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"inventively" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows that you can think of new and interesting ideas

151 Sentences With "inventively"

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

They, too, can inventively keep the drama going with distractions.
Head wraps were inventively stylish, and fur bonnets were a favorite.
It's brief and inventively shot, and you can watch it above.
Play she in fact can, and does: with structure, cleverly, inventively.
But from what I saw, Ron Daniels's staging is inventively contemporary.
Now, Centeno's not Texan, nor is the inventively Spanish-ish Bäco Mercat.
But she uses it constantly and more inventively than most modern pianists.
Deadpool may be one of the most inventively cosplayed characters of all time.
In November, we wrote about why Richard D. James Album is still inventively immature.
Poets and artists have always responded most inventively to the machines of their time.
Bright ideas fill categories like classics, including a Greek salad topped, inventively, with fried feta.
Mr. Overstreet, who was deeply involved in the Black Arts Movement, negotiated the divide inventively.
And inventively clad millennials, more than a few affiliated with the designer ateliers headquartered here.
Ms. Jaffrey's recipes are inventively streamlined for non-Indian cooks, but with no sacrifice of flavor.
That's partly because the play's performers, under Mr. Mendes's impeccably paced direction, are so inventively mutable.
The class emails that intersect her first-person narration are bracingly sarcastic and often inventively intimidating.
Discovering she and her fellow bad people were being inventively tortured was awful, but also vindicating.
The new production, inventively directed by Trip Cullman, trims the text (wisely), eliminating a few minor characters.
What they mainly did was tear down walls to open up rooms, inventively gouging the original mass.
So Ms. Wolfe inventively juxtaposes a plaintive Yiddish folk song with a lively Italian tarantella-like piece.
The Pakistani group hosts inventively named sessions for "Jovial Janeites" such as "Austentatious tea parties" and "chai and chatter".
Earlier this month, we discussed how Aphex Twin's Richard D. James Album is still inventively immature after 20 years.
He and Benh Zeitlin wrote the score of "Beasts of the Southern Wild," and both works use instrumentation inventively.
Jon Kaiman, a former town supervisor in Nassau County, deserves credit for inventively tackling local problems with limited money.
That work, inventively staged by Mr. Davis, ingeniously repopulated John Wesley Powell's 1869 rafting expedition into unmapped Western territory.
Red snapper is paired with squash blossoms, which are inventively used for wrapping the fish, keeping the flesh moist.
Young and his fellow Marines are horny, deeply insecure, often drunk, compulsively (and inventively) masturbatory and disturbingly driven to kill.
Mushroom pâté was paired inventively with fig compote and black vinegar, but tasted almost nothing like either mushroom or pâté.
Then — most inventively and disturbingly — Michèle chooses to gain control over her rapist by staging her own kind of rape fantasy.
They cleanse the palate, inventively taking us into the detail both of basic movement and of aspects of non-virtuoso dance technique.
The good news is that some enterprising minds managed to inventively retool the genre you once described as the "cockroach" of Broadway.
The good news is that some enterprising minds managed to inventively retool the genre you once described as the "cockroach" of Broadway.
Earlier today TechCrunch covered The new vehicle, inventively named Fund II, will mostly focus on early-stage companies in the cybersecurity space.
Today, the newest evolution of Mexican cooking is vastly different from the combo platter or the inventively stylish plated renditions of traditional dishes.
These books featured feisty white protagonists in urban or suburban settings, inventively solving problems by applying kid logic with hilarious and poignant results.
Of the 10 principal actors, the Deutsches Theater's Regine Zimmermann gets to show the widest range, playing a series of inventively unfaithful wives.
An optional dollop of panna — Italian whipped cream served plain or inventively flavored with coffee or fruit — is available to top each portion.
Although perhaps not as inventively as in California, where varieties proliferate, and different cuisines collide to create new takes on an old staple.
The starkly vivid production, directed by Lawrence Edelson with sets by Zane Pihlstrom, inventively employs rows of video screens that hover over the stage.
Unsentimental and precise, he reckons with a past simultaneously vanished and all too present, drawing inventively on Proust, Nabokov, De Quincey, and St. Augustine.
While it's packed with hours of depraved slaughter, Yuasa renders it so inventively that his show is very much worth a THC-infused viewing.
In these, he is inventively abetted by Marc Spicer's bird-dogging camera, which noses around closet doors and into cellar corners with shivery curiosity.
But with a menu filled with inventively-flavored pastas and simply-grilled meats, it serves just about my favorite Italian food in New York.
The most enjoyable quality of the book is its relentless cataloging of Wallace's inventively awful behavior, and of Miller's efforts to withstand the onslaught.
However, while I pride myself on being someone who can handle large amounts of drugs gracefully and inventively, I have never actually done a beer bong.
The language of cinematic action — which Ms. Bigelow speaks as fluently and inventively as any living American director — is an idiom of feeling and visceral response.
"A Life," by Nick Payne , with Gyllenhaal as a man grieving for his father as he expects his first child, is similarly, if slightly more inventively, built.
The chapel inventively retells the Adam and Eve story with the Virgin Mary presiding over the death of the righteous, who redeem themselves from the original sin.
Cunningham, who died in 2009, used technology inventively throughout his career; for the works in this series, the camera is not an impartial observer but an active participant.
In recent years Audrey Niffenegger's "The Time Traveler's Wife" and Kate Atkinson's "Life After Life" have both played inventively with the idea of lives lived outside of ordinary time.
It already is one, in a manner of speaking, given that its strengths are lavishly violent, inventively choreographed fights that have been glued together by nonsense and Charlize Theron.
