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"lilt" Definitions
  1. the pleasant way in which a person’s voice rises and falls
  2. a regular rising and falling pattern in music, with a strong rhythm

208 Sentences With "lilt"

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

He wanted to have that kind of lilt and sensation.
If you listened, you heard it: a lilt in his voice.
You can almost hear her saying this in that signature laidback lilt.
Extra cheese with a tickle of radish and a bottle of Lilt?
"They're examples of people," he continued, speaking in a pleasing Scottish lilt.
And Adam Cork's music is full of the blarney of Celtic lilt.
His honeyed lilt sweetens dancehall macho with gentle affection and melodic cheer.
And yet it all feels like a nightmare recounted with a cheery lilt.
Wieczorek is an odd name for someone with such a south London lilt.
Lilt, which provides machine translation for enterprise, uses professional translators in this role.
Sequoia Capital led a $9.5 million Series A round in automated translation platform Lilt.
The epic girliness of it is such a delight, as is her British lilt.
As a side benefit, treating people as rational also gives economics an egalitarian lilt.
From the tables around me I heard the lilt of the local Veneto tongue.
Human figures have a goofy, spindly comedic lilt but are often attacking each other.
But she ended that sentence with an upward lilt as if posing a question.
Of course, McConaughey delivers his charitable messages in the lovable Southern lilt he's known for.
They're also working hard on connecting with academics and building the translation community around Lilt.
Michael Fassbender's soft lilt is in my ear spouting nonsense about assassins and their creed.
She speaks with the faint lilt of a German accent that I mistake for Dutch.
"It's always this way," he said to me, his voice had a deep Irish lilt.
Torn between lilt and crunch, Balvin insists on both, and gets it every which way.
This beast of a song is tightly focused, and yet still maintains a playful lilt.
Italienne gave them an Eastern European lilt by serving them with beets, horseradish and applesauce.
Anything more would overpower Keating's voice, a feminine lilt that hardly registers above a whisper.
His baritone lilt adds sadness to any song he sings, no matter what the subject.
There are odd and charming additions strewn across Patterns, all adding to the steady, classical lilt.
It was the first time the entire day I heard his voice rise above a lilt.
WHEN AUDREY HEPBURN died in 1993, newspapers' obituaries often mentioned the unusual lilt of her voice.
The 29 languages Lilt supports right now will be 43 by the end of the year.
Many an Oscar winning thespian has tried to affect the Emerald Isle lilt, with mixed success.
Or perhaps it's the up-turned Irish lilt that gets you dreaming of rolling emerald hills.
It's a close look at the low points of his addiction, delivered in a knowing lilt.
But no one quite knows how the singsong lilt of the Jewish clergy got its start.
The chicken broth had a gingery, Asian lilt, and its roasted carrots had a concentrated sweetness.
"Mom, I thought you said I was born in 1993," coos Gypsy with her trademark innocent lilt.
A lilt in her grandmother's voice suggested her reluctance to serve the dish before New Year's Day.
Listen to do Carmo's dulcet tones, the trot of the guitarra portuguesa, the longing lilt of the strings.
There's Riyadh Khalaf, who got his lilt from his Irish mother and his name from his Iraqi father.
In each case, the source genre is denuded, reduced to an unobtrusive lilt — reggae as signifier, not engine.
In Badlands, Sissy Spacek spins dry, folksy ruminations in a Southern lilt over horrific and quotidian events alike.
But the actors, from Harris to Paul Ritter are all excellent, and none affect a faux-Russian lilt.
And though the substance of her words stays with me, the particular lilt of her voice is gone.
Performing as Phosphorescent, he sings elegantly understated lyrics over a country-rock lilt, tinged with hymnody and psychedelia.
Black, a jock with a stoner's lilt, was a former football captain at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
"Are you...Jennelle?" it quavers, the lilt of an adolescent British accent turning the question into a yodel.
The Paris-based Mr Mélenchon is a member of parliament for Marseille, a city known for its Provençal lilt.
We highlighted a synthetic Ellen DeGeneres clip last month that had her trademark lilt but still sounds very robotic.
Holidays are fun, even saying the word "holiday" is a pleasurable experience; it has a certain lilt to it.
Save for the lilt in his voice, Garett Wipf comes off like a typical 18-year-old city kid.
