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42 Sentences With "most perceptive"

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

Some of her most perceptive readers have taken this approach.
It remains one of the most perceptive articulations of power in modern Britain.
But it's on albums where he is at his most perceptive and effective.
Last week, this confrontational style collided with LeBron James, the league's most perceptive passer.
" He added, "Our research vehicle prototype we think is the most perceptive car in the world.
And when will the world recognize that Disick is actually the most perceptive cast member on Keeping Up With the Kardashians?
Fiona Hill, the author of one of the most perceptive books about Mr Putin, oversees Russia at the National Security Council.
Mr. van der Aa is among the most perceptive composers to fuse musical thinking and technological imperatives: he directs the action himself.
This was John Hammond, a patrician related to the Vanderbilts, and by far the most perceptive scout and producer in the business.
"We think we may have built the most perceptive vehicle for this autonomy that has ever been built," TRI CTO James Kuffner told Recode.
At the same time, Americans on average spend 90 percent of our time indoors, which means we're not the most perceptive watchers of weather.
One of the most perceptive texts on Mosset is Jean Baudrillard's "The Object that is None," published for the artist's exhibition at the Swiss pavilion of the 1990 Venice Biennale.
Hilary Spurling's long-awaited life of one of Britain's most perceptive novelists of class, best known for the 12-volume "Dance to the Music of Time", is an exemplary literary biography.
Having spent some time working for nonprofits over the course of my career, I can tell you that generous funders are without exception the kindest, smartest, most perceptive people you will ever meet.
Turin's atmosphere of cool detachment and class division received its most perceptive treatment in "Le amiche" ("The Girlfriends"), the 1955 film by Michelangelo Antonioni, which takes full advantage of the city's hyperreal polish.
Perhaps the most perceptive element of the building is in response to Hurricane Harvey and Houston's tendencies to flood (Menil Collection security and facilities staff braved the storm in the Main Building, protecting the artwork).
Although some of the most perceptive critics of Russia hysterics come from the left, often their response takes the form of exasperated derision—along with the lament that progressive agenda items are being woefully under-emphasized.
DeLillo, the most perceptive (almost occult) chronicler of contemporary life, has not invented the Convergence out of whole cloth: Its DNA comes from an old evangelism dressed in a new rhetoric and streaming out of Silicon Valley.
The most perceptive leaders understand, however, that the real benefits come from the increased productivity and innovative ideas the open-office layout can foster, influencing the bottom line in a much more significant way than simply cutting costs.
Jared is, I'll just say, not the most perceptive hottie in Paradise, and the conversation in which his BFF calls his girlfriend a "back-stabbing whore" doesn't give him much pause over his choice of girlfriend or his choice of BFF.
At the end of Guardiola's first season in Manchester, Gary Neville, widely regarded as the most perceptive former player in the news media, suggested that City lacked the "power and strength," what he termed the "spine" that all English champions tended to have.
Suttner was a respected journalist, with one historian describing her as "a most perceptive and adept political commentator".
Bowers notes that the Mirror was not without its detractors and was accused of being a tool of the Edison Trust companies, but reviews for Thanhouser films were amongst the most perceptive.
At age thirteen, Keillor adopted the pen name "Garrison" to distinguish his personal life from his professional writing. He commonly uses "Garrison" in public and in other media. Keillor in 2016 Keillor has been called "[o]ne of the most perceptive and witty commentators about Midwestern life" by Randall Balmer in Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism.Randall Balmer: Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism.
Saudis Push Bush Team On Peace Plan by Nathan Guttman, The Forward, January 19, 2007. In addition, Guttman writes that Siegman is in the "far-left corner of the Middle East worldview". Journalist David Rieff said, in 2004, that Siegman is "perhaps the most perceptive American observer-participant in the last two decades of Israeli- Palestinian negotiations".Arafat Among the Ruins by David Rieff, The New York Times, April 25, 2004.
Another outstanding finding was Panbanisha's ability to comprehend her name being said at a very young age. Out of all subjects (nonhuman apes) that underwent this trial, Panbanisha was the most perceptive to her name being called (37 out of 51 times). The breakthroughs with Panbanisha have been very underappreciated and underutilized in the world of language development. When it comes to the ability to comprehend and understand human language, many think about dogs.