The flavors of the Philippines are interpreted inventively in the hands of Jappy Afzelius, a Filipino executive chef who worked at high-end kitchens in France, Italy and New York.
Mostly he improvised inventively on collage, fashioning comically well-dressed ladies and high-testosterone Army generals from all manner of found materials and objects, including war medals, on his brocade backgrounds.
Or, if you're hungry, try one of the property's three restaurants, the newest of which is Paul's Landing, a casual bayside spot with a menu that riffs inventively on old Florida cuisine.
For each unequivocal fact or hypothesis about how these ancient cephalopods lived, there is a litany of names, of biologists and archeologists who've toiled tirelessly and inventively to understand these mysterious ancestors.
She is a long Furby, inventively named "LongFurby" by her creator, and she is, depending on how you feel about her, the Harbinger of Holy Death or Beloved Saint of Hot Dogs.
Cycle enthusiasts can also opt to ride along the 22-mile self-guided biking trail, inventively dubbed PATH, that'll take bikers by quarries, farmland, and ending at the Monastery of the Holy Spirit.
Cycle enthusiasts can also opt to ride along the 30-mile self-guided biking trail, inventively dubbed PATH, that'll take bikers by quarries, farmland, and ending at the Monastery of the Holy Spirit.
The closest thing to it in recent years was "Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812," Dave Molloy's rollicking adaptation of a hunk of "War and Peace," directed most inventively by Ms. Chavkin.
As Moore, Evans bears (bares?) the brunt of the show's basic-cable sex-scene load thus far, which inventively balances the need to titillate with the need not to show certain body parts.
For stretches of the show, you are transported via a video backdrop that is inventively deployed — to convey fire, war, the crash, nightmares, and most winningly, the "dance" of an economy at full throttle.
Inventively staged by Chris Henry, who also wrote the book, this large-cast, 85-minute show is a work in progress: The first part of what its creators hope will become a two-act musical.
Many of the dishes, often inventively presented on stones or plants, incorporated unfamiliar ingredients specific to the region, like those limpets, and made it clear that the shores of the United States can be underutilized.
Made of stained, delicately patterned pieces of medium-density fiberboard or wood inventively slotted together, these works brilliantly extend the tensile clarity of Minimalist structure while contaminating it with resonances of figures, garments and buildings.
But the shows it puts on, under the banner of Clubbed Thumb productions, always look inventively stylish, rather like the luminous young things of the neighborhood who assemble thrift-shop rags into passable imitations of couture.
"We Shall Not Be Moved," by the composer Daniel Bernard Roumain and the librettist Marc Bamuthi Joseph, inventively directed by Bill T. Jones, has generated the most attention, for tackling roiling issues of race and inequality.
Every time Belko gets into a groove, with some fun plot twists or inventively gory moments, it pauses to make some point or another about the modern workplace that feels at least a decade out of date.
The owners Johnny Swet, who has consulted on the drinks at the baroque new Oscar Wilde bar in NoMad, and Benoit Sutter focus on drinks based on tradition as well as innovation, inventively mixing some local nonalcoholic products.
"Red Dawn" (1984): Teenagers inventively wage guerrilla warfare against a Soviet invasion in this action vehicle set in a small Colorado town, which featured a pre-"Dirty Dancing" Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey, Charlie Sheen and C. Thomas Howell.
In the first half she sang experimental works for solo voice by Luigi Nono, John Cage and Luciano Berio, each inventively paired with works for solo violin or cello by August Read Thomas, Huw Watkins and John Harbison, respectively.
It showed a series of 16 new Mr Men characters, each more inventively named than the last: My son has come up with a new series of Mr. Men and I'm not sure whether to be appalled or proud. pic.twitter.
Other works planned for the space include "Everything That Happened and Would Happen" (June 3-9), a production by Heiner Goebbels — who inventively staged Louis Andriessen's "De Materie" there in 2016 — that blends live music, performance, sound, movement and moving image.
But the concert is inventively placed at the center of a thoughtful lineup of works: short Baroque pieces by Lully, Purcell and Rameau alternate with jazz responses to these works, their "imaginary twins," as Mr. Greilsammer puts it in liner notes.
"I just thought a lot of my classmates dressed so well," she said in a phone interview, noting how their clothes, often inventively layered, would "reflect the day's activities": dance class, then grocery shopping, then dance class again, for example.
"I just thought a lot of my classmates dressed so well," she said in a phone interview, noting how their clothes, often inventively layered, would "reflect the day's activities": dance class, then grocery shopping, then dance class again, for example.
Pricing will be an important aspect to keep an eye out for, since the inventively named Galaxy Home will enter a rather crowded smart speaker market that is mostly dominated by those that include Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant, and, in some cases, both.
Add in the Swedish film Border, which didn't receive a Foreign Language nomination but did receive a Makeup and Hairstyling nomination for its many inventively designed fairy tale creatures, and you could bump the total to 18 if you really wanted to.
But unlike Arbus, who abstracted and softened her scenery so it resembles stage flats, Hujar employed in his square-format pictures all the tricks of Henri Cartier-Bresson: strong diagonals (of slides, swings and supporting rails); inventively off-kilter angles; and asymmetric groupings.
The crowd scenes are inventively handled, however, especially the street brawl in front when Tybalt (Diego Silva, an appealing young tenor in his Met debut) gets into a sword fight with Roméo's hotheaded friend Mercutio (the dynamic baritone Elliot Madore), and Roméo intervenes.