Before her sentencing, she'd earned a reputation as a sharp-tongued lyricist with a raspy lilt and blond bangs.
Organs, strings and accordions meld with guitars, pan flutes, trumpets and high-pitched vocals featuring an unmistakably Andean lilt.
And he brought out the dancing lilt of passages that reveal a young Wagner still influenced by Italian styles.
But that movement didn't quite crest dramatically; "Un Bal" had extroverted flair but not more elusive, more memorable lilt.
"Are you here to get a new D.S. license or to merely renew?" she'll ask in a posh lilt.
There's no denying, Cyrus' voice is really suited to that traditional country lilt that goes so well with the song.
Her syllables come out rounded and quiet, with guttural French Rs and a Southern lilt that makes each sentence undulate.
I loved it's glossy pop synths and her husky lilt so much she made my best of 2015 list, easy.
At 28, Olivia spoke with a lilt that was more Mississippi than Michigan, and presented as more blunt than sweet.
Mr. Perahia was especially inspired in the great, searching slow movement, which he played with unusual lilt and finespun filigree.
"I thought he was a good guy," said Mr. Dunphy, who still has the lilt of his native Northern Ireland.
Don't underestimate the power of hearing a woman from a nation with a small-country complex proudly owning her lilt.
It belongs in the footwell of a car, rattling around with crisp packets, de-icer and an empty Lilt can.
When we got the demo file earlier I was excited to hear the slight Irish lilt in your robotic voice.
She recites from her autobiography with a Jamaican lilt and a disciplinarian's glare that dares you not to pay attention.
Still, those recordings, "Alice Blue Gown" and "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles," have the propulsion and lilt that characterized New Orleans.
She took the stage and started the slow guitar lilt of "Star Witness," and within seconds, the hail began to fall.
The sparse guitars in this track draw out the slow torment buried in every lilt of Folick's voice in this song.
He's affable, often grins when he speaks, and has an inviting, slightly Midwestern lilt, despite being a lifelong resident of Virginia.
Now, grab yourself a cold can of Lilt, a big bag of cashews, and pull your chair up nice and close.
In her Georgia lilt, Yates explained that she had repeatedly warned the White House about Flynn, contradicting the Trump Administration's story.
A steady lilt, alternately peaceful and hallucinatory, presides over the work, which is devoid of punctuation except for frequent question marks.
The contrast of Calderwood's striking ability and her softly spoken Scottish lilt was a big hit with fans of the show.
The British actor also says it with an old time-y lilt to his voice that makes it *chef's kiss* perfect.
The most memorable performances are carried by a mysterious lilt that makes them the next best thing to dancing on air.
In Brazil, a tongue derived from German immigrants, Riograndenser Hunsrückish, blends Portuguese words with Teutonic suffixes and the lilt of Italian.
Her own Icelandic sometimes draws criticism from Icelanders not quite sure if someone with a foreign lilt can represent them in politics.
Torn by competing sonic extremes, the plinky, bouncy, rattley synthesizers falter between abrasion and lilt, and often collapse into a squeaky dinkiness.
His voice hasn't lost any of its youthful lilt since I first interviewed him back in 1995, when we were both teenagers.
His voice hasn't lost any of its youthful lilt since I first interviewed him back in 27, when we were both teenagers.
"If Germany is strong, it's because Bavaria is strong," Mr. Söder intoned from the stage in his Frankish lilt, to approving cheers.
The song "Old Town Road" by Lil Nas X has the boomy trap of hip-hop and the lilt of country twang.
In the finale, a rustic dance, Mr. Hadelich and the orchestra conveyed the music's rousing energy, while somehow maintaining a breezy lilt.
There's an upward lilt to his voice that suggests a kind of naïve wonder—someone happily lost in his own boundless curiosity.
The gated trailer park had 100 homes, which the girls, in a light Irish lilt, call "caravans," arranged in 10 rows of 10.
The production value here makes the longing lilt on "Holding On" feel like a soft collision with whatever's going on in Tirzah's head.
"Once You Lose Your Heart," a ballad for Sally, is a lovely tune (with banal words); the title number has an infectious lilt.
The Brazilian-born Mr. Roditi fused in his playing the gentle lilt of samba with the drive of the post-bop trumpet tradition.
With an Irish lilt and the delicate walk of a dancer, Palmer gives no hint of the years of pain upon meeting her today.
