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22 Sentences With "more embellished"

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

At the time, lightweight fabrics were still favored, but dresses were beginning to become more and more embellished.
Prices for the most basic pieces start around $200, rising to several thousand for larger or more embellished ones.
During her 72 hours at the fest, Hudgens admits to having seven outfits, each one more embellished and layered than the last.
"Nose art dates well into World War I and became more embellished in World War II to help bring the warfighters a taste of home, a memory, place, significant other, or motto," said Lt. Col.
The bralette, a lightweight feminine take on the bra that combines the comfortable underpinnings of a sport bra with the more embellished elements of a fashion bra, is fast becoming a must-have item in young women's wardrobes.
The novel is constructed out of spoken stories within stories, each more embellished than the last ("It's O.K. to change a story a little if you can make it better"), shared over evening chai, or while waiting for help on the roadside, or watching explosions on a distant mountain.
But the lion's body is a darker tint than the arm, and it is more embellished, with its face and mane described through yet another approach, in careful daubs of what could be a wash of terre verte or diluted ink, while the temple is dashed off with restless sepia strokes, a quick architectural sketch.
In restaurants, Chinese chicken salad may be more embellished and offered as an American-style entree salad, similar to Caesar, Chef, and Cobb salads.
In reference to Roman literature, the Silver age covers the first two centuries AD directly after the Golden age. Literature from the Silver Age is more embellished with mannerisms.
For sources to his biography, there are two early (though not contemporaneous) Lives,Passio Leudegarii I & II. The second one is much more embellished than the first. drawn from the same lost source (Krusch 1891), and also two later ones (one of them in verse).
Model 21 grades were offered in 12, 16, 20, 28 gauge and .410 bore with 16 gauge being the rarest. Barrels were produced in lengths from 26 inches to 32 inches. Select engraved models were available in 6 different patterns, with a higher number indicating more embellished engraving.
Kingston-type decoration typically consisted of regularly spaced combed or engraved lines. The more embellished vessels generally had a lead glaze coloured green with the addition of copper. Another common decorative technique was the application of strips or bands of clay to the individual pot. More complex designs include stamped bosses, floral patterns, overlaid scales, and pinecone impressions.
The plans were successfully transferred and he admits to giving his courier another more embellished story as a gun would seem too mundane. Three agents of the other side meet in Paris, annoyed that their plans failed and they blame each other for their loss. Mr. Roberts sits at home reading a book. Pyne sends onto him a cheque for fifty pounds with thanks from "certain people".
415) was error- strewn and thus not by Mozart; that Mozart's realisation of the figuration in No. 8 (K. 246) was for use in highly reduced orchestras (i. e. strings with no wind), and that the "CoB" instruction was for cueing purposes. Conversely, other scholars, notably Robert Levin have argued that real performance practice by Mozart and his contemporaries would have been considerably more embellished than even the chords suggested by the figuration.
The level of ornateness varies according to the importance of the room. Rooms in the William Street wing have decorative cast-iron wall ventilators, marble fireplaces and plaster ceiling roses. The Cabinet room, positioned in the centre of this wing on the piano nobile, is distinguished by a more embellished plaster ceiling and elaborate carved cedar panels over the doorways. Ministers' suites, located in the corner pavilions, and rooms associated with the Cabinet overlook the street.
"Neumatic" chants are more embellished and ligatures, a connected group of notes, written as a single compound neume, abound in the text. Melismatic chants are the most ornate chants in which elaborate melodies are sung on long sustained vowels as in the Alleluia, ranging from five or six notes per syllable to over sixty in the more prolix melismata.Hoppin, Medieval Music pp. 85–88. Gregorian chants fall into two broad categories of melody: recitatives and free melodies.
Bel canto vocal music also frequently uses ossia, also called oppure, passages to illustrate a more embellished version of the vocal line . On the other hand, an ossia marking does not always indicate a change in difficulty; the piano solo music of Franz Liszt is typically full of alternative passages, often no easier or more difficult than the rest of the piece. This reflects Liszt's desire to leave his options open during a performance. Many of his ossia passages are cadenzas.
Built in 1718–38 by Giovanni Antonio Scalfarotto, the church shows the emerging eclecticism of Neoclassical architecture. It accumulates academic architectural quotations, much like the contemporaneous Karlskirche in Vienna. Wittkower, in his monograph, acknowledges San Simeone is modeled on the Pantheon with a temple-front pronaos, on the other hand, the peaked dome recalls Longhena's more embellished and prominent Santa Maria della Salute church. The centralized circular church design and the metal dome recalls Byzantine models and San Marco, though the numerous centrifugal chapels are characteristic of Post-Tridentine churches.
Michael Uebel, Ecstatic Transformation: On the Uses of Alterity in the Middle Ages, Palgrave/Macmillan (2005), contains a full English translation and a discussion of the Letter. The many marvels of richness and magic it contained captured the imagination of Europeans, and it was translated into numerous languages, including Hebrew. It circulated in ever more embellished form for centuries in manuscripts, examples of which still exist. The invention of printing perpetuated the letter's popularity in printed form; it was still current in popular culture during the period of European exploration.
Hanuman appears with a Buddhist gloss in Tibetan (southwest China) and Khotanese (west China, central Asia and northern Iran) versions of Ramayana. The Khotanese versions have a Jātaka tales-like theme, but are generally similar to the Hindu texts in the storyline and character of Hanuman. The Tibetan version is more embellished, and without attempts to include a Jātaka gloss. Also, in the Tibetan version, novel elements appear such as Hanuman carrying love letters between Rama and Sita, in addition to the Hindu version wherein Rama sends the wedding ring with him as a message to Sita.
The prelude is in ternary form. The theme of the main section is introduced in measure 3: 200px Measure 3 The theme is in the form of a period, composed of two symmetrical phrases, the consequent being a more embellished version of the antecedent, presenting a triplet descant in the treble voice above the main theme in the right-hand alto voice. The right-hand voices are offset against an eighth-note figure in the left-hand: 200px Measure 19 The middle section presents rhythmic changes and several modulations. Triplets appear in the accompaniment, and shorter phrasing is utilized: 200px Measures 35 and 36 The piece reaches its climax at measures 50–51, and immediately resolves back into the main section: 300px Measures 50 and 51 Here, the triplet flow returns to the left-hand bass line, while a high counterpoint is introduced in the main melody.
"We have the silent strike on... The slave drivers are wild—the slaves won't work as hard as they want them to."Richard Steven Street, Beasts of the field: a narrative history of California farmworkers, 1769-1913, Stanford University Press, 2004, page 605 A definition of silent strike is offered in a book about the Filipino sugar strike of 1924-1925: > ...employees who do not receive the wages demanded will go on a silent > strike, staying on the job, but doing only enough work to earn the wages > they receive. According to the book, no IWW organizers were involved in a strike that erupted into a gunbattle, but the Honolulu Star-Bulletin blamed the IWW for the labor unrest anyway. The Harvard Monthly of 1913 offers a more embellished definition, > In case of failure to achieve any gains by a strike, the worker resorts to > sabotage, the silent strike by which are gained all the advantages of the > open strike without its dangers; i.e.

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