Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

158 Sentences With "most literal"

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

Konráðsdóttir is a working mom in the most literal sense.
And in the most literal sense possible, it'd be true.
But we mean "expensive taste" in the most literal sense.
Palumbo: It's the most literal fucking gesture, sending a postcard.
"Nipped in the bud" took on its most literal meaning.
The Venezuelan artist's work is exacting in the most literal sense.
It was Gloria Steinem fan fiction in the most literal sense.
Ariana Grande is a dangerous woman in the most literal sense.
That would be elitism, like in its most literal active form.
A Ghost Story: The most literal movie title since Monster Trucks.
"The Waverly Gallery" is his most literal presentation of that inadequacy.
But that would be true in only the most literal sense.
This is a life-or-death situation in the most literal sense.
Also, what image is "escapism" in the most literal sense like "beaches"?
They subscribed to these sites in all but the most literal sense.
The most symbolic can be the most literal, as is the opposite.
Try convincing your most literal-minded friend to see it with you.
Yes, we're ready to air our dirty laundry in the most literal sense.
This is, in the most literal sense, a matter of life and death.
But it's also important that the emoji have references beyond its most literal meaning.
Perhaps the most literal example is our handwritten signature, a core talisman of identity.
" In fact, the most literal translation for "bingqiu"—Chinese for hockey—is "ice ball.
Van Oorschot's touch DNA discovery had unveiled the most literal expression imaginable of Locard's principle.
The superpowered siblings close the season in the most literal physical embodiment of that era.
That's meant in its most literal sense: the game feels, at points, like a movie.
Amazon Go is a grab-and-go grocery store, in the most literal sense possible.
The other candidate to win Super Tuesday in the most literal of senses was Donald Trump.
Like this is the most literal and commercial album art of all these stoner metal albums.
Of all the shocking things Kim Zolciak-Biermann has done, this one is the most literal.
But even more than shock, I feel a sense of greatness in its most literal form.
What sticks with voters, often in a most literal sense, are the effects of the policy.
A synagogue burning in Germany is perhaps among the most literal illustrations of anti-Semitism imaginable.
The stacks were being oppressed in the most literal way, but they hadn't buckled — they resisted.
But what if the act of speaking your truth seemed impossible in the most literal sense?
"Love It If We Made It" is a generational anthem in the most literal way possible.
Kitty the cat was quite full of herself — and we mean that in the most literal sense.
Felt earrings from the indie jewelry label Dadybones may be the most literal Memphis tribute you'll find.
Mr. Vargas, for one, said he was simply responding to the inquiries in their most literal sense.
Freetown Sound unfolds like a mixtape in the most literal sense, an approach that's suited his music well.
Instead of fundraising in the most literal sense, the app collects a different type of donation: your data.
It has a soul in the most literal sense — each of Saar's assemblages carries a bit of her.
This time around, Pional is putting his voice on line in the most literal sense, actually laying down vocals.
There are beautiful bodies aplenty, lesbian pimps, eerie faucet drips, and leather-clad killers in the most literal sense.
Wearable technology is set for its most literal incarnation with a new partnership between Google and clothing line Levi's.
It's not just medical technology in the most literal sense that is contributing to advancements in the healthcare arena.
In the most literal sense, it is Amtrak's version of luxury rail, traversing a line between Boston and Washington.
The most literal personification of malevolence, the fearsome Bad Coop, functions more like an elemental force than a proper character.
This season, we mean that in its most literal sense, because spring and summer's biggest trends are, quite literally, huge.
How did the guy who coined one of the 1990s' most literal punchlines take such a joyless, decade-long detour?
The most literal thing it could mean is preventing human extinction, to ensure that the species persists as long as possible.
A woman named Stephanie (Aparna Nancherla) takes wrestling at its most literal and doesn't laugh at Dev's passable "Samosa Joe" pun.
Female leaders in search of a sartorial model need look no further than this gown: power dressing at its most literal.
Saudi scholars, who typically represent the most literal and strict interpretation of Sunni Islam, ruled that no adjustment should be made.
Interpreted in the most literal possible way, Medicare-for-all would entail extending Medicare coverage to the rest of the country.
In the most literal sense, Ghibli's TV debut is another Miyazaki production; Hayao's son Goro gets director credit on the 26 episodes.
So it looks like Discovery is maintaining its ties to the franchise, even as it moves away from its most literal continuity.
