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24 Sentences With "inspiriting"

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

Most young Americans did not think Trump's speech was presidential or inspiriting. Surprise!
It's also an inspiriting estival fling, one that, as Heather says of her relationship with Jack, melts any residual winter ice.
Yet though you're likely to feel the pressure of unshed tears when the play is over, "Fulfillment Center" is also an unexpectedly inspiriting work.
And it's an inspiriting achievement for service workers, signaling that it's not just the incredibly rich that deserve rights, protections, and having their voices heard.
A few flaws aside, these were inspiriting recitals, and it is heartening to see both pianists gamely holding winter at bay, at least for the moment.
Some of the more inspiriting moments in the life of this longtime observer of the industry were generated by folks of infinite creative resources and zero cash.
Such questions came to mind on a visit to "Artists Respond: American Art and the Vietnam War, 1965-1975," a big, inspiriting survey at the Smithsonian American Art Museum here.
Everything in "Artists Respond," a big, inspiriting blast of a historical survey, dates from a time when the United States was losing its soul, and its artists — some, anyway — were trying to save theirs by denouncing a racist war.
Everything in "Artists Respond," a big, inspiriting blast of an historical survey, dates from a time when the United States was losing its soul, and its artists — some, anyway — were trying to save theirs by denouncing a racist war.
A vibrant cast of both deaf and hearing actors share the roles in this inspiriting production of the show about adolescent angst in 19th-century Germany, with a fluid book by Steven Sater and a gorgeous score by Duncan Sheik (4646:4223).
A vibrant cast of both deaf and hearing actors share the roles in this inspiriting production of the show about adolescent angst in 8113th-century Germany, with a fluid book by Steven Sater and a gorgeous score by Duncan Sheik (2:20).
A vibrant cast of both deaf and hearing actors share the roles in this inspiriting production of the show about adolescent angst in 19th-century Germany, with a fluid book by Steven Sater and a gorgeous score by Duncan Sheik (2:20).
Most of the performances were at least fluent, and a few were inspiriting, like Nate Sassoon's romp near the end of the evening through the C minor Prelude and Fugue from Book 1, which showed temperament, for a change, as well as technique.
I'd returned for six weeks in early 2002 to write a brief book that was partly about how an immersion in Sicilian history, with its appalling violence and inspiriting record of recovery and resilience, had provided some comfort in the recent aftermath of Sept. 11.
To the Editor: We were surprised to read in these pages Benjamin Moser's negative review of Kate Briggs's "This Little Art" (July 1), a book that, even after our many collective decades active in translation and translation studies, we found fresh, stimulating and inspiriting, vital and rich.
Once their partnership was sundered, Ivana took her blithe esprit and comic malaprops to enjoy the high life elsewhere ("In 2006, my yacht was parked at Cannes for the film festival, and I was having a party with two hundred people on it"), a pity since she might have been a more inspiriting first lady than the inscrutable, animatronic Melania.
Bennett, "Finding Mary Shelley", 298–99. Shelley's conception of herself as an author has also been recognised; after Percy's death, she wrote of her authorial ambitions: "I think that I can maintain myself, and there is something inspiriting in the idea."Qtd. in Bennett, "Finding Mary Shelley", 298. Scholars now consider Mary Shelley to be a major Romantic figure, significant for her literary achievement and her political voice as a woman and a liberal.
Seeing one of our Bristol fighters, in difficulties with its propeller, being attacked by one of the enemy machines, he dived and drove it down to crash; when climbing back to join his formation his observer shot down another enemy machine. In addition to the foregoing Captain Gibbons has destroyed four enemy aeroplanes and driven down three out of control. The gallantry in action he invariably displays sets an inspiriting example to those with whom he serves.
He regarded it as "something that contained multitudes, something not exclusive", and, according to his English translator Michael Hoffman, the Jews represented "human beings in their least packaged form" - "the most anomalous, individual of peoples", fissured by history and geography. Roth believed in "Judaism, in the sense of a somewhat separate presence of Jews within and throughout and inspiriting Europe." Communism he believed would eliminate anti-semitism and Jewish identity alike. He never went to Palestine, but he objected to the creation of a nation state there for the Jews.
All this encouraged his exploration not only of working class life but also the emotional life of characters on the periphery of society.See for example Fordham's discussion of The Closed Harbour and Levine, pp. 185–193. There is an exploration of another type of extreme situation in those works of Hanley which deal with a shipwreck, such as "Narrative" (1931), and the World War II novels The Ocean (1941), Sailor’s Song (1943), though these extreme situations are undergone by groups of men, and "were primarily inspiriting in their representation of maritime heroism".Fordham, p. 165.
On 13th the Botha's army retreated to the north, they were chased as far as Elands River Station, only 25 miles from Pretoria, by Mounted Infantry and De Lisle's Australians. Although Roberts had removed the Boer threat to his eastern flank, the Boers were unbowed despite their retreat. Jan Smuts wrote that the battle had "an inspiriting effect which could scarcely have been improved by a real victory." Forty-four years after the battle, British General Ian Hamilton opined in his memoirs that "the battle, which ensured that the Boers could not recapture Pretoria, was the turning point of the war".
" These were followed in 1943 with Shadow of Night, a Scribners' novel of which The Chicago Sun wrote: "Structurally it has the perfection of a carved jewel...A psychological novel of the first order, and an adventure tale that is unique and inspiriting." In November 1945, however, Derleth's work was attacked by his one-time admirer and mentor, Sinclair Lewis. Writing in Esquire, Lewis observed, "It is a proof of Mr. Derleth's merit that he makes one want to make the journey and see his particular Avalon: The Wisconsin River shining among its islands, and the castles of Baron Pierneau and Hercules Dousman. He is a champion and a justification of regionalism.
Winifred Hart-Dyke, The Royal Magazine (1902) Hart-Dyke appeared in several comic opera productions with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company between 1900 and 1903, including in The Rose of Persia, as Nora in The Emerald Isle, Fleta in Iolanthe, Marjorie in Merrie England and Butterfly in A Princess of Kensington.Stone, David. "Winifred Hart Dyke (1900–03)", Who Was Who in the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, 5 August 2019, accessed 29 September 2020 A reviewer of Merrie England in Punch magazine called her "one of the most graceful, most spirited, and inspiriting of danseuses I have seen for a long time.""The 'German Hood' Entertainment", Punch, 23 April 1902, p. 302 She was then in the original London cast of the Edwardian musical comedies The Earl and the Girl (1903),"The Earl and the Girl", The Guide to Musical Theatre, accessed 29 September 2020 Little Hans Andersen (1903) and The Catch of the Season (1905).
In Edinburgh he again devoted himself to the interests of science. Over and above his connection to the Royal Society of Edinburgh it was in connection with the Royal Physical Society that he made his main influence. This society, one of the oldest scientific bodies in Edinburgh, had ‘fallen into one of its periodic fits of depression,’ when, in 1877, Gray accepted its secretaryship. He entered on his duties with great energy, and, by his courtesy and singular charm of manner not less than by his power of organisation and his excellent business faculty, he was successful in introducing needed reforms, in attracting new members and inspiriting old ones, and, finally, in placing the society upon a satisfactory footing as an active scientific body, issuing printed ‘Proceedings.’ At the time of his death, which occurred suddenly in Edinburgh on 18 February 1887, Gray was engaged, in conjunction with William Evans, upon a volume dealing with the birds of the east coast of Scotland.

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