Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

23 Sentences With "most fleeting"

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

Presidents prefer memorials to their lasting accomplishments, not their most fleeting.
Affection for the seasons is, quite possibly, the most fleeting of all love affairs.
Even the most fleeting personal bonds established in a digital world can influence how we behave outside of games.
Sorry if you are a cold-hearted loser who doesn't find this cute, for even the most fleeting of seconds!!
And as the restaurants come and go, even the most fleeting pen lines linger as proof of what once existed.
In these stories, the critically acclaimed writer explores the ways that even the most fleeting connections can echo through people's lives.
While Changes can feel abstruse, it is ultimately a fascinating look at the creative process behind the most fleeting of art forms.
And so, we commit our lives to an eternal pursuit of the most fleeting dreams of money, status, and renown — in its many varying yet identical forms.
They might not catch on like Vines, but we think that Twines (Twitter + Vine = Twine) are a fitting tribute to the most fleeting social network of the aughts.   
When we as queer people dance to it, wherever we are, we're dancing on our own, but as a collective own – together for the most fleeting of moments, against the world.
"Those who had the misfortune to know Mr. Warsame," Mr. Ahmed's lawyer, Sabrina Shroff, said recently, "even in the most fleeting of moments, have spent years in American jails regretting that chance meeting."
By November 2020, it isn't hard to picture the DNC taking out ads about how reckless Cheeto Mussolini's spending habits are as Americans collect their paid leave and checks from oil companies kept afloat by the most fleeting of lifelines.
Russian clubs tend to make only the most fleeting impressions on European competitions, and the country's national team has made it beyond the group stages of a major tournament only once since the breakup of the Soviet Union, at the 2008 European Championship.
It's that last resource, Ricco hints, that has been the most fleeting and always in short supply, so much so that, at 76, he finds himself charting a path out of the long shadow of his own accomplishments to face many of the same challenges as those of an "emerging" artist.
One gets the impression that even the most fleeting of pieces in "Essays One," such as a few paragraphs about her favorite short stories, written for a British tabloid, has been given the precise and playful Lydia Davis treatment: "Subtly, or less subtly, you always want to surprise a reader."
MESONS, which are so scattered and neurotic they don't even exist for more than a few nano-ticks in time, were discovered and further broken down, each into a quark and an ANTIQUARK, sort of yin and yang, and therefore even the tiniest, most fleeting entities we can find consist of two opposing forces that, in battling for their own existence, keep everything from dissipating into a vast nothingness.
Hungarian nobles planned their gardens after the parks of French palaces, the characteristics of which were orderliness, well arranged but with great variety. The baroque garden strove for order and union. Because of the narrower financial possibilities, Hungarian baroque parks are much more modest than foreign ones, and as the art of garden-building is the most fleeting art, today we can hardly find anything of the old splendor of these parks.
She felt the exploration was thrilling and declared the atmosphere and visual effects during hacking sequences "masterful". David Rayfield at GameSpot praised the detailed environments and found the story to be "one of the most intriguing" in the genre in years. He felt the ability to open doors inches at a time added to the horror. He liked the blend of the sound design with Reikowski’s music, and how the writing made "even the most fleeting of characters" genuine.
This caused the signal to trace out a pattern on the display that could be used to determine the direction of the transmission almost instantly. In the UK, the high-frequency direction finding (HFDF or “huff-duff”) system largely had displaced BTDF by about 1943. HFDF used balanced amplifiers that fed directly into a CRT to instantly display the direction directly from the incoming signal, requiring no mechanical movement of any sort. This allowed even the most fleeting signals to be captured and located.
He was > able in his wisdom or – please pardon this manner of speaking – in pursuing > a divine fantasy … to put any particular muscles into action, one alone or > several muscles together, when He wished the characteristic signs of the > emotions, even the most fleeting, to be written briefly on man's face. Once > this language of facial expression was created, it sufficed for Him to give > all human beings the instinctive faculty of always expressing their > sentiments by contracting the same muscles. This rendered the language > universal and immutable.Duchenne, Mecanisme, part I, 31; Cuthbertson trans.
The England middle order was full of stroke-makers, but it was on the captain Peter May and vice- captain Colin Cowdrey that the real burden lay. Unlike the others they were a permanent fixture in the team and it was generally felt that if they failed then so did the batting. May was the leading England runmaker in 1954-55, 1956 and 1958–59 and his near-perfect technique allowed him to make runs where others could not. Cowdrey had made his first and best Test century in 1954-55, 102 in an innings of 191 and could sent the ball to the boundary with the most fleeting touch of the bat.
Believing that he was investigating a God-given language of facial signs, Duchenne writes: > In the face our creator was not concerned with mechanical necessity. He was > able in his wisdom or – please pardon this manner of speaking – in pursuing > a divine fantasy … to put any particular muscles into action, one alone or > several muscles together, when He wished the characteristic signs of the > emotions, even the most fleeting, to be written briefly on man's face. Once > this language of facial expression was created, it sufficed for Him to give > all human beings the instinctive faculty of always expressing their > sentiments by contracting the same muscles. This rendered the language > universal and immutable Duchenne, Mecanisme, part I, 31; Cuthbertson trans., > 19.
The subtitles recalled Impression, Sunrise in style and influence, though their subjects varied. Examples of similarly titles works are Effet de brouillard, impression in 1879, L’Impression in 1883, Garden at Bordighera, Impression of Morning in 1884, Marine (impression) in 1887, and Fumées dans le brouillard, impression in 1904. These works then seemed as a continuation of his Le Havre scene, "one of the sequence of canvases in which he was seeking to capture the most fleeting natural effects, as a display of his painterly virtuosity." Evoking the name of Impression, Sunrise, but also providing stylistic connections, the later paintings are similarly "quite summary and economical in handling, and depict particularly hazy or misty effects" that is characteristic of Monet’s impressionism in particular. While the movement and the painting initially garnered controversy, Monet’s Impression, Sunrise gave rise to the name and recognition of the Impressionist movement, arguably exemplifying more than any other work or artist the Impressionist movement as a whole in style, subject, and influence.

No results under this filter, show 23 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.