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"melodramatically" Definitions
  1. in a way that is full of exciting and extreme emotions or events; in an exaggerated reaction to something
"melodramatically" Synonyms

68 Sentences With "melodramatically"

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

It melodramatically contains a cataclysmic pictorial voodoo of swirling feminine sexuality.
Warning: There is plenty of coarse language liberally and melodramatically sprinkled throughout. Acting!
Rather melodramatically, Ms Vestager says what seem to be free services are ones for which you "pay with your life".
Intertwined, they melodramatically let go, suspending themselves on a kind of long bungee cord spun from their most persistent slime.
Swift sings melodramatically, and with an indeterminate accent, but isn't over the top in the way Webber is best suited.
In fact, the public fascination with melodramatically feeling very attacked arose nearly simultaneously thanks to a heated moment from Drag Race.
There are parts of The Accountant that are so deeply ridiculous and melodramatically overwrought that people laughed out loud during the screening.
As an author in this period Wolff was unusually frank about women's sexuality and daring in her willingness to write (albeit melodramatically) about race.
Will you remember an exhausted Helen melodramatically Googling "Can Narcolepsy Kill You," or Joanie referring to her boss's unborn child as a "carbon bomb"?
Only Collins knew what the man he'd installed as security detail had just now whispered in Mohammed's ear, melodramatically, as per instruction: Face it.
It's why people use a photo of war criminal Slobodan Praljak drinking poison after being sentenced to prison at The Hague to melodramatically depict "FML" moments.
In a forum post melodramatically titled "Our Pursuit of Burdenless Speed," OnePlus CEO Pete Lau has confirmed some key specs for the company's upcoming flagship phone.
I couldn't melodramatically sigh and gaze out the window of a taxi while Frank Ocean turned me into the tragically beautiful protagonist of an indie film.
Every four years, Iowa goes speed dating, and then melodramatically announces her choice to the rest of us, as if we're supposed to follow her lead.
On successive albums, she tinkered with ingredients and proportions: a touch more psychedelic guitar on "Ultraviolence" in 2014, melodramatically dissonant string arrangements on "Honeymoon" in 2015.
In the first video, one of the girls make an attempt to take out older brother Drake, swinging at him until he falls melodramatically on the ground.
"I remember thinking to myself, a little melodramatically, someone might think it's crazy to be out here with sharks in the water," Freeman told Cape Cod Times.
The state of denial she's in has some consequences, most notably — and, frankly, a bit melodramatically — in the form of her deteriorating relationship with her husband (Wendell Pierce).
His current project is building an organization in Europe, melodramatically called "the Movement," designed to bolster Europe's xenophobic far-right parties in advance of the 2019 European Parliament election.
Fending off a rogue and homicidal AI would prove to be stressful on any couple, but instead of melodramatically crumbling, their relationship only gets stronger through this trial-by-fire.
To put it melodramatically, being diagnosed with a long-term health condition in my late teens felt like a new adult existence had just begun, only to grind to a halt.
It's a jumble, a mishmash of contradictory styles and ideas, worst where it strives to have a meaning: the dancers melodramatically confronting the "system" of the fourth wall or a light shining in their faces.
Charles de Gaulle saluting a fading shadow of French troops in Algeria in 1958; and Nikita S. Khrushchev melodramatically wielding an ax 0003 miles outside Paris after walking out on a summit conference with Eisenhower in 1960.
The Team 225 leader then blew a pillow-size fire ball into the warm Hollywood air, then turned to the camera triumphantly, squawking, "I'm a dragon!" as he flapped his arms melodramatically, cornstarch cascading from his mouth.
What Engels somewhat melodramatically, but also alluringly, called the "kingdom of freedom" can only be achieved by cooperation, not competition—and by breaking the power of a system that hoards resources and makes it seem there's not enough to go around.
The melodramatically titled "World Without Mind," Foer's compact attempt at a broad technological polemic — which identifies the stupendous successes of Amazon, Google and Facebook, among others, as an "existential threat" to the individual and to society — begins with a disclaimer.
If Abstract Expressionism was a melodramatically psychological exercise, with each splash of paint communicating some anguished search for American identity in the midst of the Cold War's atomic glow, here was something cool and detached, familiar and yet forever unknowable.
Gaga is wont to talk—melodramatically, but perhaps with genuine paranoia—of her fears that she might go the way of John Lennon or Princess Diana (the latter with whom she particularly identifies), either assassinated by a stalker or hounded to death by paparazzi.
