Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

127 Sentences With "nymphs"

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

Rider nymphs reached safety about four times faster than nymphs walking on their own, suggesting that the behavior aids in their survival.
My first entry was 18A, "Sea nymphs," which I knew as THE NEREIDS because it's important to know your nymphs, especially when puzzling.
The pool is given over to a troupe of synchronised nymphs.
In the water, where they are superhuman nymphs, artistry takes over.
Many nymphs headed straight for adults and tried to climb aboard.
The nymphs, called spittlebugs, make the foam, although it isn't actually spittle.
Nymphs, or young bedbugs, are smaller, translucent, and yellowy or white in color.
Nymphs are considered for the most part, prey to the more powerful gods.
It will include video from the night "Hylas and the Nymphs" was removed.
And then, in late spring through early summer, the nymphs begin to feed.
It looks pretty amazing: 35A: Turns out there are so many different nymphs!
Shadows loom across high-ceilinged hallways lined with statues of gargoyles and nymphs.
Nymphs and goddesses assemble, but the revelry's hardly begun when Prospero's mood changes abruptly.
Trilobites When running for safety, aphid nymphs crawl onto the backs of their elders.
The tremendous "Nymphs and Satyr," (1934), presents eight and one-half feet of whirling drama.
The nymphs climb trees and within an hour, they shed their skins and become adults.
Around them are two circles of dancing nymphs dressed in skirts, one black, one white.
We have tagged sprayed areas with GPS to help us in dealing with hatched nymphs.
There are armies of mindless human-drones, deadly robot sentries, murderous water nymphs and worse still.
It's those nymphs, infected in the larval stage by mice, that transmit the infections to humans.
The nymphs are smaller than the adults and easier to miss on the skin, Mr. Neitzel said.
The nymphs then cycle through five life stages in as many weeks, shedding their skin each time.
Cicada nymphs spend 17 years underground, where they "await an undetermined signal for emergence," Mr. Hoover said.
"The Lament for Icarus," a 19th-century British piece, depicts the fallen Greek cradled by weeping nymphs.
A ProMED moderator speculated that it had come north from Africa in tick nymphs carried by migratory birds.
Nymphs hatched in the silvery water and the western sky lit up like coals in a dying fire.
Cassiopeia enraged POSEIDON, the Greek god of the sea, by comparing her own beauty favorably to his nymphs.
The drug-fueled focus on mating could maximize the critical spore dispersal of those cicadas infected as nymphs.
Small statues of golden nymphs scale the facade of 21 Bond, where the photographer Robert Mapplethorpe had worked.
Past the parlors is a study, also with an elaborate fireplace, as well as a small ceiling mural of nymphs.
The term "annual cicada" is something of a misnomer, as nymphs may spend two to five years underground before emerging.
The larvae, nymphs and adults — like the undead — are cursed to roam the earth in search of a suitable host.
For spring 2018, Chanel's contemporary water nymphs were as bold as they were beautiful, and as classic as they were modern.
Instead of nymphs and shepherds making music, composing poems, canoodling, and occasionally tending to their flocks, we find explicitly contemporary bathers.
Nymphs, which are "about the size of a poppy seed," and adults, which are "about the size of apple seed," also feed.
The wood nymphs and Rusalka's sisters, the sweet woodland community, reject her as completely as the shallow nobility of the prince's castle.
Nymphs (young ticks) become infected by feeding on birds and small mammals like mice, chipmunks, raccoons and opossums, Dr. Diuk-Wasser explained.
When I came to it was not in some gilded lounge surrounded by pulchritudinous night-nymphs and Danny Tenaglia sculpting sweet, melodic soundscapes.
They range in size from 1 mm (nymphs) to 5—7 mm (adults), and their eggs look like tiny, white grains of rice.
People nicknamed "nymphs" keep the party safe and cleanNSFW has 2,000 members, and memberships range from $200 to $2,690 for an annual membership.
Ten lice-like insect nymphs were found, along with two dinosaur feathers, trapped in two pieces of amber in northern Myanmar's Kachin Province.