With meshing geometries of large and mobile groups, a firebrand soloist and a poignant duet — all in a classical vocabulary that's been sped up and inventively extended without being slurred — it is choreography that follows the house tradition of closely attending to music.
Suffused through it all is a palpable embrace of Provincetown's history — not as a series of ancient events etched in textbooks but as a living continuum to be tapped and inventively updated, regardless of how old you are or how recently you washed ashore.
Her music has only gotten better and more distinctive since then, and her latest album, "Lune Rouge," is a delightful tumble through hip-hop, EDM, pop and much more, with vocalists including MNDR, Isaiah Rashad and Yuna taking on Tokimonsta's inventively laid-back beats.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads The question that comes to mind seeing Nidaa Badwan's work 100 Days of Solitude, is whether it is primarily the documentation of a protracted depressive episode undergone by the artist or her inventively aesthetic response to a situation that is unbearable.
In 1948, when Meredith Gardner, the linguist who had inventively succeeded in recreating the KGB code book, began to read the decoded cables sent from Moscow Center to its spies working in America, he discovered the existence of "Operation Enormoz" — Russia's covert plan to steal the nation's atomic secrets.
In the compilation above from The Graham Norton Show, the likes of Chris Pine and Matt Damon are confronted with a range of inventively thirsty tweets about them — from Pine's full-frontal nude scene in Outlaw King to Matt Damon's temporary ponytail (to which there were many, many creative responses).
Soderbergh shot 'Unsane' primarily on iPhones using additional lenses, including a fish-eye … Big budget or on the cheap, like here, he is a great shooter and he plays with perspective inventively, distorting the edges of the image so they bulge out, a warping that dovetails with Sawyer's disturbed, disturbing world.
Although Dubai most often makes sensational headlines for its dizzying skyscrapers, inventively shaped man-made islands, and ski slopes in shopping malls, the carefully crafted rise of Emirates Airline reflects the serious economic planning that has underpinned the evolution of this emirate from a modestly successful regional entrepot to a leading world city.
Throughout the past several decades, but especially since the debut of Planet Earth in 2006, the BBC has led the charge of embracing new and improved technologies to push the boundaries of what's possible, by continually updating the equipment it uses to better and more inventively capture the lives of the animals it tracks.
Curators Achim Borchardt-Hume and Nancy Ireson inventively select one prodigiously productive year and explore it in the context of it being "pivotal" to Picasso's career; in 1932 he had turned 50 and was losing relevance and 'edge' in the eyes of critics and contemporaries, and needed to step up his output in time for a retrospective that summer.
It's not quite anti-consumerism, because you have to buy tinfoil or you have to buy cellophane, but there's something really wonderful about being at home with your folks or your friends or your siblings and making a project and figuring out how to use the material inventively in creating something unique that you can photograph and chuckle about for ages.
There is a raw component with quite a few inventively seasoned tartares and carpaccios of meat and seafood on the menu, along with tastes of Italy like zucchini flan, artichokes cooked Roman style with bruschetta, spaghetti with sea urchin, Milanese-style breaded veal, and tuna in a sesame seed crust: 14 Bedford Street (Downing Street), 212-675-9080, tfor-nyc.com.
Could it be that, what's really enticing about the '80s is the recognition that, in that time before the triumph of corporate homogenization, soulless branding, and banal social media, there were communities of ambitious, talented, fearless people who plugged in their synthesizers, picked up their brushes, slapped on their makeup and dared to dance, make art, and make love — inventively and joyously, even in the face of death?
The complexities of Henry Darger's inventively illustrated, good-versus-evil magnum opus, with its legions of naked, Victorian little girls with penises in combat against monsters, armies, and hangmen, or those  found in the work of the Swiss art brut legend Adolf Wölfli (1864-1930), whose alter ego, "Saint Adolf," creates an entire universe within a 45-volume grand narrative filled with texts, musical scores, and elaborate images, might seem edgier or more sophisticated than the multifaceted but comparatively familiar storybook character of Kuhler's big production.
Washington Post Obituary, 19 February 2020. Portis has been described as "one of the most inventively comic writers of western fiction".Portis. - English.
Vellum, gesso, gouache, plywood and beeswax are among the materials Kretschmer inventively employs.Phyllis Tuchman. Painting After Postmodernism: Belgium-USA. Artforum. Vol. 55, No. 5, January 2017.
Oldham, Gabriella (1996). Keaton's silent shorts: Beyond the laughter. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press. p. 203. . Even though the central character's intentions are good, he cannot win, no matter how inventively he tries.
Scott Yanow of Allmusic said "The focus is mostly on Konitz, and he is in top form, playing inventively and thoughtfully ... This is a melodic and cool- toned bop session that finds Lee Konitz often sounding as if he is thinking aloud".
Ann Messner, in collaboration with Carole Ashley, Elaine Angelopoulos, Debra Werblud and Larilyn Sanchez created and directed the documentary, Disarming Images, produced by Artists Against the War. The documentation, covering the years 2001-2005, focused on protest groups who inventively spread their word against the U.S. invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq.
When the play appeared at the Manchester International Festival, the reviewer for The Times said it was engaging for the first three hours, but dragged in the final hour. In The Guardian, Michael Billington criticized the choice of source material, but said the production was inventively staged and showed van Hove's "characteristic virtuosity".
The book was adapted by the Ridiculusmus theatre company. Premiered at Aras na nGael, London in 1992 and toured in repertory until 1997. The book was adapted for an open-air theatre production by Miracle Theatre in 2017, with The Stage judging it to be an "Enjoyably absurd and inventively staged alfresco summer theatre".