It can be, and a company called Lilt is quietly doing so — but crucially, it isn't even trying to leave the human element behind.
Lilt claims a 5x increase in words per hour translated, and says the results are as good or better than a strictly human translation.
Cat is a young musical autodidact—both fiercely talented and plain old fierce—with an Irish accent more of a thwack than a lilt.
The finest track is "Ma S-Abok"; softer and more nuanced, the undulating rhythms lilt to lyrics that reflect on the importance of community.
In terms of the video—which we're premiering below—we find Marks triplicated, her body twitching and gliding to each beat and melodic lilt.
The Polonaise exuded vitality in its outer sections, but between them settled into an easy, breathy lilt that brought the dance vividly to life.
Ms. McMahon impressed Republican operatives as a quick study in retail politics, charming residents in person with a southern lilt and an easy laugh.
I'll remember the flower clearly, but I might miss other details — like a bird's lilt or a whale's fin emerging in my peripheral vision.
Igor sparkles and growls, but Tyler hasn't resolved his conflicting fondnesses for lilt and abrasion — you can tell, because he feels the need to schematize.
Janina Gavankar is stellar as the cynical and dry witted Lola, while Khoi Dao's wavering lilt perfectly encapsulates a bumbling ne'er-do-well in Milo.
Maybe that version of myself would graduate with more honors or friends or confidence, with a lilt in her step as she accepted her diploma.
Voiced quite stunningly by Thompson, in a singsong lilt that is not remotely sweet, Miles and Flora are just as unnerving as the speechless ghosts.
The Hobsbawms moved to Vienna, where he spent his early childhood (he spoke German with an audible Viennese lilt all his life) in genteel poverty.
The unrelenting crackle of that call is the opposite to the smooth, softly Auto-Tune-coated lilt that I'm used to hearing on his records.
The son of a mechanic from Lower Bavaria, who betrays the region's lilt in both English and German, has worked at Siemens for 40 years.
Whenever I hear him play, I think I'd better go practice for a year, just to get one phrase with that lilt and life. video
The company said the program will soon have "a new, more natural voice" that will be more "expressive" than the robotic lilt it currently has.
KELLY EVANS: And by the end of our conversation, I'll probably -- you know, my Southern lilt, I'll be saying "y'all" in 2400 minutes time here.
He also was an advisor at Lilt, a real-time deep learning translation product that spun out of Chris Manning's famed Stanford NLP research lab.
"Kara, Kara, Kaaaaaaara," she'll intone with a dulcet lilt, which draws you in and makes you quiet until the moment she goes in for the kill.
Prince Hamzah's rich Arabic lilt (acquired during a youth living with tribesmen) appeals to the Bedouin and contrasts with the king, who grew up speaking English.
"Rio", with its Latin lilt, demonstrated how Mr Nesmith's palette expanded from the mid-1970s onwards, as he released music on his own Pacific Arts label.
There are so many human imperfections in your speech pattern, your personality embedded into every lilt, unspoken emotions communicated through each prolonged pause or sudden exclamation.
Mr. Jorgenson asked the congregation to stand, and the worship band struck up a catchy song called "I'm Going Free (Jailbreak)," played with a hoedown lilt.
A pigeon was cooing, a turtledove answering, The forest was joyous with the [cry] of the stork, The forest was lavishly joyous with the francolin's [lilt].
Ranky Tanky, from Charleston, S.C., sang old Gullah songs — some of them sly moral lessons — in arrangements that connected their beat to a New Orleans lilt.
He has an almost posh Parisian accent, but his English, like the Creole that he spoke on the streets as a boy, has kept its island lilt.
Dr. Bolte, a mild-mannered U.C.S.C. professor with a soothing lilt to his voice, became one of the most visible promoters of the project in community meetings.
Richard picked up a punitive lilt in the man's tone, but when he opened his eyes the car was moving and the man was silent, staring ahead.
Mr. Roditi's playing was a seamless fusion of Brazilian music and jazz, combining the gentle lilt of samba with the drive of the post-bop trumpet tradition.
Born in Ireland nearly 90 years ago, he still has a musical lilt to his voice, and wears a suit and tie every day, all custom made.
He spoke with a mid-Atlantic accent that recalled Cary Grant, but when the conversation turned to his childhood in South Carolina, a southern lilt announced itself.
