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47 Sentences With "mystifyingly"

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

And then, the other candidates, somewhat mystifyingly, dropped the argument.
Third, President Trump has been mystifyingly friendly toward Russia and President Vladimir Putin.
There is some shade thrown at Sanders, who Brooks once mystifyingly equated with Donald Trump.
Notably, the Huawei P30 Pro has a better zoom and mystifyingly good low-light shots.
Beyoncé's feed is the rice cake of celebrity social-media feeds: low in caloric content but mystifyingly satisfying.
He raised eyebrows by cultivating a mystifyingly cozy relationship with Russia, which the Pentagon considers a major threat.
"Russia is new in terms of nuclear," he mystifyingly averred, loping around the stage like a manic zoo animal.
Heck's advisers have mystifyingly questioned whether Cortez Masto is really Latina, claiming she identifies as Hispanic for political convenience.
"It's a mystifyingly bad campaign that Issa's run," said David Wasserman, an editor of the nonpartisan Cook Political Report.
The star has the "rice cake of celebrity social-media feeds: low in caloric content but mystifyingly satisfying," she says.
Instead of walking away, the Covington boys decided to respond with a round of group cheers — and, mystifyingly, the chaperones let them.
Mystifyingly, Isaacs' name hung around on the opening credits until the end, as if to say: look what you could have had.
Yes, nontalking dogs can be mystifyingly erratic, but you expect more from an animal smart enough to warrant his own TV series.
Apparently the Annex brought the 103 (!!!) women who mystifyingly all went into labor on the night of the storm into the foundation's thrall.
Early on, that meant agitators like Jane Fonda, who sent her good tapes and then, mystifyingly to her, seemed to abandon the cause.
They followed that with a 2-1 win over South Korea but then were mystifyingly poor against Sweden, who hammered them 3-0.
Perhaps that bravado was infectious: As a private citizen and celebrity, Mr. Trump was, somewhat mystifyingly, often sought by the media for his thoughts on vaccines.
Mr. Castellucci, whose work has often been seen in Montclair but, mystifyingly, is never seen in New York City, is engaging with Moses mostly on an abstract level.
The evening's unequivocal highlight was the peerless flamenco dancer Farruquito, whose charisma and mystifyingly fast footwork can electrify a stage as much as any group — though he wasn't alone.
After rainfall, when the pale desert dandelions and purple pincushions stagger into bloom, tourists come to geotag the flowers and take selfies in the shifting, mystifyingly beautiful desert light.
This may be tempting to President Trump, whose disdain for alliances is now well-documented -- and who is, mystifyingly, attacking South Korea on trade issues across a number of fronts.
Peering from the window of Bergdorf Goodman, an emerald green gorilla made from feathers and sequins surveys a mystifyingly fortified Fifth Avenue outside Trump Tower, as though across an unbridgeable abyss.
That's because as long as you're not afraid of letting blemishes show, the Pixel 3's selfies are mystifyingly sharp in a way that often makes images from other $1,000 phones look bad.
The scientists discovered another strange thing about the supernova: The measured speed of the exploding material, which normally decreases over time as slower stuff deeper in the supernova becomes visible, stayed mystifyingly high.
Equipment and abilities are mystifyingly under-explained: no terms like "+15% gear speed" or "+/-10% shield time" are explained anywhere in the tutorial, documentation or character screen — because there is no character screen!
Then I flopped over to the Final Fantasy series of games, most of which are available for iOS (except, mystifyingly, the one I know best, VIII), but generally spendier than the average offering, port or otherwise.
The company has a growing inventory — a full line of regular bras and underwear, along with nipple pasties and a mystifyingly flexible hoisting breast tape inspired by gaffer's tape — but its core product is its shapewear fabric.
Even when reading his mystifyingly bad works, such as "The Fountain" (written 1921-22) or "Lazarus Laughed" (1926) or "Dynamo" (1928), I was in O'Neill's corner, fascinated by the way he illuminated his invented worlds with hysteria.
