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19 Sentences With "pensiveness"

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

When the movement became an active dialogue between soloist and ensemble, Mr. Lisiecki's playing mixed youthful impetuousness with mature pensiveness.
Catch the short cadenza before the conclusion of the aria, which she sings with a touch of pensiveness and melting tone.
My favorite unscripted narrative show is back for a fourth season, with all the staggering Alaskan vistas and poignant pensiveness you can handle.
The Tetzlaffs and Mr. Vogt are experienced in the Brahms trios, having released a fine recording of them last year, and on Wednesday they played the second, in C, with clearheaded pensiveness.
Ms. Lamsma, who first worked with her countryman Mr. van Zweden in 2007, played splendidly, with crisp clarity and brightly radiant sound, conveying both the rhapsodic fervor and intriguing pensiveness of the music.
J.P. An unhurried young R&B singer from El Paso, Khalid has a voice that's slightly fissured, cut through with a touch of Sampha's devotional air and a bit of Michael Kiwanuka's pensiveness.
Far from the doof-doof that circulates around room one at XOYO, there's a pensiveness to it—that kind of creeping dread that comes with accepting that not only is tonight nearly over, but tomorrow's nearly here too.
Banks comes to believe the aliens she and the physicist have dubbed "Abbott and Costello" are benevolent, but she has to figure out how to convince her nervous government, whose pensiveness and trigger-happy fatalism is represented by Stuhlbarg's shadowy CIA operative.
As Sebastian, a down-on-his-luck but oh-so-passionate jazz pianist determined to open his own club and save the music he loves, you could say that he reaches peak Gosling, that signature combination of aw-shucks sheepish smile and moody pensiveness.
Hawthorne is musing idly in the Concord woods, where "sunshine glimmers through shadow, and shadow effaces sunshine, imaging that pleasant mood of mind where gaiety and pensiveness intermingle," when the bucolic peace is shattered by the whistle of a nearby locomotive, a "long shriek, harsh, above all other harshness" that reminds the writer that civilization's swarming anthill is not far off.
The group's playing on this number > really reflects pensiveness. This is the top tune, but the entire fare is > delightful. Each of the sidemen contribute substantially to the session. A > solid entry for Fischer and Co.
14 October 2012 Biting the Sun is the 22nd most popular item on alibris.com for work authored solely by Tanith Lee and her highest-ranked Amazon title. Review bloggers have described Don’t Bite the Sun as "a fun, addictive read"Daniels, Matthew. “Reflected Pensiveness.” Weblog post. Wordpress.
We were acquaintances > before we had seen more of each other than handwriting; we were friends > before we knew it. But the time had now come for something better. With our > pens we had wished each other the good cheer of a Merry Christmas and a > Happy New Year, and that scarcely discharged the pensiveness of our unrelief > of bank work. We wanted to meet each other.
At the center of the painting, but in the background, stands an androgynous female tambourine player; to her left and on an edge of the table sits a just as androgynous male violin player, who dominates the composition by his size. The mood of the two drinkers and of the three musicians is one of pensiveness, and the whole painting is pervaded with melancholy.
It was in fact written earlier, in 1855, and Liszt simply decided to use it as a part of the oratorio. The next movement is a setting of the Lord's Prayer for chorus and organ. The murmuring of Latin text and pensiveness of mood is much alike the first movement. 'The Foundation of the Church', however, 'wakes up' the chorus and Christ's words 'Tu es Petrus, et super hanc petram...' (Matthew 16,18) sound firm and decisive.
As the conventional name suggests, many have taken the posture to indicate sadness or pensiveness, and thus to interpret the rectangular object on the viewer's right as a stele, a stone slab that serves as a grave marker. Others see an 'exhausted Athena', and others still see no such emotion. The exact nature of the rectangular object, too, is unclear – some suggest that an object was perched atop it (e.g., the infant Erichthonius) – others that it is a marker from a race-course.
The chorus opens with her walking along a bridge with the children playing their instruments behind her. When the second chorus starts, the camera pans over to several buildings and landscapes around Los Angeles. The camera then pans into several citizens in the city expressing a sense of pensiveness: an elderly couple, a man in his car, a couple who have just finished surfing, and a woman walking her dog. During the second chorus, Amuro and the children begin marching and playing their instruments through downtown Los Angeles.
His 1611 portrait of Frances Howard, Countess of Hertford in rich attire framed by a draped silk curtain, with a fringed pelmet across the top of the canvas, is the first known instance of a portrait setting that would be used by Hilliard's former apprentice William Larkin in a series of full-length portraits between 1613 and 1618.Hearn 2003, p. 37 Overall, Gheeraerts' portraiture in the Jacobean era is characterized by the "quietness, pensiveness, and gentle charm of mood" seen in his portraits of Catherine Killigrew, Lady Jermyn (1614) and Mary Throckmorton, Lady Scudamore (1615). Isaac Oliver died in 1617, and around the same time Gheeraerts' position at court began to decline as the result of competition from a new generation of immigrants.
"Instead of the thoughtless levity of childhood he possessed the gravity, pensiveness, and melancholy of mature life.... some dark, doubtful ideas of the great Life had presented themselves, and his spirit was grappling with them in hard strife.") In 1853, Routledge published Mackenzie’s book Burmah and the Burmese, even as Mackenzie was busy helping Walter Savage Landor prepare a new edition of his Imaginary Conversations (Demosthenes to Eubulides: "We want surprise, as at our theaters; astonishment, as at the mysteries of Eleusis." Diogenes to Plato: "It is better to shake our heads and let nothing out of them than to be plain and explicit in matters of difficulty... for if we answer with ease, we may be... liable to the probation of every clown's knuckle.") In 1854, Mackenzie translated, from the German, Friedrich Wagner’s Schamyl and Circassia (the title page noting Mackenzie had already, at age 20, been appointed a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London and a Member of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain).

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