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"owlish" Definitions
  1. looking like an owl, especially because you are wearing round glasses, and therefore seeming serious and intelligent
"owlish" Antonyms

61 Sentences With "owlish"

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

She's an owlish divorcée who manhunts at her favorite nightspot.
"They have expression, modesty, sex appeal, simplicity," sighed the owlish Frenchman.
The young, owlish notary public had been talking for some time.
Against those certitudes, Minsky, an owlish man with a shock of grey hair, developed his "financial-instability hypothesis".
His thick eyebrows, round spectacles and sprays of white and gray hair give his face a vaguely owlish appearance.
When NightOwl does the switch, it lets out a cute owlish noise (which you can turn off in the settings).
In fact, she asked serious questions about the land and the cottage, the drainage, and she did so with an air of owlish inquiry.
In the cartoon as in real life, he wears owlish spectacles and blinks very deliberately while waving his hands in front of his face.
Finally, with internet assistance, I learned that thorium is element number NINETY; EDUCATION is Aristotle's "best provision for old age;" and "strigine" means OWLISH.
In a fevered glance, she moves between seduction and terror, and with the rise of an owlish eyelid, she pushes gentle vulnerability into cartoonish ridiculousness.
DARIUSZ STOLA, the owlish director of Polin, the museum of Jewish life in Warsaw, remembers when Jewish sections first started to appear in bookshops in Poland.
Scamell-Katz, who has a background in design, acted as their architect, and, with his owlish glasses and dandified clothes, you might mistake him for one.
We were sitting at Morton's, the venerable Washington steakhouse, where Leo, an owlish man in his 50s who wears a pocket watch, keeps a wine locker.
Water had scoured two symmetrical hollows into the stone, giving it an owlish look, or a blind look, or, anyway, some quality that was oddly attractive.
That's why you should investigate before you click "Accept," said J.D. Gershbein, CEO of Owlish Communications, a Chicago-based company that helps professionals hone their LinkedIn profiles.
In the 2700s, Mr. Hockney was easy to recognize, a boyish figure with an apple-round face, a mop of blond hair, and his trademark owlish glasses.
Blake, who is three minutes older than Blaine, has a few more strands of gray hair and wears his owlish glasses perched on the tip of his nose.
For the trip, an hour's drive from Guaidó's apartment in Caracas , we sat in the back of an armored S.U.V. A man in owlish glasses sat between us.
Mr. Harari has a sort of owlish demeanor, in that he looks wise and also does not move his body very much, even while glancing to the side.
There seemed to be no neutral opinions about Mr. Bergé, a man of slight build, exquisitely tailored suits and oval, horn-rimmed glasses, which gave him an owlish look.
His writing, admirers said, matured into literature: an owlish wit, sometimes surreal, often absurdist, usually scouring dark corridors of paradox, always carried off with a subtext of good sense.
To Hispanic fans the Clintons are family, praised for ties stretching back to 1972, when an owlish Hillary Rodham helped register Mexican-American voters in the wilds of south Texas.
After the war, he wandered amid the ruins like a folklorist, an austere man in owlish glasses, compiling the Yiddish expressions and jokes that circulated among Polish Jews facing death.
Owlish, fierce, preternaturally wise, her dad's biggest headache as well as the bad apple of his eye, fallen for awhile right under the tree, Lockwood is an Athena-ish heroine.
" Excitable and owlish-looking behind giant horn-rims, Pill gradually revealed herself as a Canadian-nationalist grammarian, saying "zed" for "z" and insisting that words like "savour" retain their "u.
"We've always thought that ideas can be extreme without alienating people," says Trix, a tall, white-haired great-grandmother with owlish round glasses that evoke another famed Swiss architect, Le Corbusier.
The dean of conservative pundits, now 75, wore a crisp pinstripe shirt and gray slacks, his customary owlish Mona Lisa expression a bit tighter than usual, owing to the subject matter.
The visual idiosyncrasies of individual characters also translate faithfully from static to motion, with Birdboy maintaining his owlish face and Dinki sporting a similar charm bracelet around one ear in both versions.
Gold has worn the same uniform since he was 19: a dark shirt with slightly baggy black jeans, gray New Balance sneakers and owlish glasses that make his childlike face appear solemn.