The attempts to zoom in to the picture in the most perceptive possible way lead to the introduction of the moduli space. To explain how the pentagram map acts on the moduli space, one must say a few words about the torus. One way to roughly define the torus is to say that it is the surface of an idealized donut. Another way is that it is the playing field for the Asteroids video game.
Characterised by critic Michael Billington as "a pioneering black playwright who opened the doors for his successors", Matura was the first British-based dramatist of colour to have a play in London's West End, with Play Mas in 1974.Michael Billington, "Mustapha Matura obituary", The Guardian, 1 November 2019. He was described by the New Statesman as "the most perceptive and humane of Black dramatists writing in Britain.""Matura, Mustapha (1939–)", Screenonline.
His studies of the Florentine master have shaped a generation of art historians and constitute a point of reference for Renaissance art history in general. His book on Michelangelo’s drawings is widely considered to be the most perceptive study on the subject thus far. Hirst’s monograph on Sebastiano del Piombo is also fundamental in the field. Beyond Michelangelo, he published important articles and essays on artists such as Francesco Salviati, Perin del Vaga and Parmigianino.
He has taught Islamic studies, cultural history and comparative religion at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland, Birkbeck College, University of London, UC-San Diego, Dartmouth College (New Hampshire, USA) and Colorado College (Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA) Malise Ruthven's profile at Oxford University Press website He has given numerous lectures as an expert on the Middle East. He has been described by Madeleine Bunting for The Guardian as "one of today's most perceptive observers and historians of religion".
Powell died on 16 September 2016 in Darlinghurst, New South Wales after unsuccessful treatment for spinal cancer. Phil Sim of Media News acknowledged Powell's "pioneering roles in Australian magazine publishing and technology media". Computer Daily News editor David Frith has described Powell as "the best, wittiest and most perceptive commentator on the local IT scene from the mid 1960s". In their book Australian Censorship: The XYZ of Love, James and Sandra Hall hailed Powell as an "anti-censorship pioneer".
He went to Australia in 1930 and spent over two years travelling across the country. This prompted him to write his book Cobbers (1934) which the Australian Dictionary of Biography describes as "still the most perceptive and captivating characterization of Australia and its people ever written by a visitor". He continued to compose and wrote several other books, including an autobiography, True Thomas (1936), before his death of a heart attack in 1950. Miss St Osyth Mahala Eustace-Smith(1886 - 1970) of Wormingford married Thomas Wood in 1924 at Wormingford Church.
Robert M. Citino (born June 19, 1958) is an American military historian and the Samuel Zemurray Stone Senior Historian at the National WWII Museum. He is a leading authority on modern German military history, with an emphasis upon World War II and the German influence upon modern operational doctrine. Citino received recognition for his works from the American Historical Association, the Society for Military History, and the New York Military Affairs Symposium. The Historically Speaking journal described him as "one of the most perceptive military historians writing today".
Burke was in charge of spacecraft design, deep space tracking and control network, space flight operations and data reduction support systems, while the Space Science Division was in charge of the scientific experiments. Burke could combine the technological and theoretical to integrate mechanical and electrical features to achieve the difficult technical objectives. Along with his two associates, Burke had solved the major guidance problem, velocity control, associated with solid-propellant ballistic missiles. He was recognized as one of the Laboratory's most perceptive research engineers, and advanced to become deputy to Cummings on the Vega Program.
The Joslyn Art Museum in Omaha, Nebraska is home to the largest of three known collections of Bodmer's watercolors, drawings, and prints. Bodmer captured a challenging and dramatic landscape that was still unfamiliar to audiences in the eastern United States and Europe. His portraits were the first accurate portrayal of western Indians in their homelands, and they are considered remarkable for their careful detail and sensitivity to the personalities of his sitters. To this day, Bodmer's work remains one of the most perceptive and compelling visual accounts of the American interior.
In The New York Times, Vincent Canby called it a "magnificent, moving, and very mysterious new film". Roger Ebert gave Cries and Whispers four stars (out of four) in his initial review: "We slip lower in our seats, feeling claustrophobia and sexual disquiet, realizing that we have been surrounded by the vision of a film maker who has absolute mastery of his art". Variety staff praised the direction for "a hypnotic impact". In New York, Judith Crist called it "a work of genius— certainly the most complex, the most perceptive and the most humane of Bergman's works to date".