Near its conclusion, as Levine's vocals fade out, the record production inventively incorporates various bells and whistles, warped bass and scathing synthesizers.Beaumont, 2015. p. This elongated outro was arranged by American film score composer and multi-instrumentalist Jon Brion. For his second studio album, West collaborated with Jon Brion, sharing record production duties with him for several tracks.
The Teatro Variedades was a famous Colosseum in the city of Madrid, Spain, in the 19th century. Erected in 1847, the theater was located at 40 Magdalena Street. It was known once as one of the most entertaining theatres for the not-so-demanding general public. There, the Boufee genre, the political revue and other minor theatrical genres were inventively exploited.
Institutional anchoring is vital to the RepaNet idea. So although its primary ideological drive is to reduce environmental damage through waste minimisation, it sometimes seems reluctant to go out and sell the products it so inventively designs and manufactures. It does not want to forget what sort of a business it is – one that integrates unemployed people back into the workforce.
Seedy night clubs, asylums, dark basements as well as, especially in later movies, girl's colleges and of course Scotland Yard, are popular main and side locations for Edgar Wallace movies. The stories are very similar across the series as well. The plot is most often centered on one inventively masked main villain. In contrast to thrillers, the most important technique of creating suspense is the "whodunit".
Taylor, Pamela G. and B. Stephen Carpenter, II (2002). "Inventively Linking: Teaching and Learning with Computer Hypertext" Art Education, 55(4), pp. 6-12. It has been used for teaching creative writing in particular,Murray, Janet H (1997). "The Pedagogy of Cyberfiction: Teaching a Course on Reading and Writing Interactive Narrative", in Barrett, Edward and Marie Redmond (eds.) Contextual Media: Multimedia and Interpretation, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
In Mayo v. Prometheus, the Supreme Court invalidated a patent on a diagnostic method, because it non-inventively implemented a natural principle; the Court drew on cases involving computer software and other abstract ideas. In this case, the Court was much more detailed in describing how to recognize a patent-ineligible claim to an abstract idea. The Mayo methodology has come to dominate patent-eligibility law.
Later, Fugazi more fully integrated elements of punk rock, hardcore, soul and noise with an inventively syncopated rhythm section. Notable is MacKaye and Picciotto's inventive, interlocking guitar playing, which often defies the traditional notion of "lead" and "rhythm" guitars. They often feature unusual and dissonant chords and progressions filtered through a hardcore punk lens. Each of Fugazi's albums since Repeater have featured an instrumental.
The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 77% approval rating based on 31 reviews, with an average rating of 6.2/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "ABCs of Death 2 delivers some inventively gory thrills, offering a surprising (albeit still somewhat uneven) upgrade over its predecessor." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 53 out of 100 based on ten critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".
While Avicenna often relied on deductive reasoning in philosophy, he used a different approach in medicine. Avicenna contributed inventively to the development of inductive logic, which he used to pioneer the idea of a syndrome. In his medical writings, Avicenna was the first to describe the methods of agreement, difference and concomitant variation which are critical to inductive logic and the scientific method.Lenn Evan Goodman (2003), Islamic Humanism, p. 155, Oxford University Press, .
Outside the body, Listeria has flagellar-driven motility, sometimes described as a "tumbling motility". However, at 37 °C, flagella cease to develop and the bacterium instead usurps the host cell's cytoskeleton to move. Listeria, inventively, polymerizes an actin tail or "comet", from actin monomers in the host's cytoplasm with the promotion of virulence factor ActA. The comet forms in a polar manner and aids the bacterial migration to the host cell's outer membrane.
By using process or second color inventively, Brodovitch was able to give the magazine an added sense of currency and luxury. He applied color to his layouts expressively, often choosing to use colors bolder than might be seen in the real world. Even after full-color reproduction became standard practice, he still used broad swaths of single colors for bold emphasis. In terms of photography, Brodovitch had a distinct feel for what the magazine needed.
While Avicenna (980–1037) often relied on deductive reasoning in philosophy, he used a different approach in medicine. Ibn Sina contributed inventively to the development of inductive logic, which he used to pioneer the idea of a syndrome. In his medical writings, Avicenna was the first to describe the methods of agreement, difference and concomitant variation which are critical to inductive logic and the scientific method.Lenn Evan Goodman (2003), Islamic Humanism, p.
While Avicenna (980-1037) often relied on deductive reasoning in philosophy, he used a different approach in medicine. Ibn Sina contributed inventively to the development of inductive logic, which he used to pioneer the idea of a syndrome. In his medical writings, Avicenna was the first to describe the methods of agreement, difference and concomitant variation which are critical to inductive logic and the scientific method.Lenn Evan Goodman (2003), Islamic Humanism, p.
Boxoffice Magazine said in praise, "viewers connect to both the relatable pain of everyday injury and the gory gratification of a well-constructed, larger-than-life set piece." NJ.com opined, "Admitted, there is a certain inventiveness to the way director Steven Quale stages the violence." San Francisco Chronicle said that the characters are "killed in gruesome and spectacular ways". The gymnastic set piece has been praised as "anxiety-filled", "a beautiful example of successful comic suspense", "Hitchcockian edge-of-your-seat suspense", and "inventively grotesque". Film.
One of the most recognisable AP devices was the Ed Comment, which, although not invented by them nor indeed used exclusively by them, was employed extensively and inventively. Over time it evolved into a multi-purpose review device. An Ed Comment is intended to be an interjection from the editor, inserted into a body of text as if spoken in real-time. The comment is italicised and bracketed, and the suffix - Ed is attached to the comment to show that it is from the editor.