In the most literal sense, the runways are meant to show us what will be in our shopping carts come next season.
"Sober sex" is one of the most literal manifestations of sex work as therapy, and one that's particularly needed by LGBTQ communities.
Then there are those verses even some of the most literal readers of the Bible ignore because they are just too inconvenient.
Only the most literal-minded originalists would claim that all the punishments dealt out under eighteenth-century law would be legal today.
The book I chose was Cal Newport's "Deep Work," and for the most literal of reasons: It's changed how I lived my life.
" In other words, this form of therapy was—in the most literal way possible—all about stripping someone down to their "true self.
Diane Winston, MS, PhD, professor of media and religion at University of Southern California, calls Catholicism a sensual religion in the most literal sense.
That's why Hollywood crafted the most literal version of that dilemma, 2011's I Don't Know How She Does It, around the Emmy winner.
In the most literal sense, it moves you, but there's a potential for more, something beyond the sights and smells of the darkened dancefloor.
But I might also be reading too much into a series that forever resists being read on any level other than its most literal one.
A gallery wall of personal art makes a space come alive, and it's one of the most literal ways your home can tell your story.
In the way that only science fiction can, it takes his metaphor of the Facebook profile as pet to its most literal and physical conclusion.
At its most literal level, "Knight of Cups" is an encyclopedia of its protagonist's love affairs, casual and serious, painful and frolicsome, blonde and brunette.
"Overperson" might be the most literal equivalent in English, although it is unlikely that DC Comics would have sold many comic books using that title.
Augmented reality (AR) is perhaps the most literal reality-altering tool on this list, because it's meant to alter the three-dimensional space around a viewer.
Thousands poured their sweat and blood, in the most literal sense, into the protection of those human rights and the hope of a more cohesive society.
They are thought experiments in which the artist attempts to confront his own dislike for allegory by representing the Holocaust in the most literal-minded way.
TNRmageddon has come to be at the nexus of a wide range of ideological conflicts, but on the most literal level it was about something else entirely.
Perhaps the most literal connection were the pet fish markets of Kowloon, where fish in little bags—almost sandwich bags—hang in alleys and on street corners.
The most literal theory behind the origin of the term comes from the fifth-century tradition of wedding guests giving mead to the newlyweds as a gift.
Part theater, part literature, part dance, and part film, And is environmental writing in the most literal sense of the term: writing that produces its own built environment.
Blockchain technologies in their current form may run afoul of the most literal interpretation of the law, but neither the legal system nor the technology are that pedantic.
Then someone shouts that the cameras are live and suddenly they all switch in the most literal visualisation of 'putting your game face on' I will ever see.
Twinning, in the most literal sense of the word, has never been more visible, but it's a brand identity that comes with its own unique set of challenges.
But this is only phase one of their plan to ensure that Joan Crawford will take home the Best Actress Oscar, if only in the most literal sense.
Mr. Kline's own probing video interviews with a politically conscious waitress at a Baltimore Applebee's and a checked-out bartender in the same city seem the most literal.
The Whoppercoin are part of a new rewards program; customers will receive one Whoppercoin for each Whopper they purchase, because this is apparently the most literal cryptocurrency in existence.
Some people writing about the film have assumed everything Michael sees and experiences is metaphorical, and some have assumed this is all happening, in the most literal way possible.
Although her works are deeply enigmatic, their allure is less in their solutions than in their precise compositions and constructions; they're beautiful puzzle-boxes, in the most literal sense.
Although her works are deeply enigmatic, their allure is less in their solutions than in their precise compositions and constructions; they're beautiful puzzle-boxes, in the most literal sense.
Even people who had never considered themselves "gamers" in the most literal sense of the word now discover themselves hooked to the screen, engrossed in Angry Birds or Fruit Ninja.
The experience provides an opportunity for meditation on artistic judgement, collaborative creation, and the power of speech, ultimately offering a deeply intimate piece of performance, in the most literal sense.
The weekend wobble was treated by some political rivals and online antagonists as validation -- proof positive that the Democratic nominee was unfit, in the most literal terms, for the presidency.
Instead of trying to create the next "it" bag — the era of which is arguably over — she offers accessories that one can integrate into outfits, in the most literal sense.
The most literal reading of Creedence's "Fortunate Son" lyrics laments how the privileged were often able to avoid the Vietnam War, while the less fortunate were forced to go fight.