The ordeal of Fu Xuedong—an owlish, soft-spoken man who seems stunned by his sudden notoriety—has vividly revealed the extent to which China's commitment to the rule of law is conditional.
Asked at the end of the evening what his audience should "take away" from the distilled wisdom of his book, he paused, giving that owlish, quizzical look of his and said, "Several copies."
On a recent evening, a young woman wearing owlish glasses strode through curls of smoke produced by the cigar of a man in a blue-and-white polo lounging on the bar's veranda.
At Aitchison he took teenage pupils, including young Khan, on 250-mile treks through the mountains, where they often found their bony teacher, in school cap, owlish glasses and Aertex shirt, effortlessly overtaking them.
Wearing large, owlish eyeglasses, he was a smartly tailored dresser who affected a near-British accent as he spoke wistfully of his decision earlier in life to forgo a career as a literature professor.
Mr. Guinness played le Carré's frequent hero George Smiley: an owlish, soft-spoken, pathologically British intelligence chief whose nose for treachery is keen — developed in part, perhaps, by the experience of his wife's serial infidelity.
Gray haired with an owlish pair of black glasses, he speaks with jaunty indifference and ingratiating candor, a combination that always made the tsk-tskers who disapproved of his client list sound unworldly and naïve.
Mills knelt at the foot of his bed in the Standard Hotel, on the Lower East Side, scrolling through photos on an iPad, exclaiming at a woman huffing glue and an owlish boy who died young.
Mr Greengrass himself is almost as recognisable as his work: at any film awards ceremony, it's easy to spot the smiling, burly six-footer with the mane of grey hair and the pair of owlish wire-rimmed glasses.
His tall, lanky form, tousled hair, and calm, owlish expression give him the aura of a pleasantly surprised child who's just wandered into the living room on Christmas morning and discovered a gargantuan Merzbow boxset tucked under the tree.
Shepard Smith, Fox's chief news anchor, and Chris Wallace, its owlish Sunday host, frequently jab the president and his administration; Tucker Carlson has waffled back and forth; and Trump has hit back—frequently, viciously, and whenever it suits him.
I recall sitting there as Starr, his blue eyes owlish, his skin pink and dimpled, sat before Congress and in a sonorous I-say-this-more-in-sorrow-than-in-anger tone, pounced light as a cat on a scalawag president.
While Oliver usually opens the show with a selection of timely jokes followed by a longer reported segment on a single topic, he greeted his audience on November 12 with more urgency than usual, his owlish eyes blinking rapidly behind wired glasses.
An owlish, taciturn, supremely disciplined strategist—at one point his book describes a year and a half spent outwitting a Senate rival, ending with an assassin's quiet boast: "Larry never saw it coming"—Mr McConnell is in many ways the anti-Trump.
Finch (Michael Emerson), the owlish genius who created the crime-predicting artificial intelligence program called the Machine, wonders whether it's time to pull the plug: Is the existence of a program that could exterminate us "an existential risk the world can't afford"?
In Ms. Dunham's interview with Amy Schumer in Lenny Letter, Ms. Dunham's online feminist newsletter, the "Girls" creator recounted her experience at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Gala this last spring, at which she wore a black-tie pantsuit and owlish black-frame eyeglasses.
It all comes back to whether you're a lark — an early riser — or an owl, and "most people are a little owlish," said David Welsh, a neuroscientist at the University of California, San Diego, who studies the body's pacemaker cells and was not involved in the study.
Long before dawn on a wind-whipped April night, the only thing stirring at the corner of Central Park West and 86th Street was a slight figure in boyishly oversize attire — ink-stained parka, baggy pants, owlish eyeglasses — that nearly hid him as he fussed with a stack of newspapers.
The work of the 80-something architects Trix and Robert Haussmann is brilliant, subversive — and virtually unknown in the U.S. "We've always thought that ideas can be extreme without alienating people," said Trix, a tall, white-haired great-grandmother with owlish round glasses that evoke another famed Swiss architect, Le Corbusier.
David bethought himself instead of the owlish Mizrachi, his visit to whom had been left unfinished.
They are similar to the 'owlish' eyes and eyebrows carved on the Folkton Drums.Sharp, Mick (1994). A land of Gods and Giants. Frazer Stewart Books. .