Classical mythology has its satyrs and centaurs, its shape-shifting gods and metamorphosing nymphs, whose commingling and canoodling is part of the human heritage.
Yes, so also there were the Pre-Raphaelites who painted the nymphs who used their charm to drag sailors into the water and kill them.
Entomologists still don't know what the K. gaga males and nymphs look like, how she interacts with other animals and what her "song" sounds like.
The Pre-Raphaelite painting, "Hylas and the Nymphs," by the Victorian artist John William Waterhouse, is now back on display at the Manchester Art Gallery.
Often faces turned up to address the sky, as with the maenads and nymphs whose shapes in Greek sculpture did so much to inspire Duncan.
As a result, he didn't quite fit into the staging, which otherwise worked to separate the characters into different types — gods and giants, dwarves and nymphs.
Construction began in 2010, but stopped again for almost two years after workers came across another dazzling mosaic, depicting a winged Pegasus attended by three nymphs.
Take the comely water nymphs in Herbert James Draper's Ulysses and the Sirens (1909), or the voluptuous creatures of Léon Belly's Odysseus and the Sirens (1867).
At the far left edge of the canvas, one may also notice a black female figure who helps lift or wash one of Diana's astonished nymphs.
For the evening, Beccaria's nymphs transform into bright luminescent fairies wearing short or maxi dresses, tunics with cape-shaped sleeves, some lightened up by small crystal decorations.
And though dog tick larvae and nymphs generally seek small rodents and medium-size mammals upon which to attach themselves, they are relatively indiscriminate in their preferences.
In the opening scenes, the marriage of Orfeo and Euridice is celebrated by choruses of nymphs and shepherds, performed with infectious snap and buoyancy under Mr. Gardiner.
Younger ticks (nymphs) typically spread the parasite, which means they are extremely tiny — about the size of a poppy seed — and difficult to spot with the naked eye.
This behavior could be because the less mature bedbug nymphs have not developed the eyesight needed to distinguish between white, black and the rainbow of colors, Pereira said.
Meanwhile, in the library's print collection is "Lascivie" ("The Lusts"), a series of late-16th-century pornographic engravings featuring satyrs, nymphs and putti by the Italian artist Agostino Carracci.
Although both adult and younger nymph ticks can both carry Lyme disease, nymphs are much smaller and can more easily be overlooked if they've attached themselves to your skin.
Nymphs hatch in six to eight weeks and then drop to the soil for a period longer than four presidential administrations before they re-emerge and the cycle continues.
Among Ms. Johns's specific suggestions when visiting Taos are the lesbian-owned-and-operated Sugar Nymphs Bistro and a visit to Mabel Dodge Luhan's historic inn and former residence.
In return, 27.93 French museums and institutions shipped 300 art works here this year, from Leonardo da Vinci's portrait of "La Belle Ferronnière" to massive marble nymphs from Versailles.
In March 2017, during the season when the River Dee is at its coldest and deepest and stonefly nymphs are large, he put on chest waders and went in.
" Yet, even as the title figure revels in the vision of two nymphs, he fears that they were merely a dream, flitting out of the "mass of ancient night.
Perhaps it was something to do with the tragedy of the male who sets off towards the glacial region of symbols and en route forgets himself with warm-blooded nymphs.
We then see Di Chirico's pictures of stringy, bare-bottom gladiators as they were displayed in a Paris apartment, and a Roman museum populated by gross, classicized athletes and nymphs.
In the study, the density of infected "nymphs," as the adolescent ticks are called, was at 15 percent of levels in areas where foxes and stone martens were less active.
The researchers dubbed the botnet "SIREN" after sea-nymphs described in Greek mythology as half-bird half-woman creatures whose sweet songs often lured horny, drunken sailors to their rocky deaths.
People went for the mural that decorated the bar—a scandalous depiction of nude nymphs and satyrs—but most of all, they went there to enjoy the city's most sophisticated cocktails.
The gods, heroes, and nymphs displayed in museums look that way, as do neoclassical monuments and statuary, from the Jefferson Memorial to the Caesar perched outside his palace in Las Vegas.
They also perform works by Bach and Couperin, and a fifteenth-century paean to smoking, on April 24 at the Morgan Library, perhaps Manhattan's closest approximation to the nymphs' Rhineland court.