His paintings of Nazi gas chambers contain subtle flesh tones, to invoke the actual people murdered in them, representing the horrors of the Holocaust in only the most literal sense.
Physically situated amid and between the walls of the gallery, "Inside Out, Upside Down" moves beyond Intermural Art as metaphor: it acts as intermural art in the most literal of senses.
So when we talk about empowering women, we do so in the most literal way, because that empowerment could help create massive growth and transformation in the world on every level.
I've seen six "Fuller House" episodes and, to their credit, the last three are endeavoring to cut at least the most literal cords to "Full House," to be their own show.
I mean that in the corniest, most literal sense: He made a film set in space (Gravity) and a film set in the imaginary (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban).
The passion to re-establish Shariah, in its most literal and archaic form, is at the core of that Islamist resurgence, which now seems to be making an advance in Brunei.
Oplev mimics some of that in the most literal ways — "The original had an outdoor party around a bonfire, here's my outdoor party around a bonfire" — but brings nothing new to them.
Though cheerleading in the most literal sense — hollerin' 'bout sports — dates back to the middle of the 19th century, cheerleading as an intensely athletic art form only dates back to the 1980s.
To not only create the clothes but give designers and models a platform for their creativity is supporting people in the most literal way, both financially and in terms of a platform.
If 2018 is the year that you plan to become a boss (in the most literal sense), you may want to reach for more than a kitschy listicle to lead your efforts.
The marriage of teenage female sexuality and supernatural horror gets its most literal manifestation in 2007's Teeth, in which the monstrous development in question is – yeah, you guessed it – vagina dentata.
I realize, on the most literal of levels, that nothing has actually happened to cereal; it's still around, still fully stocked in the aisles of our local grocery stores and corner bodegas.
When the InSight lander touched down on the Red Planet on November 26, 2018, its thrusters blew the rock about 3 feet -- making it a rolling stone in the most literal sense.
The Bell Curve is racist in the most literal sense: It organizes people by race, treating racial categories as real and fixed and associating particular genetic and social characteristics to those groups.
Not only did they faithfully recreate the blazing sword from Voltron, but they took "blazing" in the best, most literal way, in the sense that the blade itself is always enveloped by flames.
When these fetishizing commenters objectify women, they do so in the most literal way possible: by considering a single part of their bodies as actual objects and debating how sexually arousing it is.
Armed with nothing more than a GoPro and a borderline-reckless appetite for danger, urban explorer and YouTuber DyingLlama hitches a ride on a double-decker London bus in the most literal way possible.
This is greed in its most literal sense, the use of power and influence to wield more personal power and wealth—and almost always at the expense of the most marginalized groups in society.
Whether or not you accept the notion of original sin in its most literal sense — I don't — it's impossible not to notice that we're all born with a powerful inclination for fault and failure.
I mean "prejudiced" in the most literal sense: Barr pre-judged the case in Trump's favor, and he has acted in accordance ever since Barr's prejudice is not a matter of opinion or debate.
Today, the Vietnamese economy has become so open the "subsidy era", when Vietnam went through its most literal iteration of communism, is remembered mainly as a "vintage" design trope in novelty coffee shops and restaurants.
In its most literal sense, the judgment means some female athletes will no longer be considered as such for some races — from 400 meters to a mile — unless they take measures to suppress testosterone production.
But it's at least equally likely that their fates are part of a program of revenge, and that when she talks about wanting their hearts, she means it in the most literal and grisly sense.
As I wrote last year when discussing why Christian conservatives are so likely to blame pornography for other, seemingly more serious sins (like adultery), at its most literal level, Christianity views all sins as equally bad.
" He said that another song, "Crawling," is "probably the most literal song lyrically I'd ever written for Linkin Park and that's about feeling like I had no control over myself in terms of drugs and alcohol.
And while her life, even more than other celebrities', seems so far from normal, Kylie Jenner took to Snapchat (obviously) to give the world a reminder that sometimes beauty is pain — in the most literal sense.
"Contact," for example, Susan Stroman's hit collage of nearly 20 years ago, uses prerecorded music to tell a story (again through dance), and in using existing tracks, it is perhaps the most literal of jukebox presentations.
House Remodel The most literal choice for your book group would be Yvonne Georgina Puig's "A Wife of Noble Character," a smart and diverting modern homage to "The House of Mirth" set in 21st-century Houston.
