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22 Sentences With "limns"

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

His story limns years of suffering and uncertainty, and lambasts the arbitrariness of the system.
I just want something of that other world that comes through and limns ours with meaning.
It is here that he first limns the almost heavenly beauty of fly-fishing and Paul's nearly godlike gift for it.
Most impressive is "Dream English Kid 1964-1999 AD," which limns the artist's youth primarily through scraps of video discovered online.
She limns the fantasy of the depressed person, always believing against the odds that it is possible to be free of the condition's endemic weight.
Gorgeous and evocative — its aesthetic is palimpsestic and purposely sketchy — "Pittsburgh" limns a large-scale American loss as it stretches back to become a Vietnam War story.
While Denworth deftly limns the "how" of friendship, she doesn't fully deliver on the "why," because, like the primatologists and neuroscientists she reports on, she restricts her investigation mostly to humans, monkeys and other primates.
While the term "real estate porn" describes our ecstatic obsession with the ways in which a handful of lucky people get to live and the rest of us generally don't, there seems to be no obvious term to characterize the literature that limns the trouble that invariably takes place inside fictional houses, whether they are claustrophobic, haunted or simply falling apart.
Her career limns Britain's colonial history — her family's fortune was destroyed in the South Sea Bubble stock-market crash of 1720, and her final escape from threats of scandal notoriety took the form of flight to a slave-trading fort in what is now Ghana — and the rise of a truly popular literary culture; it also highlights the sexual hypocrisy at the core of both of these developments.
The album opener "Real Death" — the phrase "death is real" makes appearances throughout the album, as if Mr. Elverum is still needing to remind himself of that fact — turns on an awful moment that limns the space between the living and the dead: I go downstairs and outside and you still get mailA week after you died a package with your name on it cameAnd inside was a gift for our daughter you had ordered in secretAnd collapsed there on the front steps I wailedA backpack for when she goes to school a couple years from nowYou were thinking ahead to a future you must have known deep down would not include youThough you clawed at the cliff you were sliding down Occasionally he reaches for air, only to realize how suffocating real life is.
Feirstein was born in Maplewood, New Jersey.Lovenheim, Barbara. "'REAL MAN' LIMNS SINGLES LIFE", The New York Times, October 5, 1986. Accessed December 1, 2007.
Tender as Hellfire is a debut novel by Chicago author Joe Meno. Released by Punk Planet books in 1999. Meno limns a near-fantastical world of trailer park floozies, broken-down '76 Impalas, lost glass eyes, and the daily experiences of two boys trying to make sense of their random, sharp lives.
Vincent Canby of The New York Times called it the film an "entertaining new movie, an old-fashioned backstage musical transplanted to the world of ballet by three people who not only know it but also love it, sentimental clichés and all."Canby, Vincent (November 15, 1977). "'Turning Point' Limns Ballet Life". The New York Times. 48.
Rain Taxi called Olsen's novel "a book about the image of reality," drew connections between it and Edward Albee's play Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, and emphasized its rare investigation into "couples who consciously elect to remain childless," while Paul Petrovic's essay in Extrapolation (journal) limns the relationship of Girl Imagined by Chance to Baudrillard's concepts of simulation and reproduction, and Jean-Luc Marion's phenomenology.
"'Rose Garden' Limns Dark Borders of Reality". The New York Times. 53. Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film two-and- a-half stars out of four and wrote that Kathleen Quinlan was "smashing" in her first major role, but the plot "spends a lot of time—too much time—telling us about the troubled world of mental hospitals," and the fantasy sequences "run on too long and look phony."Siskel, Gene (August 16, 1977).
"'Valentino' Fleetingly Limns Idol" Schallert, Edwin. Los Angeles Times 14 Apr 1951: 8. The film was one of Edward Small's few box office failures. However it did well in South America where Anthony Dexter subsequently went on a dancing tour."Actors Leaving Films Attempt To Lose Professional Names" The Washington Post 19 June 1952: 16 It was announced that Dexter would appear in a remake of The Sheik (1921), the rights for which Small had purchased in order to show segments of that film in Valentino.