She melodramatically writhes around on the floor to spite her parents for leaving on a trip, screams at her friends for getting engaged, and generally treats her peers like dirt for not acting like someone written as a 21st-century Instagram feminist — which is to say, like her.
Of all the climate change issues that have been melodramatically dubbed a "carbon bomb" in recent years—tar sands projects in Alberta, catastrophic wildfires in Indonesia, holes in Australia's seagrass meadows—it seems the thawing of permafrost in the Arctic is most likely to live up to the hype.
Instead of counting his winnings and leaving the table—the guilty verdict was as much pure newspaper fodder as his climbing the mountain had been, and he could simply have accepted victory when he was pardoned—he melodramatically resigned from the Army, insisting that his honor had been stained.
Chains, hooks, locks and horseshoes are welded into dense knottings of steel, which hang from the wall in this gallery like malevolent sconces; skeins of barbed wire stretch from one wall to the next, and are (a little melodramatically) suspended from the ceiling to form a large tent.
I don't know how people learn this skill anymore; I write with a pencil or pen so rarely now that I have a hard time deciphering my own scribbles two minutes after making them, and when I'm going for speed or duration my hand melodramatically cramps and ruins my penmanship further.
He must also have realized that he had a melodramatically self-abnegating prima donna on his hands, and he patiently walked Beckett through the steps necessary for his books to be published in the United States, starting with persuading him to translate them into English himself, which Beckett did only after making a tremendous fuss.
The rules of the leadership contest, too, should have helped Mr Smith: some of Mr Corbyn's supporters had been prevented from voting, either because they signed up too late or because, having made offensive or anti-Labour comments on social media, they had been "purged"—as some of his backers melodramatically describe the party's vetting processes.
For four years after its release, Zombieland was the highest-grossing zombie-related movie in the US. (World War Z knocked it off its perch in 2013.) And though The Walking Dead premiered in 2010 and quickly became the gold standard for juggernaut zombie entertainment, if you prefer your zombie fare to be more comical than melodramatically gruesome (as I do), Zombieland is still a lot of fun in 2019.
Grace (Debra Messing) responds by melodramatically making the day about her own pain over losing her mother however many years ago (which also serves to answer the question of how the show would handle the death of Debbie Reynolds, who played the unsinkable Bobbi Adler.) Jack (Sean Hayes) goes into overdrive trying to please Karen as she roars her disapproval, and even frantically dances when she commands it.
As a teenager, I'd choose to listen to Bright Eyes in the dark when it was raining because it was so melodramatically appropriate (also because I spent most of my teens convinced I was in a film.) Today, as an adult, I felt like the universe had aligned for me personally when I walked out of the door, stepping out into an early summer breeze, as the synths and idealism of "Cut to the Feeling" poured out of my headphones.
South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete ButtigiegPeter (Pete) Paul ButtigiegOvernight Health Care: Massachusetts governor signs groundbreaking vaping flavor ban | Disability advocates questions 85033 Dems' mental health plans | US birth rate falls for fourth straight year Moderators named for December Democratic primary debate Bloomberg bets 2020 campaign on unprecedented strategy MORE, who has tried to position himself as a moderate perhaps more aggressively than any other candidate, melodramatically claimed he "sometimes feel[s] like a stranger in my own country" because he is gay.
Temporarily closed off from the world, a farcical coup is staged and linked melodramatically to a stage play. The main discussion concerns the interface of secularism and belief but there are references to all of Turkey's twentieth century history.
The Ferret Brothers fall into a number of stereotypical categories. They share many assumed traits of ferrets; e.g., getting depressed when separated, being afraid of deep water, and seemingly subconsciously snooping through other's belongings and taking whatever their hearts desire. Robear's habit of behaving melodramatically may be an allude to his origins.
According to Andrew Penn Romine, Banderas voiced Puss "with feline gravitas". Rob Carnevale called Banderas's performance "inimitable". IAmRogues Dana Gardner wrote that Banderas "brought plenty of comedy to the role of Puss by playing the character so melodramatically". Matt Fowler found Banderas "perfectly suitable as Puss", and Todd McCarthy called his performance "spirited and knowing".
Groff Conklin, reviewing the first American edition, found the novel "uniquely original. ... shocking and fascinating, and the moral and ethical implications tremendous"."Galaxy's 5 Star Shelf", Galaxy Science Fiction, September 1955, p.90 P. Schuyler Miller received the novel favorably, noting that it handled its theme "more quietly, less emotionally [and] less melodramatically" than familiar genre treatments of the subject.