In the most literal sense, it implies that the erratic service of MoviePass, which has its remaining subscribers avoiding actually going to movies, may be due to the fact that some of its senior staff… are dogs.
No doubt the reporters from The Washington Post knew this but still chose to use "A Very Stable Genius" in its most literal sense to paint the president as an egotist and create clicks and book sales.
Beyoncé's feminist rallying cry, "Ladies, now let's get in formation," will take its most literal form at the Women's March on Washington D.C.  And with her latest Facebook post, Bey herself is lending her voice to the movement.
The plan was to sell enough pieces to take out a full-page ad in Vogue; after that, Jumpsuit would close up "shop" in the most literal sense, as it was never intended to grow into a businesses.
"The Man Who Killed Don Quixote" is most fantastical when it's most literal, and vice versa, and like the novel (the second volume in particular) it enfolds layers of self-consciousness into its comic tale of epic adventure.
And yet, if you look past its pocket-protector reputation, there's little doubt that IBM is angling—more aggressively than any corporation of its size—to become a leading design company in the most literal sense of the phrase.
" Befitting the "postliteracy of the late capitalist world," the culture of postmodernism would be characterized by "a new kind of flatness or depthlessness, a new kind of superficiality in the most literal sense" where "depth is replaced by surface.
Trump has long wanted to close the border in the most literal sense: some kind of steel or concrete barrier stretching from the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico, the bill for which would be sent to Mexico.
Their first full length, More After We're Gone, became the soundtrack for that memorable trip which in the most literal sense paved the way for me to be writing this article and also every job I've ever held post-college.
Here, both of his styles merge in a set of sculptures made over the last year, and they are "lampworks" only in the most literal sense — the bulbs mostly face the floor, their light unnoticeable in an otherwise illuminated room.
The Salchiboxto hot dog cart combines the best of both of these worlds, in the most literal sense; the name is a direct translation of two Basque words, salchicha, meaning sausage, and botxo, a friendly nickname for the city of Bilbao.
So he and AP Thompson created a solution, Multibowl, a two-player fever dream that will test every video game skill in the most literal way possible: shuffling opponents through a variety of specific, 15-second challenges from 230 old games.
To Verginer, these lines indicate something about periodic thresholds, but given the theme and content of the show, here they suggest rising water in the most literal sense, as well as the metaphoric understanding that a watermark represents change over time.
With their dazzling fracturing these rooms are the most literal manifestation of one of the artist's central obsessions: infinity, which can symbolize the enormity of love, death and God, all of which she often invokes in her titles and her poetry.
While Australia's right-wing politicians have taken the most literal and disheartening lesson from the election — Mr. Trump won, so be like Mr. Trump — a former prime minister of our country, Paul Keating, questioned Australia's deference to the United States.
It's quick and dirty in the most literal sense of the word, so it's not entirely surprising that all that screen time can do some physical damage, as well — a reality that affects even those with seemingly perfect skin like Ruby Rose.
Then the lights came back down, and the audience all turned back to the stage, waiting for the climax where we would all gasp as one at the same moment — because this show is, in the most literal sense of the word, breathtaking.
One of the most literal examples of poetic influence on Guston is T.S. Eliot's "East Coker," the second poem of his "Four Quartets" and which Guston used as a title for the 1979 painting he made just after his first heart attack.
At a moment when nearly everyone is relying on e-commerce to get by — while being forced to renegotiate the social contract at its most literal — "Sorry We Missed You" serves as a grim reminder that the contract was rigged from the start.
While this video is the most literal work in the show, it is also a metaphor for the way the exhibition battles with the commercialization of Cappadocia and champions the everyday person there, the farmer just trying to live off the land.
Artist Kasper Ray O'Brien grapples with the experience of the Grindr scene in a solo show, Show Me Love at Hatch Art — a body of work in the most literal sense, as most of the pieces are dismembered body parts modeled off of himself.
We live in an era where so much emotion—or performance of emotion—is mediated and complicated by our relationships both with the supercomputers that live in our pockets and the knowledge that in the most literal of senses we are being watched at every moment.
Mr. Gil provided a glowing example of this with "Expresso 2222," which on its most literal level is a train song: singing the line "Que parte direto de Bonsucesso pra depois" ("It runs direct from Bonsucesso to the hereafter"), his syllabics evoked the clatter of the tracks.