In Gluck's 1762 version of the often-told myth, Orfeo first appears at the fresh grave of his wife, Euridice, as nymphs and shepherds lament her death in somber choral phrases.
I had stumbled into #planner Instagram—#plannerlife, #plannergirl, #planneraddict—and gotten lost, hungrily scrolling through image after image of fanciful calligraphy and perfectly outlined lists and elaborate illustrations of journaling wood nymphs.
MILAN (Reuters) - Airy, ethereal and delicate designs filled the catwalk in Luisa Beccaria's show on Thursday as models took the role of water nymphs on the second day of Milan's fashion week.
Yes, the group does resemble figures for a stone fountain, but it's the Mediterranean sun on the naked nymphs at a moment when their plight looks desperately uncertain that's more the thing.
Tapestries and rugs are on view at Keshishian, including one from the 1960s — formerly installed at a university in Tbilisi, Georgia — that features a psychedelic composition with sinuous sea nymphs and dolphins.
After exhibiting her skills as a witch, the sly, brilliant, and devastatingly under-appreciated Circe is banished from her father's kingdom, where nymphs frolicked and gods dined ad infinitum, to the island Aiaia.
Although the number of eggs laid on all the plants was much the same, on those exposed to the air of infested plants the new generation of whitefly nymphs developed much more quickly.
Last year, he released an LP version of his alternative film score to 1969's The Color of Pomegranates called Pomegranates, in addition to his Nymphs series and a single for R&S.
The libretto, also written by Miss Smyth, was a kind of folk tale that involved peasants, wood nymphs, a primeval forest, noble huntsmen, poachers and, of course, young lovers who die in the end.
Pastoral is also, as Hadley reminds us, the pre-eminent form of erotic encounters, in which the great god Pan swoops down on nymphs, and generations of shepherds and shepherdesses tryst in tumbledown cottages.
Stripped-down white cube galleries have conditioned us to look with dispassion upon paintings like the large-scale ones here, which depict goddesses and nymphs, heroines and victims, with full breasts and bountiful thighs.
Similar to deer ticks, the immature larvae and nymphs of the longhorned tick are very small, similar to a poppy and sesame seed respectively, and are easily over looked on both animals and people.
The heart of Parkchester lies in the Aileen B. Ryan Oval, formerly called the Metropolitan Oval, where residents relax on benches as they gaze at the water-spouting nymphs in the plaza's central fountain.
From his vision, Bran learned that the Children of the Forest — those leafy, child-like nymphs — created the White Walkers thousands of years ago when they battled the First Men, Westeros' original human inhabitants.
The exhibit demonstrates her step-by-step process with "Heart of the Storm," an iconic image of two hamadryads, classical mythology's tree-huggers, from her recurring cast of Pan and his fellow wood nymphs.
In this choreographed staging, members of the Mark Morris Dance Group dynamically portray the nymphs and shepherds and, later, the furies and ghosts at the gates of Hades, and the contented inhabitants of Elysium.
The number for white-clad nymphs, filling the stage protectively while the injured Daphnis (Cory Stearns) lies unconscious, starts handsomely, while the black-clad pirates use heels and arms colorfully in their second-scene number.
A group of nymphs are at the top of a tree seeing out a flood that has overwhelmed the woodland where they live – the water froths about their feet, there's a fish out of water.
As movements like #MeToo and #TimesUp prompt new conversations about harassment and abuse, gender inequality, and the representation of women in art, the removal of "Hylas and the Nymphs" seems to have struck a nerve.
"Making Marvels" brings together hundreds of elaborately crafted objects, many never seen in the United States: an ornate silver table decorated with sea nymphs, for example, or a clock with Copernicus depicted in gilded brass.
There was some bouncing around, sure, but the gymnasts cut elegant arcs with their bounces, even on the bars, and one could persuade oneself that a clutch of nymphs had wandered out of L'Aprèsmidi d'un faune.
It's in the 2nd arrondissement near the tree-lined alleys of Palais Royal, inside Galerie Vivienne, a Belle Époque, glass-roofed, covered passageway with preserved mosaic floors, half-moon windows and moldings of goddesses and nymphs.