She's unabashedly Latina, with her slight Dominican lilt that producers clearly never told her to hide, and her cursed, real-world bound altero-ego's name, which is Jacinda.
Frantic rhythm game Lilt Line started on iOS, meanwhile, but also works better with Wii Remote tilt controls and its heavy dubstep soundtrack blasted out through bigger speakers.
At 2 in the morning, with my insomnia machine strapped to my head, I listen to a volunteer reading George Meredith's "The Egoist" in a South Indian lilt.
I would have loved listening to the lilt of Jamaican patois; so much of the text feels as if it was meant to be heard, not just read.
Rick's voice is relatively pleasing, if baffling: there's a hint of a hint of a Southern lilt, which makes no sense seeing as he's from upstate New York.
So it's fitting that the Korean-American artist needed some time to cocoon before releasing her newest song, "Butterfly," a soft love ballad decorated with Lenis' signature caressing lilt.
On one endless groove after another, they clatter and tinkle and lilt with marked mildness; their interlocking guitar hooks are models of professional teamwork, their corny brass politely supplementary.
"I've clearly been hired, and promoted since I've got here, and I'm completely open about who I am," said Deere, who grins widely and speaks with an Arkansas lilt.
The album sticks in one's ear partially because of Kline's softly messy sonic signature, mixing electric guitar chug with acoustic guitar lilt to conjure breezy, rickety, restless forward motion.
It's what you might term the "gay voice," which typically means a man who speaks with a singsong lilt, an affected lisp, greater pitch variation, and a flamboyant flair.
"Get your shoes on and come with me," he told my 10-year-old brother, Martin, his Irish lilt edged with a steel that caused his son to scramble.
A big part of boating is aggressive cartoon snoozing — sprawling on the couch with a hat over your face, nodding in and out on the lilt of the tide.
Today, third-generation Aurovillian toddlers of mixed ethnicity dart barefooted up and down dirt paths playing with desi dogs, their French and English baby babble set to a Tamil lilt.
Mongillo's voice has a waver to it, a subtle lilt that undercuts Shinji's attempts at manliness, even as you can feel the creep of puberty infect even their lightest deliveries.
His vocals can be delicate—they lilt and crack, and are often left nearly naked in the mix—or operatic, but the melodies always hit you right in the sternum.
But for a campaign stocked with Washington veterans and millennial organizers, headquartered in a Brooklyn neighborhood where Mr. Hale's beard might register as ironic but for his Southern lilt, Mrs.
Mr. Uffelman, in his Southern lilt, recalled speaking for 30 minutes to a farmer fixing a tractor, who had concerns about his health care and corruption in the farm economy.
Driven by the lilt of the blues (ghosted in the buried rhymes of books/looks, concern/earn, blue/new, cracked/black), the layers multiply and intersect with sad, irrefutable logic.
The lilt of her voice alone could have carried these few seconds of content, but she and her musicians made the effort to match the rhythm and find its song.
To help rid Alexa of its cyborgian lilt, Amazon recently upgraded its speech synthesis markup language tags, which developers use to code more natural verbal patterns into Alexa's skills, or apps.
"It's fine cuz I am just a girl / It's just a dream / A woman really needs a man to make her scream", Marika sings in a cool, calm and collected lilt.
"It's not like someone puts on Kendrick Lamar and then half the people give an eye roll," Mr. Cervony, who traveled from Louisiana State University, said with a positive-vibes lilt.
While Ben E. King's original, Top 10 take on the song had a romantic air and a faithful Latin lilt, Ms. Franklin turned it into a rumbling, funk-rock rave-up.
Ms. Shocron, a pianist, and Mr. Díaz, a drummer, both hail from Argentina, and together they make wobbly, dreamlike music with the lilt of folk song and the expansiveness of jazz.
His lead lines—often expressed with swooning synthesizers, the lilt of a slide guitar—are direct, but smudgy, as if scrawled onto the back of a postcard with a fountain pen.
Their music is still haunted by that same sort of gloom, but its brightened by their affinity for the lilt and yearning of R&B, which produces a sort of soulful chiaroscuro.
Her smoky, honeyed voice, with just a slight Gullah lilt, perfectly suited her radio work, which ranged well beyond food; a series on AIDS in America won a big award in 1990.
