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10 Sentences With "life's works"

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

This document, acquired by the Frick in 2883, enabled art historians to reconstruct Valadier's career and the remainder of his life's works, whose survival rate seems to rise in direct proportion to its distance from Rome.
Arthur Lowe died in Kinoulton, 3 February 1940. A posthumous exhibition was held in 1943 showing over 250 of his paintings at the Laing Art Gallery (Newcastle) before his wife, Mary Lowe, donated and distributed his life's works to various galleries and museums around northern England.
Moss graduated from Miami Northwestern High School. In Miami, he gained his experience and popularity over the course of several years. The not-for-profit foundation was named in recognition of his life's works, promotion of non- violence and constant willingness to help others in the business.
He retired to his native town, and spent his last years in collecting old engravings. He died at Orléans on 22 December 1859. In 1832 Leber had been elected as a member of the Societé des Antiquaires de France, and in the Bulletin of this society (vol. i., 1860) is to be found the most correct and detailed account of his life's works.
Currently there is an active Historical Society, gathering for many annual events including a "Burns Night", which celebrates the life's works of the Scottish poet Robert Burns. The evening includes a traditional dinner of haggis. Heritage Day is observed every second Saturday in April, complete with pipe and drums, food, clans, and Native American, Civil War, and pirate re- enactors.
On 9 December 2010 a Literary Institute was founded at Rudolstadt, where she had once lived, and named after her. The Institute has as its principal objectives: (1) the regular award of a literary contribution to Humanism and Peace, (2) to bring together the life's works of authors whose books were banned during the Nazi years, and make these available and (3) to train and publish young authors.
George Reynolds Dale (born February 5, 1867, Monticello, Indiana; died March 27, 1936, Muncie, Indiana) was an American newspaper editor and politician. He was best known as the editor of the Muncie Post-Democrat from 1920–1936, and as mayor of Muncie from 1930–1935. His life's works include the starting of several newspapers and battling bootleggers and the Ku Klux Klan as mayor of Muncie. In 1932, Dale was convicted of violating Prohibition laws.
The film is based on the play Pictures from the Insects' Life by Josef and Karel Čapek, which Švankmajer describes as following: "From the Life of Insects is a misanthropic play. My screenplay only extends this misanthropy, as man is more like an insect and this civilisation is more like an anthill. One should also remember the message in Kafka’s Metamorphosis." His life's works, inimitable style and voice have had far reaching influences on the world of animation.
In 814 CE, al-Shāfi'ī decided to leave Baghdad for Egypt. The precise reasons for his departure from Iraq are uncertain, but it was in Egypt that he would meet another tutor, Sayyida Nafisa bint Al-Hasan, who would also financially support his studies, and where he would dictate his life's works to students. Several of his leading disciples would write down what al-Shāfi'ī said, who would then have them read it back aloud so that corrections could be made. Al-Shāfi'ī biographers all agree that the legacy of works under his name are the result of those sessions with his disciples.
David refused to intervene in her favor, and she was executed. Vernet blamed David for her death, and the episode followed him for the rest of his life and after. In the last 50 years David has enjoyed a revival in popular favor and in 1948 his two-hundredth birthday was celebrated with an exhibition at the Musée de l'Orangerie in Paris and at Versailles showing his life's works. Following World War II, Jacques-Louis David was increasingly regarded as a symbol of French national pride and identity, as well as a vital force in the development of European and French art in the modern era.

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