In the '9453s,  she redirected her emphasis on loose fiber strands and vegetal forms in favor of stylized figures of Hindu divinities and mythical nymphs that transgressed conventional gendered norms as they appeared in representational artworks.
That's when the immature ticks called nymphs are most actively feeding and that's also when most people are out and about, walking through grass and the heavily wooded areas where the bugs like to hang out.
In the next few weeks, concerts in the gallery will feature musicians playing a Steinway piano that Mr. Schastey's Manhattan workshop covered in carved flowers, ribbons and nymphs on commission for the Newark thread manufacturer William Clark.
During the 1920s, when Wedgwood was trying to cultivate a more contemporary image in the U.S., the patterns became beloved among young women with bobbed hair who dreamed of being as unencumbered as the designer's gossamer nymphs.
To protect against tick-borne illnesses, people should wear repellents and check their skin for black specks after spending time outdoors, particularly in wooded areas and during the late spring and early summer months when nymphs are present.
Three black spirits, or perhaps nymphs (Walker allows audience members to interpret each character and symbol as they see fit), transport us to an underground cave where happiness and pain coexist, unable to distance themselves from each other.
She had designed dresses for the ensemble's two female performers, constructed from a silky fabric that swirled slowly in the greenish water inside the tanks; when seen through the thick glass, the performers resembled Greek sculptures of water nymphs.
And Tuçe Yasak's warm lighting, which sometimes peers from the ceiling from among the hanging roots, suggests cracks leading to the surface; the nymphs, along with their "skinfolk" — wronged black souls and their mortal descendants — might finally break through.
Tales about the great Helen of Troy, Orpheus and Eurydice's immortal love, and enticing Greek Nymphs were told through dance and music as the skaters moved in layers of colorful tulle between beams of light under the dark night sky.
For example, the littlest of bedbug babies, the ones in what is called the first instar of development, did not have any color preference when they crawled toward a paper tent, although more mature nymphs did prefer the dark shelters.
The stunning nymphaeum (a type of monument built in homage to the nymphs) of Villa Giulia, built by Pope Julius III between 1550 and 205, now boasts gleaming mosaic and marble work, all set in a lush, sunken water garden.
While I felt called to learn to create apple butter and vodka pickles near the border of Poland, I was also told that I, a stocky American among the bird-boned Ukrainian nymphs, was in desperate need of a diet.
Lorde is one of our most precious musical wood nymphs, but her performance ended up being one of the weirder ones of the night, and not in the usual Lorde way that's made her such a fascinating performer over the years.
Because kids are innately curious, hormonal, horny little nymphs, they're most likely going to have sex before you want them to, and a lot of what impacts their experiences positively or negatively is the knowledge (or lack thereof) that'll shape their decisions.
Built for the Paris Exposition Universelle of 1900, it was named in honor of the father of the visiting Russian czar, Nicholas II. Sculptures of full-figured, bare-breasted nymphs look out at the river from their perches at the bridge's center.
I'd take those widely shared photographs and beneath them I'd write comedic tales of girls on study abroad or last-minute cross-country road trips and stories about nymphs posing naked in the forest to "commune" with nature without the hassle of clothes.
The major examples here — above all, Pierre Peyron's "The Death of Alcestis," up from Raleigh's North Carolina Museum of Art, a celebration of Greek self-sacrifice far removed from the Rococo's naughty nymphs and shepherds — were acquired in the past 30 years.
"Your greatest desire, Madame," the fortuneteller said once again, as a trio of giggling woodland nymphs sailed through gaps in the foliage — floral garlands on their heads, Champagne flutes in their hands and all clad in the frothiest and twinkliest of ball gowns.
For many, it went too far in January, when the Manchester Art Gallery removed from public display John William Waterhouse's 1896 Pre-Raphaelite painting, "Hylas and the Nymphs," showing a young warrior being lured into a pond by seven semi-submerged naked girls.
But Mucha's designs apparently hit a nerve: expressing a growing reaction against the new social divisions brought about by the power of the Industrial Revolution and lifting up out of obscurity the intractable powers of nymphs and fairies at free and flippant play in nature.
