are constantly mirroring and blending indistinguishably with one another.
Reflective disclosure is a model of social criticism proposed and developed by philosopher Nikolas Kompridis. It is partly based on Martin Heidegger's insights into the phenomenon of world disclosure, which Kompridis applies to the field of political theory. The term refers to practices through which we can imagine and articulate meaningful alternatives to current social and political conditions, by acting back on their conditions of intelligibility. This could uncover possibilities that were previously suppressed or untried, or make us insightfully aware of a problem in a way that allows us to go on differently with our institutions, traditions and ideals.
He praised Missy as a character and her interaction with Clara within the Dalek as "amusing", though "actually quite dark", in addition to acclaiming the dialogue between the Doctor and Davros. Alasdair Wilkins of The A.V. Club responded very positively to the episode, awarding it an A- grade. He especially praised the Doctor and Davros' exchange, finding it "by far the best use the TV series has made of the [latter] character since Genesis Of The Daleks". He also believed having Davros open his eyes "a particularly brilliant touch" and went on to praise the moment as "insightfully written, beautifully shot, and brilliantly acted".
He argued that Scruton wrote insightfully about subjects such as "the importance of the face in human sex" and was rightly skeptical of Freudian views, but that Sexual Desire as a whole was confused and unsatisfactory. He believed that Scruton, despite his avoidance of religious commitment, made dogmatic and quasi-religious claims about the nature of personal identity. He wrote that Scruton presented an idealised and questionably accurate view of sexual desire, and presented "very personal quirks with a rhetorical vigour that gives them a false air of universal truth." He described Scruton's discussion of the morality of homosexuality as "unexpectedly tentative" and unhelpful and his discussion of the politics of sex as "astonishingly simplistic and moralising".
The personalities and the pundit discuss the masterpiece The concept of the program is to shed light on a masterpiece of literature from all over the world, from classic to contemporary literature. The program invites an expert as the pundit who is best known for the selected masterpiece, in terms of both of the prominent knowledge of (and research on) the title and the excellence in presentation skills to the broad audiences comprehensibly. The pundit explains the profound world of the title concisely, but insightfully and enjoyable. 100 Pun (100 minutes) means the one title will be explained in 25 minutes per week, in a month (4 weeks × 25 minutes = 100 minutes).
A reviewer described it as "unfazed by the 21st century, confidently tracing the wrong turnings of the past 100 years, soaring insightfully over the mess of global developments that constitute the quagmire of today". Solo was translated into twenty languages. Dasgupta was awarded the prestigious Commonwealth Writers' Prize for the novel Solo; it won both the region and overall best-book prize His third book, Capital: A Portrait of Twenty-First-Century Delhi (Canongate, 2014), is a non- fiction exploration of his adopted city of Delhi, and, in particular, the changes and personalities brought about there by globalization. Capital won the Ryszard Kapuściński Award for Literary Reportage and was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize and the Ondaatje Prize.
Janet Maslin of The New York Times wrote that the film conveys Borchardt's passion "Insightfully and stirringly, not to mention hilariously", and that "For anyone wondering where the spirit of maverick independent filmmaking has its source, you need look no further". Roger Ebert gave the film four out of four possible stars, calling the film "a very funny, sometimes very sad documentary". Amy Goodman of IndieWire called the film "An inspiration for filmmakers everywhere", and Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote that the film "is sure to draw lots of laughs". Glenn Lovell of Variety called the film an "ambitious, wildly funny chronicle" and a "madcap tribute to a beer-guzzling Midwestern filmmaker".
His non-dramatic work includes a book for children, The Maitland and Morpeth String Quartet (illustrated by Victoria Roberts), a set of verses for The Carnival of the Animals, and occasional verse. He edited Holding the Man, a memoir by his former NIDA student, Timothy Conigrave, and, following Conigrave's death, saw it to publication by Penguin Books. His plays deal sympathetically and insightfully with mainly lower-class Australians. Two exceptions concern his time at Riverview: St. James Infirmary Blues (he subsequently dropped 'Blues' from the title), and a teleplay for the ABC; in addition, his unproduced and unpublished play, Harper's Hill, deals with the sort of prosperous Hunter Region people among whom he was raised, though significantly distanced by time (the play is set in the early 20th century).
At numerous music-orientation camps and workshops organized by the Gujarat University and Government of Gujarat to mould budding singers, he diligently and insightfully followed the indigenous traditional method of imparting training in music. Pranayama, dhyana, breath- controlling exercises, prayers, poetry recitation and appreciation, a scientific approach to developing voice culture and an emphasis on experiencing the divine through it were integral to his interactive music sessions. He conducted such lecture demonstrations and workshops in the United Kingdom and the United States as well. Again, reminiscent of our Parampara, going back to ancient times, quite a few students in his lifetime were welcome to stay in his family, observe and emulate his lifestyle and learn music in the spirit of a sadhana, experiencing the bliss, the ambience and his dedication offered.
" In The New Yorker, Jill Lepore wrote that The Hardhat Riot was a "riveting book." The New York Daily News reported that the book, which tells the story of the Hard Hat Riot of May 8, 1970, as well as the antecedents and aftermath, is about how a “day changed American politics, perhaps forever," and also, according to The Washington Examiner, the book "details a series of wrenching national events" that “explains in elegant and expert fashion” how, in 2016, Donald Trump “won so much support among blue-collar white voters.” The Wall Street Journal book review also wrote that the book “insightfully explains why and how” the white working class tilted “the 2016 election to Donald Trump,” centered around the microcosm of a “riveting account of the May 1970 explosion of New York’s blue- collar workers.” Kuhn's second book, the political novel What Makes It Worthy, was published in 2015.
With documented expertise in statistics and optimization tools, Giannakis' research team contributed innovative solutions to challenging science and engineering problems by capitalizing on the data deluge, while jointly leveraging physics-guided and data-driven models. Their key novelties have markedly advanced machine learning with data collected at distributed agents, and offered learning models that account for nonlinear data dependencies, structures, dynamics, and outliers. They were the first to develop consensus-based distributed (gossip) schemes for classification, sparse regression, and clustering using the alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM); and pioneered a solver based on judiciously designed cluster-heads to speed up decentralized optimization. Sparsity and low rank were the data structures they exploited early on to develop online estimators of sparse signals; to cope with perturbed compressive sampling using sparse total least-squares, and also insightfully link compressive sensing with robust statistics, simply because data outliers are sparse.
Writing for The Daily Beast, Claire Howorth describes the novel as "a fast-paced, engaging novel of pop-culture and big ideas, authentically subversive, and thoroughly American" which "spins the themes of morality, loyalty, and patriotism into an insightfully entertaining commentary on modern history and contemporary society", while Publishers Weekly hailed it as "an incisive depiction of radicalism’s seductive roots". Criticism of the book focused on the shallow nature of the two main characters and the handling of the emerging love story which "feels more expected than earned", according to a review in the New York Times. Similarly, NPR questions the "bland romance" between Aidan and Paige, claiming that "Goodwillie is a terrific and observant writer, but even he can't roll political critique, social comedy, fast-paced thriller and mushy love story into one convincing package". American Subversive was a New York Times Notable Book of 2010, and a Vanity Fair and Publishers Weekly top ten spring debut.

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