Speaking with a singsong lilt, she referred to herself as Mama as she delivered an uplifting version of Scripture that included personal encounters with the divine and linked spirituality to material success.
Many of Condit's unnerving, fairy-tale-like videos feature the artist's own narration, and her real-life voice mirrors that of her voice-over work, a kind of singsong, deliberately unplaceable lilt.
The concerned lilt in his voice, the hopeless scanning of the dark, the ropelike leash limp in his hand, the slow operatic rise toward panic—Robert oscillated between rage and drunken culpability.
She was also recognizable for the lilt of her native Kentucky accent but still managed to get elected to her Rochester-centered district in upstate New York 16 times — a formidable achievement.
With her burnished, supple alto, Victory started "Feeling Good," a Nina Simone showpiece, as a bluesy reflection, then shifted it toward the Caribbean lilt of her own songs calling for self-acceptance.
A Dark and Stormy glaze gives a Caribbean lilt to the long-braised pork butt; fried pecans and red peas are a shout-out to the South, where Mr. Brochu grew up.
On his journey, the Mandalorian comes across a bevy of interesting new characters, including what fans are calling a "baby Yoda" and droid with a familiar lilt: Bounty hunter droid, IG-11.
"If it were me, I would have probably not threatened to sue The Guardian," Ms. Brown said, with a Southern lilt in her voice and the easy charm of a onetime broadcast anchor.
The Australian Fimmel delivers Ragnar's lines in a light, calm voice topped with a thin layer of accent – a lilt that suggests the sound of ice cubes clinking in a gin and tonic.
Initially it's Erez's dark synths and vocals—which flit between haunting lilt and an alien sing-speak—that draw listeners, but it's her sense of empathy and awareness that give her music impact.
She also channels some serious "Monster" vibes on a Section Boyz' "Lock Arff" rework, released a flip of Rihanna's "Work" with Sneakbo, and lent her Jamaican lilt to Jeremih's mixtape Late Nights: Europe.
But Caridad China had its own bustle earlier in the night, of families at tables laminated with flags from across Latin America, under the lilt of two TVs tuned to Spanish-language channels.
Lukas Graham, from Denmark, writes neatly turned songs that merge the lilt of pop-soul with the quick cadences of hip-hop, and he sings about earnest striving that gets its deserved reward.
And, passing the mic back and forth with Fredo, he rides this sparse beat with the lilt of someone who's just caught a glance of themselves in the mirror when looking particularly fresh.
It opens with the gentle Caribbean lilt Mr. Chesney learned from Jimmy Buffett, but that's a fake-out; with the chorus, a giant guitar twang and booming tom-toms reverberate to distant horizons.
The track meshes the 4/4 thump and four-chord cycle of international dance music with the syncopated percussion of South African kwaito and crucially, the lilt and tickle of countermelodies from African guitars.
Seventeen year old rap purists may spill Snapple juice all over their Nike SB Janoski's on the basis of the song's daytime radio lilt, but for everyone else: we're all on our way to greatness.
The two move into a sequence of repeating minor phrases, with the lilt of a bolero or a flamenco lament, letting waves of melody do their work over a graceful nine-and-a-half minutes.
In poetic terms, the name is a spondee, two syllables in a row that claim equal force, disrupting the lilt of ordinary speech, like a command or a shout: Shut up, no way, get out.
For example, a small but much-admired startup, Lilt, uses phrase-based MT as the basis for a translation, but an easy-to-use interface allows the translator to correct and improve the MT system's output.
When Mr Cook joined the company in 22.5 he changed all that, deploying his soothing Alabama lilt and a fearsome work ethic (he gets up at 226am) to forge an unrivalled supply chain running through Asia.
I am not a religious Jew, but on the High Holy Days I like to be in a synagogue, listen to the ancient lilt of Hebrew prayer and allow my mind to drift from daily cares.
"At the second autopsy there were a total of eight gunshots -- a total of eight gunshot wounds, meaning that he was hit by eight bullets," Dr. Bennet Omalu said in the lilt of his native Nigeria.
Ms. Taha, a bubbly 32-year-old mother of three who speaks German with a soft regional lilt, recalled the flowers and toys the mayor brought when he first welcomed her family to their new home.
On the end-stage "memory care" floor where Linda lives today, many residents who can no longer talk still appear to enjoy hearing about times long past, or swaying to the lilt of classic hit-parade songs.