In January 2009, a snowy owl appeared in Spring Hill, Tennessee, the first reported sighting in the state since 1987."Snowy Owl Appears in Middle Tennessee." The Styling Owlish. 24 January 2009.
In The Moon, for instance, it takes a few moments to register the huge, owlish eyes very faintly incised in the shadowy surface of the painting, eyes that stare sightlessly back at you.
Her husband is Tomlan Goodwin. ;Matthias Tunstall : Mattes is the partner of Clara Goodwin. He is 6 feet, 3 inches tall. Beka describes him as having an owlish look; during the span of the novel, his lover is Sabine of Macayhill, a lady knight.
Composer T. J. Kuenster has some funny songs. They're not Ashman and Menken (The Little Mermaid songwriting team), but they're sprightly. The best is probably a Bach-like fugue number, in which the Grand Duke and his owlish goons sing "Never Let Him Crow" around a church organ. But in a movie like this, it ain't over till the rooster sings.
Vida – Described as an "out-of-town guest", Vida is a struggling writer who is visiting her grandmother, Ida Wentz. She writes a magazine which doesn't sell. After reading some of Random Wilder's poems, she becomes obsessed with the neighbor who she describes as an "owlish oddity", and begins to follow him around. David Goldberg – The silent boy who is kidnapped during the course of the story.
An online translation When the caricaturist J. J. Grandville illustrated the Fables in 1838 he updated the social comment, using animals instead of humans. At an Academy exhibition, a fox glances sideways at a pompous portrait bust that is being examined closely by an ass, with the figures of a uniformed duck and an owlish dandy in the background. The German philosopher Gotthold Ephraim Lessing also reinterpreted the fable in 1759, identifying chatterers as its target.
After their inaugural season in Sacramento, the team relocated to Miami, Florida. They took the name Miami Hooters in an unusual marketing arrangement with the Florida-based restaurant chain Hooters, which was ordinarily more noted for its buxom waitresses than feats of athletic prowess. Naturally, the team adopted the restaurant's owlish logo and trademark colors as its own for three years, until this unusual arrangement terminated after the completion of the 1995 season. Desirous of staying in the general South Florida area, the team relocated to West Palm Beach as the Florida Bobcats.
After their inaugural season, the team relocated to Miami, Florida. They took the name Miami Hooters in an unusual marketing arrangement with the Florida-based restaurant chain Hooters, which was ordinarily more noted for its buxom waitresses than feats of athletic prowess. Naturally, the team adopted the restaurant's owlish logo and trademark colors as its own for three years, until this unusual arrangement terminated after the completion of the 1995 season. Desirous of staying in the general South Florida area, the team relocated to West Palm Beach as the Florida Bobcats.
The film opens with the MGM logo, as usual, but with a voice-over saying, "I forgot the opening line" (the voice of James Stewart), replacing the lion roar, and proceeds with The Lecturer regaling his unseen students with a wealth of knowledge of the habits of birds. Owlish Brewster McCloud, living hidden and alone under the Houston Astrodome, dreams of creating wings that will help him fly like a bird. His only assistance comes from Louise, a beautiful woman who wants to help. Wearing only a trench coat, Louise has unexplained scars on her shoulder blades, suggestive of a fallen angel.
The calls of the grey-headed fish eagle include a gurgling awh-awhr and chee-warr repeated 5–6 times, an owlish ooo-wok, ooo-wok, ooo-wok, a nasally honking uh-wuk and a loud high pitched scream. These begin as subdued low short notes each succeeding one more strongly upturned and more strident then previous then dying away again and are uttered from a perch or on the wing. Fledglings give a longer nasal uuuw-whaar that starts low and subdued then becomes, louder and higher and strident. During the breeding season becomes quite vocal, with calls being loud and far carrying, often calling also at night.
The owlish St Mary's Chapel The name Capel-y-ffin comes from Welsh, and means "chapel of the boundary" since it lies in the valley of the River Honddu close to the boundary of the historical dioceses of St David's and Llandaf, now Swansea and Brecon and Monmouth. The chapel itself is dedicated to St Mary and was built in 1762, replacing an earlier 15th-century structure. It originally served as a chapel of ease for the parish church at Llanigon, but is now within its own ecclesiastical parish. With an interior of just 26 by 13 feet (8 by 4 metres), the chapel is one of the smallest in Wales and reminded diarist Francis Kilvert of an owl.

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