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"languorously" Definitions
  1. in a way that is pleasantly lazy and without energy

38 Sentences With "languorously"

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

In another, he played languorously with a piece of cheesecake but never quite took a bite.
Above him floats a bee, and a snake curls languorously over a branch, appearing to watch his activities with interest.
The unlikely champion, though, is the butternut squash that has been languorously baked in its own juices with nothing but sugar.
There was even an image torn from an old issue of Vogue of Marina Schiano loafing around languorously in palazzo pajamas.
"I'm going to whine," he said languorously, scolding a moderator, Hugh Hewitt, for not asking him about subjects ranging from Israel to taxes.
Two years later, these same girls preen at Rockaway Beach, light each other's cigarettes, and recline languorously against cars parked on the street.
One has the easier job, languorously holding the door in place as his colleague strains to tighten a dozen studded bolts in turn.
When she stirs, she moves languorously, and when, still reclining, she strikes an over-the-shoulder pose, you think of the odalisques of art history.
That year he also starred in the Andy Warhol film of the same name, which featured Mr. Indiana very slowly and languorously eating a mushroom.
Set to Kanye West's languorously sublime hip hop gospel track, "Ultralight Beam," the visuals in Jafa's seven-minute film alternate between eruptions of joy and violence.
There are many lingering shots of glaze being prepared and booze being sipped languorously as Jimmy/Saul/Gene watches his own TV commercials on VHS tape.
In another fantasy sequence, Mrs Yu stretches out languorously on a sofa, imagining a shirtless Ziming with a pair of cats scratching and licking his chest.
The only thing leonine about him is the power he wields languorously over his family; he is horrendously ill-equipped to steward the deference shown him.
Set to Kanye West's languorously sublime hip hop gospel track, "Ultralight Beam," the visuals in Arthur Jafa's seven-minute film alternate between eruptions of joy and violence.
In one image of the Heneine Palace, in Beirut's central historic neighborhood of Zokak al-Blat, striated light drapes languorously across the frame, just illuminating a stately staircase.
But then one could just look at "Carousel Change," a painting that is languorously cool and yet intent about moving out from the strictures of the stretched canvas.
Calvin Klein features a red-and-white quilt in its provocative ad starring the Kardashian-Jenner sisters, who are languorously sprawled across the blanket in nothing but their underwear.
She's a horse-riding rich girl, the adopted daughter of Begum Hazrat (Tabu), the Miss Havisham character who languorously smokes her hookah in a beautifully crumbling mansion, her eyes full of pain.
A warm beet, languorously braised in smoked beet juice until it is soft and sticky like salt water taffy and then basted with a beet-based bordelaise sauce, was impressive in June.
In an interview at her home, where her bedroom often doubles as her recording studio, she was introducing me to Goldie, her ball python, as he languorously wrapped his gold-patterned body around her tattooed forearm.
At the bottom of the 75-step brick staircase (inspired by the filmmaker Curzio Malaparte's Capri villa, where Brigitte Bardot sunned herself languorously in 1963's "Contempt") is the orchard, a feat of regenerative land management.
Shot in 663 on grainy, black and white, silent 16-millimeter film, "DARA I" captures the German-born, Miami-based Ms. Friedman languorously awakening in bed, lighting a cigarette, in no hurry to greet the day.
The camera lingers languorously on fingers tying careful, complicated knots; on the dust flecking the air as the ropes twist tighter; on Motta's abdominal muscles as his diaphragms draws in and up towards his sometimes blindfolded face.
A discussion about product design at the early-rising "chai hour" might start out languorously, with just the foreman, until there are "15 faces leaning over the rug pointing out things," says Lily of the "supersocial process" of weaving.
Further, numerous shots of  a group of girls laying languorously entwined, brings to mind the Lisbon sisters of The Virgin Suicides; scenes of perfume bottles held in hands adorned with coral red nail polish put in mind a Miss Dior commercial.
The importance of visuals, thanks to the emergence of MTV, was just becoming apparent, and Mr. Petty languorously rose to the occasion for the video, which was far more intriguing than the song itself, one of Mr. Petty's bigger hits with his band the Heartbreakers.
In addition to the performances featuring Cunningham's choreography, I also watched the durational in-gallery performances created by Maria Hassabi: a group of dancers, dressed in plaid, stripes and other loud prints, languorously move at glacial speed from one lounging position to the next.
With the lethargic movement too > many of them affect, he shows no patience. Slowly, indeed, his Spaniards may > move, and sometimes languorously. But move they do, every minute they hold > the stage, and sometimes passionately, All thanks to Mr. Copeland! More > thanks to him, too, for showing the world how to plan a long-rising climax.
After the Reign of Terror, there was a need for another change in the imagery, to showcase the more civil and non-violent nature of the Directory. In the Official Vignette of the Executive Directory, 1798, Marianne made a return, still depicted wearing the Phrygian cap, but now surrounded by different symbols. In contrast to the Marianne of 1792, this Marianne "holds no pike or lance", and leans "languorously" on the tablet of the Constitution of Year III.Hunt 1984, p. 118.
Title: The Desert of my solitude > In the desert of my solitude, my love, quiver the shadows of your voice, the > mirage of your lips. In the desert of my solitude, from beneath the dust and > ashes of the distance between us, bloom the jasmines and the roses of your > presence. From somewhere close by rises the warmth of your breath it > smolders in its own perfume – gently, languorously. Far away, on the > horizon, glistens drop by drop, the dew of your beguiling glance.