Much of that had to do with Mr. Eubanks, a guitarist with an extravagant expressive palette and a technique that merges postbop fluency with flamenco and classical fingerstyles as well as the lilt of West African blues.
It's like he's trying to hide any trace of his body—downright mortified to have any sexual attraction at all—and Mongillo's voice, with its softness and lilt, conveys that better than any other performer has since.
It could be taken as depressingly monochrome, as the cover of the record suggests, but there's something about the way the synths come back in after a brief vocal break that causes it to lilt slightly heavenward.
If a company's translation budget and process before using Lilt limited it to targeting 5 or 6 new markets in a given period, that could double or triple for the same price and staff, depending on efficiency gains.
Mr. Muti tolerates no overplaying, and Mr. Maestri here won with restraint, making the audience crack up at just the slight, randy lilt he gave a single word — "parla" ("speak") — in the first scene of the second act.
" McElroy, a mild-mannered white man in his 217s with a genteel lilt to his speech, told me that "the ultimate success" for a Chapter 2130 filing is "to pay it out, get a discharge, get out of debt.
Before Dana Rohrabacher was a congressman from southern California, a speechwriter for Ronald Reagan, or a journalist, he was a walking stoner-surfer stereotype, albeit one with a rightward lilt—a folk-singing activist who loved weed and hated the government.
" Some say that working with machine translation is becoming mandatory: According to Spence Green, CEO of Lilt, a machine-assisted translation platform, machine translation "is a requirement now, whereas for older translators, they didn't even have to use translation memory software.
There was no mute, Not even Cootie's, that could set the measure Of confidently opened casks of treasure Lighting the cave, and turning the blue suit Of tactful mourning to a pirate kit: The lawlessness, the skipping lilt of it.
The verses have a smiley lilt over a snappy backbeat, and the chorus marches with pealing major chords as Aurora's voice multiplies all over the place: girl-group harmonies answered by oohs and oh-ohs and la-las and ya-yas.
As they do every four years, presidential candidates are racing around the country straining to endear themselves to voters on a local level, smiling warmly in Iowa farm country, effecting a preacherly lilt for religious black audiences in South Carolina.
Chance the Rapper and Kanye West may use gospel elements to give their music a reverent lilt, but the genre hasn't had many crossover evangelists since Kirk Franklin's hip-hop bombast brought it to the pop charts in the 1990s.
Now and then, and in a segment of Thursday's concert, Aventura switched from the lilt of bachata to keyboard-centered pop-R&B ballads; it also dipped into Puerto Rican reggaetón and the speedy merengue that dominated Dominican music in the 1990s.
"Carolina" has a Stealer's Wheel-esque lilt, "Only Angel" is his Rolling Stones moment, and heaviest of all is fan favorite "Kiwi," which has proven so popular that Styles is now called on to play it multiple times a night on his tour.
But the actual DJ Kool Herc never completely erased his Jamaican lilt: You can just catch it in the 1984 BBC documentary Beat This as he drives around the Bronx in a top-down convertible, pointing out the locations of his legendary parties.
Jeff Jensen, Entertainment Weekly: The return of Gilmore Girls is winsome and riotous...Listening to the rhythm, lilt, and inspired language of their dialogue is music to the ears — and in one hilarious passage, expresses in the form of an actual musical.
"But those are the ways it changes your life," said Ms. Chin, 43, who has a curly, deep-red mohawk, a Jamaican lilt to her speech and, at her throat, a pair of silver necklaces, one of which is emblazoned with a single word: BadAss.
"Information on a huge number of topics is only available in English," said Lilt co-founder and CEO Spence Green; he encountered this while doing graduate work in the Middle East, simultaneously learning Arabic and the limitations placed on those who didn't speak English.
Boom bap and bass heavy tracks like the Martin-produced "Grown Woman," ethereal, soul-laden cuts like the IAmNobodi-produced "If This Love," and the rock-infused "Poison"—produced by Omär and Josh Jar—are distinctive, but become cohesive under the particular heavenly lilt of Omär's voice.
It comes down to this: If you're the kind of person who can religiously attend yoga classes and not get annoyed at the teacher's "getting in touch with your inner self" talk in a dream-like lilt while reach fruitlessly for your toes, apps like eMindful are for you.