New York on Tape; A young New Yorker with a recorder limns the city in its variety of sound. New York Times One of his albums, New York Taxi Driver, was among the first 100 recordings inducted into the National Recording Registry. From 1945 to 1976, Schwartz produced and hosted "Around New York" on WNYC. He transitioned into advertising work in 1958 when approached by Johnson and Johnson about creating ads for the company's baby powder products based on his previous work recording children.
Bono felt the man was decent at heart but was constrained by his squalid living conditions, as well as poor choices, and Bono wanted to illustrate how these poor conditions affected their lives. The resulting lyric does not describe any of this explicitly, but instead limns the emotional atmosphere that the couple live in. In doing so, the song is not judgmental and shows sympathy for the woman. A character monologue from Wim Wenders' 1984 film Paris, Texas, was also a significant influence on Bono's writing of the song.
Chasm Provincial Park is a provincial park in British Columbia, Canada, located near the town of Clinton. Expanded to in 1995, the park was originally created in 1940 to preserve and promote a feature known as the Painted Chasm, or simply The Chasm, a gorge created from melting glacial waters eroding a lava plateau over a 10 million year span called the Chilcotin Group. The walls of the Chasm contain tones of red, brown yellow, and purple and are an average of in height. The Chasm is approximately wide and long, and lies adjacent to the route of the Cariboo Road, which limns the northern apex of the Chasm alongside the Canadian National Railway line.
Map of Tlingit kwaans and territories, Alaska Native Knowledge Network There are three Indian Reserves of the Taku River Tlingit First Nation around the south end of the lake: Jennings River Indian Reserve No. 8, Teslin Lake Indian Reserve No. 7, and Teslin Lake Indian Reserve No. 9; in the same area had been a Hudson's Bay Company trading post. On the Yukon portion of the lake there are three Indian Reserves of the Teslin Tlingit Council - Teslin Post Indian Reserve No. 13, Nisutlin Indian Reserve No. 14 and Nisutlin Bay Indian Reserve No. 15, and the community of Teslin, which is located where the Alaska Highway meets the lake, following its northern/eastern shore from there towards Whitehorse. The Nisutlin Plateau limns the eastern side of the lake north of the mouth of the Teslin River and extends into Yukon.
The film, based on the Mrkonjić Grad incident, is centered on the story of an American naval flight officer, played by Owen Wilson, who was shot down over Bosnia, who ends up uncovering a massacre during the Bosnian conflict. In 2004, he starred with Daryl Hannah and Denise Richards in Yo Puta, a gritty docu-style prostitution tale, based on a bestselling book by Spaniard Isabel Pisano, that tracks the slow descent of a girl, into the sex business, which is interspersed with interviews with real-life prostitutes. That same year, he joined the cast of 24 as Ramon Salazar, the ruthless leader of a drug cartel who is put into—and later broken out of—prison by Jack Bauer. In 2007, Joaquim de Almeida limns a brutal foreman named Baxter, in the Antonio Cuadri's El corazón de la tierra, a heady romance with a social conscience.
"Marks, Peters. "Round House's 'Columbinus' Limns The Darkest Corners of Adolescence" The Washington Post, March 9, 2005 The Variety reviewer (of the Off-Broadway production) wrote: "While the first act overdoes the buildup, act two has Miller and Rogers manfully shouldering their complicated characters and delivering the goods on their tormented inner lives. Here, scribes Karam and Paparelli drop the universal material of teen angst garnered from interviews in favor of words drawn from the private diaries, emails and videotapes that go a long way in exploring the twisted thinking behind the shootings... the production is especially well served by the wall of sound created by Martin Desjardins to suggest the demonic thoughts ricocheting in the boys' brains as they bought guns, made bombs, dressed to kill and worked themselves into a homicidal frame of mind by obsessing on their grievances as social outcasts."Stasio, Marilyn. "Review.

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