Carmen L. Lobo of the newspaper La Razón gave it three out of five, calling it a candid story, furiously-paced and strongly influenced by comics, yet stripped of any malicious double meaning. She described it as full of scenes that seem lifted from a video game, adding that the settings in which these unfold are impressive. Jordi Batlle Caminal of La Vanguardia wrote of the film: "The animation is top notch. The secondary characters are inventively designed (...) A worthy product, with a blockbuster soul".
Label is the magazine of Loughborough Students' Union. Evolving from a previous newspaper format inventively titled The Newspaper, Label was launched in 1997 and was distributed around campus and town with 2,500 copies printed each issue. Previously a weekly publication, from 2007 to 2017 it was fortnightly, when the role of editor changed from a paid sabbatical officer to a student volunteering position. The magazine launched its website in 2010, and from 2018 is now solely an online publication, with occasional special print editions published.
Rolling Stone called it an "inventively arranged tune... that builds from a soothing beginning to a resounding climax". Bill Graham of Hot Press praised the song, suggesting it may be Bono's "most controlled vocal, building from an almost conversational first verse over a bare rhythm section to a soul-baring confession". Graham suggested the lyric "And you give yourself away" was essential to U2's message. The Sunday Independent suggested that the song was proof the band could be commercially accessible, yet not resort to rock clichés.
Fisher hired away Capp's top assistant, Moe Leff. After Fisher underwent plastic surgery, Capp included a racehorse in Li'l Abner named "Ham's Nose-Bob". In 1950, Capp introduced a cartoonist character named "Happy Vermin"—a caricature of Fisher—who hired Abner to draw his comic strip in a dimly lit closet (after sacking his previous "temporary" assistant of 20 years, who had been cut off from all his friends in the process). Instead of using Vermin's tired characters, Abner inventively peopled the strip with hillbillies.
His materials are borrowed from the cyclic poems from which Virgil (with whose works he was probably acquainted) also drew, in particular the Aethiopis (Coming of Memnon) and the Iliupersis (Destruction of Troy) of Arctinus of Miletus, the now-lost Heleneis of Philodoppides and the Ilias Mikra (Little Iliad) of Lesches. His work is closely modelled on Homer. For a long time, Quintus' work was considered inferior to Homer; however, it is now understood how inventively and creatively Quintus is responding to Homeric epic.
Conceptually it was the most modern of Röhr's Adlers, with front wheel drive and independent front suspension using two overlapping transversely mounted leaf springs. The rear suspension was also inventively thought through. The rack and pinion steering was in effect the system originally used for the 1927 Röhr 8. The characteristic Röhr underslung chassis permitted a low centre of gravity and above-average road holding and, while giving the car a far more modern and dynamic look than the new competitor offering from Opel which also appeared in 1934.
Although he has said his teaching degree from Queens University was something he took to fall back on, Daryl Cloran has taught at the University of Waterloo and Queen's University (where he directed a modern adaptation of Chekhov's Three Sisters as well as an inventively staged Macbeth). He took on the notoriously unstageable Peer Gynt with the graduating class at George Brown Theatre School. He has also held teaching positions at Fanshawe College, Sheridan College and Armstrong Acting Studio, founded by Canadian screen actor Dean Armstrong offering classes for professional actors.
" He also noted that "[..] many puzzles [..] defy logic" and "common sense is trampled on much of the time." Darryl from Gaming Union praised The Whispered World as an undoubtedly "beautiful game" with "[..] a wonderful cast of characters and some lush scenery..." However, he criticized its gameplay "[..] in terms of puzzle plausibility", deeming progression as being "[..] down to dumb luck instead of logic." John Walker on Eurogamer praised the game as "absolutely beautiful" with a remarkable, enormous world. He also noted the "splendid writing" and that "jokes are often fantastic, Sadwick's remarks inventively downbeat.
It stars Fairuza Balk and Cohen regulars Laurene Landon and Michael Moriarty. Pick Me Up is the story of woman traveling on a bus that has broken down along a stretch of lonely two-lane blacktop. Enter two serial killers: Wheeler (Moriarty), a driver who picks up hitchhikers with the sole intent of killing them – and – Walker (Warren Kole), a hitchhiker who accepts lifts in order to find his victims. The two killers pair up and inventively murder all the passengers on the bus, save for Stacia (Balk), who has since gone her own way.
Ramsay is the writer, director and cinematographer for this film."Double Feature: Lynne Ramsay Early Shorts and Ratcatcher." (Retrieved 5 May 2012) "Kill the Day" (1997), written and directed by Ramsay, captures a day in the life of a heroin addict recently released from jail, and in the process inventively probes the inner workings of memory. "Gasman" (1997), also written and directed by Ramsay, is about a brother and sister who attend a Christmas party with their dad, and encounter two other children who are strangely familiar with him.
The patent term in Aruba is 20 years, and also a short-term patent is available with a duration of 6 years. Inventions have to fulfill 3 requirements to be patentable: they have to be new, inventive and industrially applicable. and an International Search (or similar investigation regarding the state of the art) has to be requested for the 20-years' patent. The Aruban patent is a registration patent and thus granted if the application is clear and formal requirements are fulfilled, even if the search results in concerns regarding novelty or inventively.