A cofounder of the city's most acclaimed dance club, VENT, ZULI also makes mystifyingly stoney dance tunes, mixing in long-tailed bass drums bumps with gamelan melodies accompanied by tones that seemed squeaked out of a rusty swing.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads A photographer friend once told me the secret to her mystifyingly good home interior shots: "The trick is that you have to go through and clear away everything that's a part of daily living," she said.
The idea that because things are transmitted via the same medium, they are legally identical, is so mystifyingly naive and backwards that I'm surprised to see it in a legal document of any kind, let alone a judge's official dissent in a major case.
But around 2001, Linda Evans and the mask mystifyingly vanished from the ad spots; the FDA has no further records, Springer has retired from his Clearwater office, the Rejuvenique site is a dead link, Salton doesn't list it for sale, and Amazon has only used models.
Thomas's defense attorneys are hoping that the juror statements during voir dire in their case, statements that mystifyingly failed to rouse the trial lawyers, will convince the Fifth Circuit, or at least five justices on the Supreme Court in Washington, to grant him a new trial or other relief.
Ricco/Maresca, which in recent years has presented vernacular photographs and Mexican pulp-paperback cover art at its Chelsea location, will include the sometimes mystifyingly, semi-abstract drawings in pencil and colored pencil on paper of the Austrian Leopold Strobl, an artist associated with Galerie Gugging, a component of the Art Brut Center Gugging, near Vienna.
They will have their work cut out for them with the Dodgers, who clawed their way out of the mystifyingly deep early-season hole they created for themselves to fulfill the outcome that seemed all but inevitable at the beginning of the season: yet another NL West title, though it took them 163 games to do it.
"We do not need 2,000 miles of concrete wall from sea to shining sea, we never did, we never proposed that, we never wanted that, because we have barriers at the border where our natural structures are as good as anything we can build," he continued, somewhat mystifyingly — contradicting his own years-long position on the border wall.
Nearly everything on the menu at Yaso Tangbao in Downtown Brooklyn summons up the streets of Shanghai: those soup dumplings like sleeping volcanoes, waiting for a trigger; giant shaggy pork-belly meatballs, called lion's heads, majestic and mystifyingly airy; a cool, monochromatic huddle of chicken thigh, poached and submerged in Shaoxing rice wine, that tastes gentle, with vague allusions to mushrooms and licorice (though if you eat too much, it may make your head swim).
" " Capaldi's obituary in The Guardian (2005) mentioned that "Eve", despite being "widely admired", in the UK had "mystifyingly failed to give him a hit single."The Guardian Obituary 28 Jan 2005 ... appeared in 1972, but a widely admired song titled Eve mystifyingly failed to give him a hit single.
In one case DNA tests determined that a woman, mystifyingly, was not the mother of two of her three children; she was found to be a chimera, and the two children were conceived from eggs derived from cells of their mother's twin.
" Nick Schager of The Village Voice gave the film a negative review, saying "A few decent one-liners notwithstanding, the movie comes off as willfully uninspired." Claudia Puig of USA Today gave the film one star out of four, saying, "Mystifyingly, the movie manages to emerge plot-free. Instead, it offers a succession of humorless gross-out gags, fat jokes, suggestive posturing, bullying, belches and pratfalls.
Alongside the lighter, less emotionally fraught leanings is a countering sharpness that cuts to the quick." Ending the review saying "With chameleonic deftness, Tegan and Sara have created a mystifyingly absurd but extraordinary album." Filter magazine calls The Con "a startlingly dark, yet characteristically vibrant offering, featuring a band that's learned to harness the energy-highs, while tempering pretty (even pastoral) pop-folk with a new, deeply-affecting brand of melancholy." PopMatters gave The Con a score of 8 out of 10, calling it "very, very good.