While watching the movie with him, she becomes increasingly rude to the audience members by playing with her popcorn, sighing heavily, clutching her head, and shifting melodramatically in her seat until she finally can't stand it anymore. :PETERMAN: Elaine, I hope you're watching the clothes, because I can't take my eyes off the passion. ELAINE: (quiet vehemence) Oh. No. I can't do this any more. I can't.
But Daffy puts Elmer on a guilt trip, melodramatically complaining about the misery of being constantly pursued by hunters. Catching Elmer off guard, he hits Elmer on the head with a mallet, knocking him out. A little later, Daffy is admiring himself in a mirror. Elmer puts on a semi-realistic female duck disguise and rubber fishing boots and calls to Daffy from a pond.
Close-ups are used for distinguishing main characters. Major characters are often given a close-up when they are introduced as a way of indicating their importance. Leading characters will have multiple close-ups. At the close of Sunset Boulevard (1959), the main charactera faded star under the delusion she is making a triumphant return to actingdeclaims melodramatically, "All right, Mr. DeMille, I'm ready for my close-up".
She did not feel that her education ended at high school, however. As Hagen points out, since Angelou was encouraged to appreciate literature as a young child, she continues to read, exposing herself to a wide variety of authors, ranging from Countee Cullen's poetry to Leo Tolstoy and other Russian authors.Hagen, p. 83. She states, during her stint as a madame, "when my life hinged melodramatically on intrigue and deceit, I discovered the Russian writers".
Written and produced by Mads Hauge (co-writer of Natasha Bedingfield's "Soulmate") and Phil Thornalley (co-writer of Natalie Imbruglia's "Torn"), "Mama Do (Uh Oh, Uh Oh)" is an uptempo electropop song which opens with siren-like synths and melodramatically soulful vocal. The song is composed of many synthesisers, drum machine and keyboards. It is composed in the key of D#minor. It has 120 beats per minute and runs through a moderate electropop-oriented beat.
The aria is in three thematic sections: "enjoining", "melodramatically rhetoric", and "imprecatory". The fourth movement is a soprano and alto duet recitative, "" (I would gladly, o God, give you my heart) It is rhythmically metrical and presents five sections based on mood and text. The recitative is "high and light but very complicated in its myriad of detail". The duet aria, "" (Take me from myself and give me to You!), again for soprano and alto, is in triple time.
Moulton commenced recording of the song in early 1966 in New York City while the rest of the band was situated in Boston. For the recording session, Moulton was backed by the Hawks, later known as The Band, who were currently working as Bob Dylan's support group. The lyrics were rearranged by Moulton to include the spoken intro section of the song. The composition opens with Moulton melodramatically reflecting on the struggle of losing his left hand, while the backing vocalists encouraged "Moulty" to "Don't turn away".
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 45% based on 119 reviews, with an average rating of 5.21/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Everything, Everything should tug young adult heartstrings fairly effectively, but may not be quite engrossing enough to woo less melodramatically inclined viewers." On Metacritic, the film has a score of 52 out of 100, based on 26 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale.
The Injun elder does not only willingly share their spirituality with the white intruder but, in fact, must come to the conclusion that this intruder is as good an Indian as they are themselves. Regarding Indian spirituality, the Plastic Shaman even out- Indians the actual ones. The messianic element, which Plastic Shamanism financially draws on, is installed in the Yoda-like elder themselves. They are the ones – while melodramatically parting from their spiritual offshoot – who urge the Plastic Shaman to share their gift with the rest of the world.
Charles B. Howdill became fascinated by the technical aspects of photography, and was an early adopter of the Autochrome colour process developed by the Lumiere Brothers. He gave his first known illustrated lecture, entitled Carillons, Canals and Coifs, in Leeds in 1897 and went on to give hundreds more. Among his most popular talks were the melodramatically entitled The Blazing Balkans and Corsica - Isle of Unrest. Ever the showman, Howdill would sometimes wow the room by taking a colour portrait of an audience member and developing it on the spot.
Utilizing the technique of Sprechstimme, or melodramatically spoken recitation, the work pairs a female vocalist with a small ensemble of five musicians. The ensemble, which is now commonly referred to as the Pierrot ensemble, consists of flute (doubling on piccolo), clarinet (doubling on bass clarinet), violin (doubling on viola), violoncello, speaker, and piano. Wilhelm Bopp, director of the Vienna Conservatory from 1907, wanted a break from the stale environment personified for him by Robert Fuchs and Hermann Graedener. Having considered many candidates, he offered teaching positions to Schoenberg and Franz Schreker in 1912.