Reviews for Immortal Beloved were mixed. On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 55% based on 55 reviews, with an average rating of 6.16/10. Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade A- on scale of A to F. Emanuel Levy gave the film a "C" rating, calling it a "speculative chronicle" that lacks the "vibrant energy and charm" of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart biopic Amadeus (1984). He praised the "wonderfully recorded and inventively used" Beethoven compositions as well as the casting of Oldman, who he felt was "the perfect actor to portray the arrogant, irascible musician".
This fell to Charles Darwin, who had just completed his BA degree and had accompanied Sedgwick on a two-week Welsh mapping expedition after taking his Spring course on geology. Fitzroy gave Darwin Lyell's Principles of Geology, and Darwin became Lyell's first disciple, inventively theorising on uniformitarian principles about the geological processes he saw, and challenging some of Lyell's ideas. He speculated about the Earth expanding to explain uplift, then on the basis of the idea that ocean areas sank as land was uplifted, theorised that coral atolls grew from fringing coral reefs round sinking volcanic islands.
Spotting a help wanted ad for a job at the police station, the Little Tramp accepts and is assigned the rough- and-tumble Easy Street as his beat. Upon entering the street he finds a bully roughing up the locals and pilfering their money. The Little Tramp gets on the wrong side of the bully and following a chase the two eventually come to blows culminating in the Little Tramp inventively using a gas lamp to render the bully unconscious. The bully is taken away by the police but manages to escape from the station and returns to Easy Street.
"We all get dressed for Bill", says Vogue editor Anna Wintour. The Bill in question is The New York Times photographer Bill Cunningham. For decades, this Schwinn-riding cultural anthropologist has been obsessively and inventively chronicling fashion trends and high-society charity soirées for the Timess Style section in his columns "On the Street" and "Evening Hours". Full of uptown fixtures (such as Wintour, Tom Wolfe, Brooke Astor, David Rockefeller—who all appear in the film), downtown eccentrics and everyone in between, Cunningham's enormous body of work documents its time and place as well as individual flair.
Biomolecular design refers to the general idea of de novo design and additive combination of biomolecular components. Each of these approaches share a similar task: to develop a more synthetic entity at a higher level of complexity by inventively manipulating a simpler part at the preceding level. On the other hand, "re-writers" are synthetic biologists interested in testing the irreducibility of biological systems. Due to the complexity of natural biological systems, it would be simpler to rebuild the natural systems of interest from the ground up; In order to provide engineered surrogates that are easier to comprehend, control and manipulate.
According to film scholar and critic Clyde Taylor, “Dash's film plays inventively on themes of cultural, sexual and racial domination.” The film is set in Hollywood in 1942, a time when the role of the film industry was to create an illusion for the audience to believe in. This illusion was based on the creation of American history in films; what is seen on screen is usually what they want you to believe and not actually the truth. Made during a time of heavy war propaganda, Hollywood created its own version of America and its freedoms.
During the Second World War of 1940–1945, the artist joined the military and worked at the Army Front Headquarters newspaper making antiwar propaganda posters and leaflets in Leningrad and Moscow. Theatre productions designed at that difficult time were “The Front” and “Russian People”, among others. At a time of material shortages, Mandel inventively created the sets out of the discarded zeppelins. During that time, he also designed scenery and costumes for five movies; the most noted of them was “Svad’ba”, “Musical story” and “Anton Ivanovich Serditsja” – all of which went into the golden collection of Russian cinema fund.
The parodies, written in the style of a screenplay, have a wide appeal, at once scathing and affectionate, with plenty of references to pop culture, Internet fan culture, movie trivia, and just about anything else. Font sizes and punctuation are used inventively (perhaps most memorably in The Matrix in Fifteen Minutes). Jokes are made at the expense of plot holes, inconsistent character arcs, and bad dialogue amongst other things. The world of Internet fanfiction is also made fun of, with Jones making straight-faced, ridiculous claims about the characters even wilder than those made by the fanfic authors themselves.
The Oxford Roof Climber's Rebellion, by Stephen Massicotte and R. H. Thomson In more recent years, guides, books, plays and films have depicted the night-climbing/roof-climbing culture within Oxford. They are as follows: In 2007, Stephen Massicotte and R. H. Thomson printed the book The Oxford Roof Climber's Rebellion. This book inventively expands on the friendship between T. E. Lawrence and Robert Graves, suffering from the aftermath of World War I and foreseeing the dawning of new ones. This prompts the Oxford Night Climbers to lay siege to the university and town buildings, placing an Arabian flag on a roof at Oxford.
A cult had grown up around it as painted by St. Luke himself, and copies were ordered from Hayne of Brussels as well as from Petrus Christus. But whereas Hayne at least had merely copied it, van der Weyden inventively transformed it. Panofsky believed he could date van der Weyden's painting after 1455 because that was the date the Altar of Saint John was commissioned by the Abbey of St. Aubert, Cambrai, delivered by him in person in 1459. However van der Weyden would have certainly have known of it otherwise, indeed had been commissioned as civic artist for Brussels to paint a Saint Luke Drawing the Virgin.
V.A. Musetto of the New York Post said the film complements Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai (1954) and Ran (1985), describing Miike's film as "a pulse-quickening masterpiece that would please the mighty Kurosawa". Mark Schilling of The Japan Times commended Miike's direction and the performance of the ensemble cast (including Kōji Yakusho's). Schilling gave the film 4 stars out of 5, but, notwithstanding other favorable comparisons, he noted that it barely "strike[s] the deeper chords" of Seven Samurai. Tom Mes of Film Comment said the film "culminates in a riveting, ingeniously plotted, and inventively shot 45-minute battle scene that few contemporary Japanese directors besides Miike could pull off, either logistically or artistically".