Doom remains the order of the day, through a perverse rendering of Sabbathian tones that lurches down towards the hateful recesses of drone and sludge; scattered samples color the recording, as does the operatic lilt of guest vocalist Kristi, which hangs suspended in air near the album's close.
A Burmese cover of "Despacito" might lilt over the speakers, accompanying forkfuls of pork belly contoured with funky, forthright ngapi (shrimp paste) or beef shank, relaxed and obliging after a long braise with curry leaves and cardamom, both green with its delicate menthol and black with its smoke.
Ms. Holmes, who speaks with the almost Caribbean Gullah lilt that distinguishes the speech of many African-Americans here, recalled, as if it were yesterday, the quiet before Hurricane Hugo hit, and the moment when the silence was shattered by a violent roar that sounded like a freight train coming.
The only interesting factoids are that it was one of the first shows to go without a laugh track — you really don't know what you got 'til it's gone — and that a beloved, yet oddly uncredited, Los Angeles Dodgers announcer lent his mellifluous Irish lilt to the wacky weekly shenanigans.
Among the colour of "Bofou Safou", a tongue-in-cheek take on Malian men who prefer dancing to working, and the disorder of the album's title track, a musing on the country's political chaos, lie bluesy gems like "Ta promesse" and "Mokou Mokou", which lure the listener in with a satisfying lilt.
Joan Didion is perhaps one of the greatest living masters of the form, and Diane Keaton's sultry lilt captures the nuances of her prose, becoming firm when it needs to be, or inquisitive, or even "despondent," as Didion claims to have been upon publishing the title essay about the Haight-Ashbury counterculture.
With his quintet, Inside Straight, this masterful bassist (and emerging impresario) makes sense of a broad lineage in jazz and black music: You'll detect hints of Blue Note swing, '60s soul, Afro-Caribbean lilt and Coltrane-esque modal muscle, though the band pulls it all together into a sound of its own.
Though Mongillo's lilt comes back out when Kaworu sacrifices himself for Shinji's sake—a glint of the "true self" Kaworu always saw in him—you can hear the dissociation again after Shinji deals the final death blow, their voice returning to the same monotone inflection we heard during Shinji's target practice moment in Episode 3.
He hosts Slate's popular linguistics podcast, "Lexicon Valley," and, in another recent book, "Words on the Move" (Henry Holt), writes acceptingly of such trends as "uptalk" (the tendency to end declarative sentences with the upward lilt of the voice that usually accompanies a question) and the peppering of "like" throughout the speech of younger Americans.
On his 2015 release it's all about me—which I understood at the time to be an album but is now being referred to as a "demo tape"—he filled straightforward, home-recorded songs with little moments of care, an upward lilt at the end of a fragile vocal run here, a haphazardly double-tracked harmony there.
It is patchy, spotty, and often frustrating, but at its best—the towering, world class "Losing My Mind," the swaying Broadway lilt of "So Sorry, I Said," the technicolor slush of her "Rent" cover—Results is a tempting glimpse into alternate reality where Judy Garland's daughter is the voice of every night out you've ever had.
"We will have a national emergency, and we will then be sued, and they will sue us in the 9th Circuit, even though it shouldn't be there, and we will possibly get a bad ruling, and then we will get another bad ruling, and then we will end up in the Supreme Court," Trump said, his voice animated by an annoyed lilt.
The New Zealand-born author (who is now a professor at the University of Dundee in Scotland, and is best-known in the United States for "Rain," her slim, heartbreaking novel of sibling love) divides "The Big Music" into movements, and the novel's patterning of language (which reminds me, in parts, of Woolf's "The Waves") has all the lilt and rhythm of a score.
The paranoid ravings of Johnson, Hannity, and indeed Trump himself have a familiar lilt: They echo the venerable tradition of conspiracy theories that has flared up again and again in U.S. history, from the fear of the Bavarian Illuminati in the 1790s to the anti-Masonic fervor of the 1820s to the anti-Catholic scare of the mid-19th century to the anti-communist crusade of the 1950s.
"The market has re-priced the chances of a June rate move to 30 percent from 5 percent but the hurdles for a June hike remain substantial and gold has avoided significant technical damage, which has encouraged modest short-covering as well as continued ETF-related buying despite a hawkish lilt in Fed commentary today," said Tai Wong, director of base and precious metals trading for BMO Capital Markets in New York.

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