The messianic element, which Plastic Shamanism financially draws on, is installed in the Yoda-like elder themselves. They are the ones - while melodramatically parting from their spiritual offshoot - who urge the Plastic Shaman to share their gift with the rest of the world. Thus Plastic Shamans wipe their hands clean of any megalomaniac or missionizing undertones. Licensed by the authority of an Indian elder, they now have every right to spread their wisdom, and if they make (quite more than) a buck with it, then so be it.
Toad is acquitted of all charges and allowed to return to Toad Hall, learning before he goes that the butler knew who he was from the start. Badger's party is a flop, with everyone missing Toad. Toad returns to his ancestral home and, horrified finding everything ruined and missing, assumes the worst for all of his recklessness to his riverbanker friends. He accidentally knocks over a candle which sets the house on fire, melodramatically refusing rescue and resigning himself to a fiery death as everyone discovers what's happened.
Joan of Arc is the clone of Jeanne d'Arc, the devout 15th century French militant. She is Abe's closest friend and is obviously in love with him (everyone knows it except Abe himself), though his constant ignorance of this causes her a lot of frustration. In the episode ADD: The Last D Stands for Disorder Joan admits to being a "goth" and has a very moody, cynical, aloof, sarcastic and angst-ridden personality. She has a tendency to erupt melodramatically into tears, usually when Abe ignores her advances or scores with Cleopatra.
Despite challenging the town's systems, Scout reveres Atticus as an authority above all others, because he believes that following one's conscience is the highest priority, even when the result is social ostracism.Fine, Laura "Structuring the Narrator's Rebellion in To Kill a Mockingbird" in On Harper Lee: Essays and Reflections Alice Petry (ed.), University of Tennessee Press (2007). However, scholars debate about the Southern Gothic classification, noting that Boo Radley is, in fact, human, protective, and benevolent. Furthermore, in addressing themes such as alcoholism, incest, rape, and racial violence, Lee wrote about her small town realistically rather than melodramatically.
It was cured with herbs, sex or sexual abstinence, punished and purified with fire for its association with sorcery and finally, clinically studied as a disease and treated with innovative therapies. However, even at the end of 19th century, scientific innovation had still not reached some places, where the only known therapies were those proposed by Galen. The evolution of these diseases seems to be a factor linked with social “westernization”, and examining under what conditions the symptoms first became common in different societies became a priority for recent studies over risk factor. Today, the phrase "a case of the vapors" is most often used either melodramatically or for comedic effect.
A Junker himself, Bismarck was strong-willed, outspoken and overbearing, but he could also be polite, charming and witty. Occasionally he displayed a violent temper, and he kept his power by melodramatically threatening resignation time and again, which cowed Wilhelm I. He possessed not only a long-term national and international vision but also the short-term ability to juggle complex developments. Bismarck became a hero to German nationalists; they built many monuments honoring the founder of the new Reich. Many historians praise him as a visionary who was instrumental in uniting Germany and, once that had been accomplished, kept the peace in Europe through adroit diplomacy.
Producer Jan Sharp originally intended her husband, Phillip Noyce to direct but he went on to make Echoes of Paradise instead so she hired Ken Cameron.David Stratton, The Avocado Plantation: Boom and Bust in the Australian Film Industry, Pan MacMillan, 1990 p159-160 Cameron: > I was very happy to do it but it was a picture that I think would always be > hard to do. It's terribly hard to do Madame Bovary in Australia and it's > very hard to graft, say, that European style of melodrama or > melodramatically intense view of family and sexual relations on to the > Australian landscape. There's something there that refuses to play the game > about the Australian country town.
At the airport, she explains her decision to her brother Gary (Kevin Kilner), and she melodramatically rips up the bill in front of him. (Gary was a witness to one of Jimmy & Frank's robberies.) Sam is also at the airport, waiting for a flight to Europe and having a drink with Jack, with the two clearing up the misunderstanding over the $20 bill on good terms. Sam uses a piece of the ripped up bill as a bookmark but it falls out without him noticing it as Sam and Emily walk toward their gate, both striking up a conversation. A title reading "The End" is derailed by Angeline collecting pieces of the bill.
Doo-wop (also spelled doowop and doo wop) is a genre of rhythm and blues music that originated among African-American youth in the 1940s, mainly in the large cities of the United States, including New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Baltimore, Newark, Detroit, and Washington, DC. It features vocal group harmony that carries an engaging melodic line to a simple beat with little or no instrumentation. Lyrics are simple, usually about love, sung by a lead vocal over background vocals of repeated, varying syllables, and often featuring, in the bridge, a melodramatically heartfelt recitative addressed to the beloved. Gaining popularity in the 1950s, doo-wop enjoyed its peak successes in the early 1960s, but continued to influence performers in other genres.Hoffmann, F. Roots of Rock: Doo-Wop.