A former butler to the Earl of Oxford, turned proprietor of furnished apartments in south-west London, wherein reside the likes of Jimmy Corcoran, Bowles is a portly man with a bald head, greenish eyes and an aura of dignified superiority. Generally disdainful of the somewhat Bohemian Corcoran, Bowles is mystifyingly in favour of Ukridge, and will invariably let him into his friend's apartment to borrow clothes, whisky, breakfast, or just to let boxers such as Wilberforce "Battling" Billson snooze on the couch. Bowles appears in several of the Ukridge shorts.
The film opened to mixed reviews. Janet Maslin of the New York Times pointed out its similarities to Avildsen's previous film Rocky, going so far as to call it "Rocky on the Hoof". She went on to write a more critical review, praising Sorvino as a "perfectly plausible" newsman and Ditchburn as "so glamorous and mystifyingly odd that she recalls the young Audrey Hepburn" while stating that both were "sabotaged by the script". Ed Blank of The Pittsburgh Press wrote similar commenting that "Grant's script has little to do with real life and more to do with outdated movies", and noting that "Ditchburn looks and speak like Vivien Leigh".
Wu continued to both teach and design and twice received Architectural Record magazine's Distinguished House Award, in 1966 for the Paul Johnson residence and again in 1975 for the Adrienne Suddard house (although mystifyingly the house was planned, constructed and previously published several years earlier in 1971). His last published work was the small country house for longtime client, T. C. Hsu, in 1976. In the late 1970s and after living in New Haven for 32 years, Wu finally designed and constructed a home for himself and his family. Located on a corner lot in a developed residential area, the white aggregate block walls of the Wu house reveal little of the rich interiors within.
A review from the New York Times from 1967 when it was nominated for Best foreign film at the Academy Awards War’s utter bestiality and waste, usually illustrated by armies, is brought into sharp focus by a talented few in “Three,” a prize-winning Yugoslav drama that treats its bleak and harrowing subject with a grim but poetic artistry. It had a showing at the New York Film Festival last year, and is now at the Studio Cinema and 72d Street Theaters. The film is mystifyingly abrupt in its transitions, but its effects, physical and intellectual, are unmistakably forceful and chilling. The director, Aleksandar Petrovic, with the aid of a sparse script and stunning photography by Tomislav Pinter, has pointed up war’s ravages as it affects one partisan’s fights in one small sector of the conflict.
The Guardians Ian Gittins found the band swapping "grunge-lite punk- pop" for a "sleek angst-rock that would be rejected from the soundtrack of The OC for lack of emotional depth". Tom Sinclair of Entertainment Weekly wrote that a greater emphasis was put on "infectious choruses and razor-sharp melodic hooks". Though the "cannily constructed" tracks might not "change anyone’s life" ... "they sound good enough to almost convince you they mean something". musicOMHs Alex Nunn noted that while there was a "cavalcade of saccharine hooks and uber-large choruses", the album basically amounted to the band "doing what they’ve always done ... and in the case of Revival, they do it as well as ever". The New York Times reviewer Kelefa Sanneh called it "a mystifyingly inept CD that includes some of the worst lyrics you will — or, with any luck, won’t — hear all year".
Trace felt, therefore, that the then-famous and heavily used Dick and Jane series of readers—usually taught through the look-say method—seemed to foster what he deemed to be a mystifyingly illogical and deliberate holding back of learning possibilities. In an attempt to counter such disturbing trends, as he saw them, he edited in 1963-64 a series of elementary school readers published by Open Court Publishing Company.Reading is Fun (1963), Our Country (1964), A Magic World (1964), A Trip Around the World (1964) In them he hoped to offer students a wide selection of imaginative stories, tales about other countries, poems by famous poets, and information essays that he felt could challenge students and that also offered new knowledge and interesting insights about the world. Although these basal readers were adopted by numerous schools (mostly private) around the country and found some success, they ultimately failed to thrive amid criticism among educators that they were too difficult for students.

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