I find myself thinking again about chimera, ouroboros, the electronic music priestess in the church, and a host of water nymphs, and think that, much like Aitken's Mirage, art can only be as good as what is there to be reflected in the first place.
The delicate fabric fragments from late antiquity are adorned with sea nymphs riding dolphins, vibrant birds in primary colors, geometric motifs, and portraiture, all visualizing the diversity of pagan and Christian religion and culture that was occurring in Byzantine-era Egypt from the third to seventh centuries.
I bumped into Bald Mustache Man again in a room full of clocks and an old woman and was made to stand eyeball to eyeball with him, staring into his face for what seemed like an eternity, while two the nymphs in white dresses danced around us.
The senior aphids wasted time trying to get the young off as the nymphs crawled on their antennas and limbs, but once a nymph got all the way up into that spot, an adult was likely to cut its losses and just start moving toward the plants.
One of his prizes was Noël-Nicolas Coypel's "The Abduction of Europa" (1726-27), now at the Philadelphia Museum of Art: Zeus, in the form of a bull, carries Europa through a churning sea, while water nymphs surf on goggle-eyed fish and putti divebomb the waves.
A sea monster-shaped nautilus cup is now at the Museum Het Prinsenhof in Delft, a nautilus cup with a base of silver sea nymphs is at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, and a pair of silver flagons are at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
Borrowing from a range of sources, including, most notably, Hindu mythology, science fiction and queer theory, Ganesh's reincarnated comic-book melodramas replaced misogynistic tales of moustachioed, warrior men and dainty damsels in distress with quirky, mutilated, multi-limbed and bare-breasted nymphs and lesbian orgies in fantastical, mythic worlds.
In the low-ceilinged, dimly-lit room, amongst the images of mothers and children, goddesses and nymphs, situated slightly out of sight behind a television monitor, hung a self-portrait of a young woman with almond eyes and a red smile holding a branch pulled from a camellia tree.
Nymphs also spend time getting other members water to keep them hydrated if they&aposve smoked too much weed or had too much to drink, Jen, a 35-year-old member who acts as a nymph and asked to omit her last name for privacy reasons, previously told Insider.
"The Olympian Party," a London costume charity ball in 1935, provided the opportunity for Yevonde Middleton (1893-1975), an innovative color photographer known as Madame Yevonde, to capture later 24 of the society beauties who had attended the event in their guises as mythical goddesses, nymphs and muses.
All black-legged nymphs were knocked out after only one minute's worth of exposure, for instance, while the same was true for 62 percent of adult female black-legged ticks (both male and female adult ticks can theoretically bite and suck blood from humans, but females are the usual culprit).
It's perhaps more straightforward in the case of the tragedies — there have been various novelistic interpretations of "King Lear" over the years — but how to handle Shakespeare's more fantastical offerings, the plays with stage directions like Enter certain Nymphs (from "The Tempest") or Enter Time, the chorus (from "The Winter's Tale")?
Using high-speed video to film the rays as they feasted on different kinds prey—fish, somewhat tougher shrimp, and extremely chewy little dragonfly nymphs—Kolmann saw that the rays used an asymmetrical jaw motion, like a cow chewing its cud, as they moved their jaws from side to side.
There's reason to believe that stinkbugs fare poorly in winters when the temperature drops early and rapidly, as happened in North America during the polar vortex of 2013-14, after which stinkbug levels declined; there's also reason to believe that excessively warm summer weather can reduce the survival rate of stinkbug nymphs.
The beauty of the mermaid-like nymphs is indeed difficult to surrender, but when the Sirens are situated more precisely in their classical context, we can begin to appreciate them as all-powerful creatures whose tainted reputation arise not from feminine seduction, but from knowledge of the afterlife, the ultimate frontier for humankind.
Walker plays one of the nymphs, a character inspired by her own life whom she calls Me. Me is a gracious host, using poetry and song (Walker wrote all of the songs with her co-composer, Kasaun Henry) to share her complex personal story and her views on the African-American experience.

No results under this filter, show 127 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.