By the terms of her late father's will, spoiled London heiress Epifania Ognissanti di Parerga, the richest woman in the world, cannot marry unless her prospective husband is able to turn £500 into £15,000 within a three-month period. When Epifania becomes smitten with Alastair, a muscular tennis player, she rigs the contest by giving him £500 in stock and then buying it back for £15,000. Alastair is unable to live with the domineering Epifania, however, and leaves her for the more domestic Polly Smith. Contemplating suicide, Epifania melodramatically plunges into the Thames, and when Dr. Ahmed el Kabir, a self-effacing, selfless Indian physician who runs an inadequately equipped clinic for the poor, ignores her plight and paddles past in his rowboat, she swims to shore and accuses him of being an assassin.
The show, in which Harris co-starred with Alan Alda and Larry Blyden and was directed by Mike Nichols, opened at the Shubert Theater on October 5, 1966 and closed on November 25, 1967. The show was based on three tales by Mark Twain, Frank R. Stockton, and Jules Feiffer and Harris starred in all three. She played Eve in Twain's The Diary of Adam and Eve, a melodramatically campy temptress in The Lady and the Tiger, and two roles in Jules Feiffer's Passionella. She was the forlorn, soot-stained nasal-congested chimney-sweep who wants only to be "a beautiful glamorous movie star, for its own sake", and, by virtue of an instantaneous costume-change, the huge- bosomed, gold-gowned, blonde bombshell of a movie star she always dreamed she'd be.
Louis confronts Nigel at the mud club, where he accuses Nigel of neglecting his responsibilities for overseeing the associates by not forcefully policing them. Nigel tries to explain his reasoning for his more subtle but firm approach; Louis refuses to accept any of it, and declares that he is going to continue flouting Nigel's authority until Nigel adopts Louis's harsh, rude and overbearing attitude, and proceeds to melodramatically storm out of the mud club. In response, Nigel retaliates at Louis by distributing a molded glass art piece engraved with the caption, "Louis Litt blew me" on it (Louis's own words during the confrontation at the mud club) to all of the associates, embarrassing him. This makes Louis even more angry, and he confronts Nigel, claiming that his own actions against Nigel are completely justified (him being the expert on handling the associates) while none of Nigel's responses are.
Junior's personality reflected a degree of respect for his father, though often, when Sylvester does something embarrassing or humiliating, Junior would (melodramatically) often profess feeling ashamed or embarrassed by his father's behavior (sometimes donning a paper bag over his head) or sadly saying, in a breathy voice, "Oh, Father...", "Oh, the shame of it", or "How can I ever face the fellows in Troop 12?" He's also contradicted himself by saying he wanted a home in Claws in the Lease while in The Slap- Hoppy Mouse, he complains to his father about his "soft living" in a "chicken- chintzy outfit". Often, Sylvester and Junior's shorts would feature Sylvester trying to capture Hippety Hopper, a baby kangaroo, to prove a point to his son. Each attempt at capture, of course, failed miserably, owing to Sylvester's invariably mistaking the kangaroo for a "giant mouse", and as such being taken completely by surprise by the kangaroo's athletic prowess, with Sylvester losing every fight, often in spectacularly humiliating fashion.
" Rolling Stones Jon Dolan stated that the album "celebrates brooding faith and slippery solace without scrimping on Depeche's trademark blackstrobe punishment." Caroline Sullivan of The Guardian expressed that on Delta Machine, "Depeche Mode are as hamstrung as ever by their refusal to admit even a chink of light into their world of gloom [...] The flip side of the coin is that the austere music that accompanies all this darkness is often very beautiful", commending the band for their ability to "balance lushness and minimalism to stunning effect". In a mixed review for Pitchfork, Douglas Wolk criticised the album's lyrics, while concluding, "There is not a single moment of shock or freshness on Delta Machine, and it's enormously frustrating to hear what was once a band of futurists so deeply mired in resisting change." Andy Gill of The Independent panned Delta Machine as the band's "weakest album in some while" and felt that "[t]he more melodramatically that David Gahan invites us to have him 'penetrate your soul... bleed into your dreams', the more the sculpted electronic backdrops seem like curtains hiding the puniness of the wizards wielding the machines.

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