In the second act, a hotel coffee shop. In the third act, a no-frills Texas motel.” “Psychos Never Dream” San Francisco Weekly – “James Faerron has built an ideal split-level set, with crisp town scenes on top and disordered farm scenes below...” San Francisco Chronicle – “...as James Faerron's inventively versatile set – beautifully used by Larson throughout – unfolds to reveal a stunningly shoddy ranch interior...” “Five Flights” Curtain Up – “James Faerron's abstract set manages to accommodate it all, including some modest projections to announce the "scenes" and a locker room encounter that creates a mini-hockey match with an empty shampoo bottle retrieved from an off-stage shower.” San Francisco Chronicle – “Everything rises on an updraft with the script.
In a 1983 lawsuit in Los Angeles federal court, Rauschenberg sought $500,000 from Chrismas' Flow ACE Gallery; the artist won a $140,000 judgment in the suit in 1984. Eventually the two reconciled their differences and in 1997 Robert Rauschenberg insisted that ACE Gallery New York (in conjunction with the Guggenheim Museum) host his Retrospective.Michael Kimmelman (September 19, 1997), ART REVIEW; Clowning Inventively With Stuff Of Beauty In 1986, Chrismas pleaded no contest after Canadian real estate developer C. Frederick Stimpson alleged that he had improperly sold work belonging to the collector, among them pieces by Andy Warhol and Rauschenberg. Under the terms of the settlement, Chrismas agreed to pay Stimpson $650,000 over a period of five years.
As a consequence of the ubiquitous use of number 8 wire in New Zealand, remote farms often had rolls of number 8 wire on hand, and the wire would often be used inventively and practically to solve mechanical or structural problems other than fencing.. Accordingly, the term "number 8 wire" came to represent the ingenuity and resourcefulness of New Zealanders, and the phrase "a number 8 wire mentality" evolved to denote an ability to create or repair machinery using whatever scrap materials are available on hand. New Zealand hardware and DIY store franchise Mitre 10 have adopted "Number 8" as their in house brand for generic hardware supplies and tools. The Waikato Museum runs an art award named after the wire.
And above all, there is the desert: Vireo Lake, Lavoisier, the "Cow Castle"—lyrical images of austerity and endurance, of human/nature, flayed to the point of death but undefeated. This is the lightest in tone of the Bold As Love books, despite some inventively gory crime scenes. Dissolution has gone global, there is no escape, but by the final credits the heroes have made their peace with the Burning World, the maelstrom in which they will live and die. Yet there is a darker undertow, an elegy for those who have no hope: for the Invisible People, fragments of human souls, digital fodder for virtual movies; for the self-immolation of the Gaian martyrs; and for the unsung queen of it all, Janelle Firdous.
" Winston Cook-Wilson of eMusic gave the album three stars out of five, saying "This type of content, as well as Alchemist's inventively blunted, Return of the Mac-style beats, will increase the comparisons to Prodigy that James is probably used to getting by now. But though his music is situated in that tradition of gangsta rap, he's distinguished from this comparison and others by a love of the sound of words — as much as their import — which manifests itself in a singular way. He crafts deceptively complex internal rhyme schemes, and positions his vowel sounds close enough to one another to continue the patterns until he's exhausted their potential. He uses words carefully and as sparingly as possible, which often makes the breathing room left after a murmured threat as important as the line itself.
His moderate proficiency in magic combined with his natural acumen and intelligence still make him quite formidable; in Season Eight's "No Future for You", he kills the warlock Roden, who could fly and conjure easily, through using a spell inventively. After being resurrected in the form of an adolescent, Giles displays much more magical aptitude, which is briefly lost when Willow temporarily ages him back into an adult form. Sophronia and Lavinia theorised that if Giles had been tutored in magic by them rather than being trained as a Watcher at the wishes of his father and grandmother, he would have become an extremely powerful magician, and could achieve this potential in his new life. Despite his vast intelligence, Giles is not what one would call technology-savvy and is, by his own admission, somewhat technophobic.
The New Statesman said: > [the series] is clearly intended to be not so much a whodunnit as a why-oh- > whydunnit; its writer, Tony Basgallop (Hotel Babylon, Inside Men), seems to > be more interested in the way we live now than in weapons and motives. You > will have gathered that I think his script strains credulity and that he's > very lucky indeed his cast includes the likes of Threlfall and Bamber. Gerard O'Donovan, writing for The Daily Telegraph, said > What Remains served up such a thumper it made me very glad I'd persisted > through the four, at times glacially slow-moving, episodes that built > inexorably up to its inventively baroque denouement. There's been a rash of > highly original crime-drama finales this year (Broadchurch, The Fall, Top of > the Lake, Southfield) and this wasn't far short of the best.
But gradually, the courts allowed claims where there had been no such trouble, no tort vi et armis, even though it was still necessary to inventively plead this. For instance, in 1317 one Simon de Rattlesdene alleged he was sold a tun of wine that was contaminated with salt water, "with force and arms, namely with swords and bows and arrows".Rattlesdene v Grunestone (1317) Year Books 10 Edw II, Selden Society vol 54 The Court of Chancery and the King's Bench started to allow claims without the fictitious allegation of force and arms from around 1350. Otherwise, a breach of covenant required production of proof of an agreement from a seal. However, in The Humber Ferryman’s caseBukton v Tounesende (1348) Baker & Milsom 358 a claim was allowed, without any documentary evidence, against a ferryman who dropped a horse overboard that he was contracted to carry across the River Humber.