This meeting took the > form of a Voodoo ceremony in the Bois Caïman in the northern mountains of > the island. It was raining and the sky was raging with clouds; the slaves > then started confessing their resentment of their condition. A woman started > dancing languorously in the crowd, taken by the spirits of the loas. With a > knife in her hand, she cut the throat of a pig and distributed the blood to > all the participants of the meeting who swore to kill all the whites on the > island.
The section of Manhattan where the theatre stood was not stylish: the New Theatre, as it was called, was neighbor to Bridewell Prison, a tent city's worth of squatters, and the local poorhouse.Henderson:49-52 Lewis Hallam, Jr., and John Hodgkinson, both members of the John Street Theatre company, obtained the building's lease. They hired remnants of the Colonial Old American Company to form the nucleus of the theatre's in-house troupe and thus give the establishment the sheen of tradition and American culture.Bank:115 Meanwhile, the men quarreled, and construction continued languorously.
Much of the movement takes place with groups of dancers passing each other in parallel lines, as if in a moving frieze. As the focus of attention passes from one group to another, dancers take a stylised pose, as might be seen on an ancient vase, and become still. The music is suggestive of a languorous summer's day in an exotic clime, and the dancers move steadily and languorously to match. The Faun locks arms with the nymph The ballet starts with the sound of a flute as the curtain rises to show the faun lying on his mound.
Sullen, sighing languorously, is entertaining disturbing thoughts of Archer: "...Suppose him here, dressed like a youthful, gay and burning bridegroom, with tongue enchanting, eyes bewitching, knees imploring..." She shrieks as she sees Archer, who steals forth from his closet hiding-place and faithfully acts out her fantasy. Again, Mrs. Sullen's conscience comes reluctantly to the rescue, and she is summoning resolution enough to scream when Scrub rushes in with word that the robbers are in the house. Archer, drawing his sword, hides as Gibbet enters to plunder, then springs upon the bandit and subdues him, summoning Foigard, who is hiding in Gipsy's chamber, to bind the fellow.
The newspapers found her to be a refreshing change from Mexican telenovela actors "who were fair-skinned, blond-haired, and green-eyed." After her publicity press, Selena was booked to play at several concerts throughout Mexico, including a performance at Festival Acapulco in May 1993, which garnered her critical acclaim. Her performance in Nuevo Leon on September 17, 1993 was attended by 70,000 people, garnering her the title of the biggest Tejano act in Mexico. During her live renditions to "Como la Flor", Selena performed her signature move: a flamenco-inspired floreo hand gesture "turning her wrist in three waves, elbow to fingertips twisting in serpentine motion, fingers elongated" as she "languorously croons" the title of the song.
Police Captain Jim Fitzpatrick (Walter Huston) is a dedicated family man and crime fighter not averse to using violence to fight violence. Although he's been demoted for political reasons, public outcry forces the mayor to take more aggressive action against sleazy gang boss Sam Belmonte (Jean Hersholt), and Fitzpatrick is promoted to police chief. His younger brother, Police Detective Ed Fitzpatrick (Wallace Ford), allows himself to be seduced by a languorously sexy Belmonte gang moll (Jean Harlow) and needs money to continue the relationship. Frustrated when his principled brother will not promote him, he betrays Jim's trust by conspiring with Belmonte's henchmen in a truck hijacking that results in the deaths of a child and another police officer.
Jonathan Romney says that "To a degree, Battle in Heaven might seem like another warmed-over example of a familiar movie myth: a fairly repellent no-hoper redeemed by hot sex with a quasi-virginal prostitute," but that "it's finally hard to know whether Reygadas takes his transcendental, religious theme seriously, or is deriding it outright - or even deriding us for taking it seriously."Jonathan Romney, "Battle in Heaven (18)" The Independent Sunday, 30 October 2005 Lisa Schwarzbaum gives the film a grade of D+. "Between those two attention grabbers on a theme of flagpoles, languorously performed and indifferently observed, Mexican filmmaker/provocateur Carlos Reygadas pitches his own fight for the aesthetic tolerances of viewers, goading us to react to images about which he himself studiously offers no opinion." Schwarzbaum finds that "for all the shock of the movie's clinical carnality, this battle is lost."Lisa Schwarzbaum, "Movie Review: Battle in Heaven (2006)" Entertainment Weekly Posted Feb 15, 2006 Battle in Heaven was later voted one of the 30 best films of its decade in a poll for Sight & Sound.
The initial Billboard magazine review from June 29, 1963 awarded the album their 'Pop Special Merit Pick' for that week and commented that "She generates lots of excitement whether it's an up-tempo ditty like "A Lot of Livin' to Do" or a more relaxed "Gone with the Wind"...Nelson Riddle contributes highly effective support". The album was reviewed by Matt Collar for Allmusic who wrote that "tour de force of an album that presented Smith as the solo star she deserved to be" and described Smith as "an urbanely sophisticated hipster and a clarion diva in the mold of such similarly inclined contemporaries as June Christy, Anita O'Day, and Kay Starr". Collar praised her "...yearning take on "Here's That Rainy Day" and her languorously sensual reading of "I'll Never Be the Same Again"" and concluded that "Ultimately, listening to Smith and her pointed yet dusky, golden-toned voice pouring out of Riddle's shimmering, sky-blue arrangements, one can easily see why Sinatra jumped at the chance to work with her".

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