Fortunately, she is able to talk life into him, and he survives losing Howl's heart, even deciding to continue living with them after he is freed. Despite his misgivings, Calcifer is the most perceptive and intelligent character in the Castle, repeatedly dropping clever hints regarding Howl being "heartless" (which he uses in literal and figurative meanings), and not hesitating to give clues on Howl's capricious nature. Calcifer's appearance is described as having a thin blue face, a thin blue nose, curly green flames for hair and eyebrows, a purple flaming mouth, and savage teeth. His eyes are described as orange flames with purple pupils.
Brenda Knight in The Women of the Beat Generation: > Joan Vollmer Adams Burroughs was seminal in the creation of the Beat > revolution; indeed the fires that stoked the Beat engine were started with > Joan as patron and muse. Her apartment in New York was a nucleus that > attracted many of the characters who played a vital role in the formation of > the Beat; ... Brilliant and well versed in philosophy and literature, Joan > was the whetstone against which the main Beat writers — Allen, Jack, and > Bill — sharpened their intellect. Widely considered one of the most > perceptive people in the group, her strong mind and independent nature > helped bulldoze the Beats toward a new sensibility.
In January 2007 the Independent newspaper published an article by Allawi outlining a blueprint for peace in Iraq. Allawi recommended devolution within Iraq, economic and political regional integration in the Middle East, and the setting up of independent boards to oversee reconstruction and security issues.Ali Allawi, For the first time, a real blueprint for peace in Iraq , Independent, published 5 January 2007, accessed 5 January 2007 The article was praised by Independent commentator Patrick Cockburn, who argued that it was "by far the most perceptive analysis of the extent of the disaster in his country, and how it might best be resolved. It is in sharp contrast to the ill-thought-out maunderings of experts and officials devising fresh policies in the White House and Downing Street".
It was John Burnside's Book of the Year in the New Statesman, where he wrote: "Jay Griffiths is one of the most perceptive and lyrical writers working today; she also brings deep learning and immense moral courage to Tristimania: a Diary of Manic Depression (Hamish Hamilton), an elegant and inspiring study of a condition shared by many who feel obliged to conceal their pain. A triumph in every sense, this is a book that gives us all an uncompromised and hard-earned sense of hope. Also in the New Statesman Marina Benjamin wrote "Tristimania is an education in the history, mythology and poetics of madness, in all its wildness and glaring neon. Griffiths is a high-wire writer who performs the difficult trick of taking you into the depths of her madness while managing to remain a completely reliable guide.
Beam co-authored two books with physician Robert Latou Dickinson, A Thousand Marriages: A medical study of sex adjustment (1931) and The Single Woman: A medical study in sex education (1934). In these books, Beam "adopted a feminist perspective by focusing on the changing historical context that affected women's lives between 1895 and 1930, as well as by analyzing the dominant-submissive relationship between the male physician (Dickinson) and his female patients". Beam is best known in her home state for her 1957 work A Maine Hamlet, which one review called "the book that a generation of readers treasured as the most perceptive account of traditional life in Maine ever written". Beam wrote vividly about growing up with her grandparents in Marshfield, Maine, at the turn of the century, describing the residents, institutions, lifestyle and community tenets.
He worked as a reporter after college on The Princeton Packet, New Jersey's oldest weekly, and left to become a research assistant for the sociologist C. Wright Mills, his professor at Columbia. His research duties left him time to begin his career as a freelance journalist, covering the Emmett Till murder trial in Mississippi for The Nation magazine, and continued to write for them from Israel in 1956, becoming a staff writer for the magazine on his return that same year. He also published in periodicals such as Dissent, Commonweal, Commentary, New World Writing, Harpers, Esquire, The Atlantic, The Yoga Journal, GQ, TV Guide, and others. On publication of his collection of articles and commentary Between The Lines (1966), The New York Times said he was “acknowledged to be one of the country’s most perceptive and sensitive independent commentator-reporters .” After his year as a Nieman Fellow he moved to Beacon Hill in Boston, where he began writing for The Atlantic, writing the entire issue of the magazine for March, 1968, called “Supernation at Peace and War,” which then was published as a book.

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