Many have been subject to Nabil's lens and distinctive technique of hand-colouring gelatin silver prints, including artists Tracey Emin, Gilbert and George, Nan Goldin, Marina Abramović, Louise Bourgeois, and Shirin Neshat; singers Alicia Keys, Sting (musician), and Natacha Atlas; actors Robert De Niro, Omar Sharif, Faten Hamama, Rossy de Palma, Charlotte Rampling, Isabelle Huppert, and Catherine Deneuve. In 2010, Nabil wrote, produced and directed his first film You Never Left, an 8-minute short film with actors Fanny Ardant and Tahar Rahim. It is set in an allegorical place that is a metaphor of a lost Egypt, sketching an intimate and solemn parallel between exile and death. This video in which he reverently and inventively revisits the characteristics of Egyptian cinema’s golden age, with its movie stars and Technicolor film stock, he reconnects with the source and inspiration of his photographic imagery with which it shares the same personal, diaristic quality.
Mark Swed of the Los Angeles Times praised Reid, saying "she evokes a world of its own through a chamber orchestra of strings, shimmering percussion, harp, piano, flute, bass clarinet and horn that becomes a maker of wonder, mystery, suspense, fear and glory ... melodies are endless and inventively transformed, the atmospheric pressure ever changing." Swed also lauded singers Anna Schubert (Bibi) and Rebecca Jo Loeb (Lumee) stating both are "strong singers and theatrically forces with which to be contended". Jim Farber in his review for San Francisco Classical Voice said "the opera treads a fine line between poetic abstraction and gut-wrenching reality ... it is Reid's exceptional score with its wide-range of musical vocabularies, and the dramatic power of Loeb and Schubert's performances that give prism its overwhelming power." Farber also commended Reid for freely moving from "soaring melodies and rich choral harmonies to abrasive dissonance accentuated by the twittering of col legno strings and pre-recorded electronic effects".
Pundits like Daniel Yergin now employ the concept of globality to speculate about the end-state of globalization, a hypothetical condition in which the process of globalization is complete or nearly so, barriers have fallen, and "a new global reality" is emerging. The current use of “globality” in business studies – as a description of the current competitive state of world commerce – was not adopted until recently. The book: Globality: Competing with Everyone from Everywhere for Everything, Hal Sirkin Jim Hemerling Arindam Bhattacharya June 11, 2008, elaborates on how 'challenger' businesses from rapidly developing economies abroad are aggressively and inventively overtaking existing 'incumbent' nations. According to Sirkin et al. (2008), globality has three main features as it applies to commerce and business: # A significant structural shift in the flow of commerce: companies from every part of the world are now competing with each other for “everything” – customers, suppliers, partners, capital, intellectual property, raw materials, distribution systems, manufacturing capabilities, and most important, talent.
For the most part Khalfoun and cinematographer Maxime Alexandre pull it off, although the technique more than once tips over from inventively arty to film-school-grad pretentious. Slasher-movie fans, however, need not be put off by the stylized camera work and arty patina: this is down and dirty genre filmmaking, and the various slaughters, excruciatingly detailed scalpings and other atrocities are no less gruesome because of the highfalutin approach... The movie is essentially a sadistic art-house bloodbath, with opera music and ballet dancers and funky little art galleries." A reviewer for SciFiNow praised the film's "fresh and challenging approach" and said, "Khalfoun's version is arguably a more troubling piece of work than its predecessor. By forcing us to see through the eyes of a man who brutally murders women, the issues of voyeurism and misogyny rear their ugly heads before you've even settled in... Maniac is certainly brutal and gory, but it's the manner in which the violence is presented that really turns the stomach.
Similarly detailed guidance was given for those fortunate enough to attend functions or levees, with gentlemen to wear a full dress suit, as well as a description of the dress of the Highland chiefs and their "tail" of followers who were expected to "add greatly to the variety, gracefulness and appropriate splendour of the scene". The exception was the "Grand Ball" held by the peers of Scotland to entertain the king: Scott's "Hints" called this a "Highland Ball", reminded readers that the king had ordered a kilt and set the condition that, unless in uniform, "no Gentleman is to be allowed to appear in any thing but the ancient Highland costume". At this, lowland gentlemen suddenly embarked on a desperate search for Highland ancestry (however remote) and a suitable tartan kilt from the Edinburgh tailors, who responded inventively. This can be seen as the pivotal event when what had been thought of as the primitive dress of mountain thieves became the national dress of the whole of Scotland.
15: Anthony Payne wrote that the music was 'most inventively- textured and syntactically original...'Felix Apprahamian, The Sunday Times, London, 1 May 1983 described the work as a 'long but competently scored piece'. The Chamber Concerto (1983) was performed by Lontano at the 1984 Bath International Music Festival.'Lontano', The Guardian, London, 28 May 1984: Meirion Bowen described the work as 'most approachable''Taking to the headiest waters', The Times, London, 28 May 1984: Nicholas Kenyon wrote that the piece 'with its mangled trumpet-and-drum fanfares and violent conflicts between striding unison lines for strings and wind, was strikingly imagined and very well played...' The Mass for Four Voices was performed at the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival and broadcast on BBC Radio 3.Music in Our Time, Radio Times, London, 28 February 1985. In the 1980s and 1990s Lambert was involved in the Royal Opera's developing outreach program around the country which explored innovative ways of composing operas alongside children and amateursfor example: 'House music', The Times Educational Supplement, London, 1 June 1990: a project at Claydon House in collaboration with the National Trust (often in collaboration with the education arm of the Metropolitan Opera, New York):'In Touch', Royal Opera House, London, April 1988, p.

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