Though the offerings from designer Kunihiko Morinaga's fall/winter 2016 collection were, as a whole, futuristic — highly-sculptural silhouettes, millinery-style helmets that sat over the models' eyes — it was the specific fabrics used that spoke to that forward-looking vision in the most literal sense.
But for the bare-bamboo ceiling, the structure is made entirely of stackable white vegetable crates — the most literal nod to actual, contemporary agricultural practice — which also make up the temporary furniture inside: seating and a table around which to share food in the festal tradition.
PC gaming manufacturer Origin came back to the show with a new version of its Big O rig that stuffs either a PS4 Pro or Xbox One S inside the same case as a gaming PC. It's the best of both worlds in the most literal sense.
He is not supposed to be here, in other words, and that is true down to the most literal sense: Washington was originally scheduled to fight on the undercard, only moving up to the main event on January 2260th after Wilder's original opponent, Andrzej Wawrzyk, tested positive for steroids.
Books of The Times In "Smoke," Dan Vyleta's supernatural variation on the classic Victorian triple decker, the gentle-born are seldom gentle; coal dust is purifying; and when a character says that smoke once poured out of her enraged father's ears, she means it in the most literal way.
Readers and players implicitly decide how close they want to try to get to this final understanding upon starting a book or game; they must determine how much effort they are willing to expend analyzing content that points away from all but the most literal meaning of the plot.
And though taxidermy — the most literal way of enshrining animals — was first attempted, crudely, by the ancient Egyptians, it reached its height in the early 20th century, when the famed conservationist Carl Akeley created dioramas of African mammals for the American Museum of Natural History in New York.
Chanel loves to create a totally immersive set that draws its guests into the designer's world for just a moment, and the haute couture show was the most literal interpretation of that yet, turning the Grand Palais in Paris into a Chanel atelier complete with dress forms, samples, and seamstresses.
Inspired by Anne-France Dautheville (the first woman to ride a motorcycle around the world) in the most literal sense, leather jackets, overalls, midi-skirts, and dresses toughened up the typically frilly and carefree collection (though the frocks and loose, ruffled blouses for die-hard Chloé fans were still going strong).
He instead wants to "run the government like a business" (as the cliché goes) in the most literal and retrograde way imaginable — for his own personal benefit, constrained if at all by the letter of the law or, more properly, by what he can manage to get away with under the law.
It's an old storytelling adage that everybody thinks they're the hero of their own story — even classic villains — and while Battlefront II appears to be exploring that idea in the most literal sense, it's a sentiment that has seemed to creep into much of the new Star Wars material that Lucasfilm has been generating.
The most literal of the lot are often screencaps from iconic TV shows, like the 1986 TV adaptation of Journey to the West and beloved '90s historical comedy Huan Zhu Ge Ge. Video footage and photographs of Chinese leaders past and present—Chairman Mao, Jiang Zemin, and current premier Xi Jinping—also feature prominently, and often hilariously.
As Cave grapples with the mundanity of life in the wake of loss, we see him at his most ruthless as a poet—and, on tracks like "Girl in Amber," his most broken and aged as a vocalist—stripped of his trademark romanticism to reveal something more vital, in the most literal sense of the word: The immediacy and tenuousness of life.
Höch is the most literal of the two artists in this regard — gluing fragments of Western figures together with pictures of African sculpture, as in the fervid "From the Collection of an Ethnographic Museum No. IX" (21), "Streit" (circa, 219), "Untitled, From an Ethnological Museum" (1924), and many other suggestions of an indeterminate, mutational, revolutionary tumult courtesy of Berlinische Galerie's extensive Höch holdings.
But the power of brand extension was at its most literal at Chanel, where the signature quilted effect of its bags had been recreated in several straps, be it in lashings of woven white diamonds in pieces like its Signature Diamond Secret Watch, or the plush black alligator leather of the Mademoiselle Privé collection, with watches featuring sculptured Oriental-style gold birds dancing on onyx dials.
While a couple of creaks in a 19th-century casino, saloon, and brothel turned hotel might not be enough to make you call Ghostbusters, things that go bump in the night have a different meaning in the hotel's town of Victor, CO. Victor was once the site of the second largest gold mining district in the United States, with nearly 18,000 residents living there in 1899, but has since turned into a ghost town in the most literal sense of the word, with only 397 people counted in the 2010 census, according to the city's website.

No results under this filter, show 158 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.