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111 Sentences With "plumbs"

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

It extends far beyond 85033 and plumbs to a deeper level.
Jesper gets a bit less insufferable as he plumbs the place's mysteries.
Mr. McVicar also plumbs psychological undercurrents, particularly those of Roberto and Nottingham.
The result is a searing narrative that plumbs both emotional and political depths.
What follows is a bittersweet story that plumbs family relationships and cultural differences.
Finally, in his 2012 film "Amity," Mr. Adams plumbs the depths of toxic masculinity.
Midlife—like all Carucci's work—plumbs experiences and emotions that are universal, even inescapable.
In Rashaad Newsome's "Running," a vocal tradition reaches expressive new heights and plumbs emotional depths.
Drawing inspiration from other arts, BalletCollective plumbs the connections between visual, literary, and choreographic forms.
Unexplored's dungeon plumbs deep into the earth, and it is filled with keys and locks.
Mr Hader plumbs contradictions in trust and morality, deceit and good intentions, trauma and strength.
The team's ice drill, positioned outside the drilling tent, plumbs the depths of Col du Dôme.
It's one that plumbs the dark recesses of all our imaginations: thrilling and terrifying by turns.
A loss, that is, for dystopian Venezuela, where every day the population plumbs new depths of privation.
Through image and metaphor, Trump deftly plumbs the depths of the cognitive chasm that fractures American society.
Again and again, he plumbs the undercurrents of a hoax to discover fearfulness and racism lurking inside.
That updating (with sets by Paul Steinberg and costumes by Brigitte Reiffenstuel) effectively plumbs the story's undercurrents.
It explores the alchemy of three families brought together unexpectedly and plumbs the depths of the scientists' deception.
Much of the book plumbs Norman's love for Paul (and envy of him) as an angler and otherwise.
More often than not, though, Doyle plumbs the bleaker aspects of literary life with startling precision and candor.
"Serving the world's rich and famous, it turns out, plumbs the depths of an alternative universe," he writes.
India's current-account deficit continues to swell, for instance, even as the rupee plumbs record lows against the dollar.
If only we all had problems like the Plumbs: the four adult beneficiaries of their family's $2 million trust fund.
Again and again, he plumbs the undercurrents of a hoax to discover the fearfulness and racism that often lurk inside.
Barra Grant's autobiographical solo play plumbs her fraught relationship with her mother, the famous politician and beauty queen Bess Myerson.
A colloquium at the NYU Steinhardt School plumbs the potential of art institutions to make an impact on immigrant lives.
Thematically, she plumbs the depths of everything from the uncertainty of racial passing to the paranoia of the 1970s political landscape.
Handsomely shot by Jens Harant — Cora Pratz is the production designer, Esther Walz the costumer — the film plumbs several ambiguous areas.
The XOP's outperformers include West Coast driller California Resources and Penn Virginia, which plumbs the Eagle Ford shale in southeastern Texas.
Again and again, Young plumbs the undercurrents of a hoax to discover lurking inside the figure of a mischaracterized racial other.
The soft brush plumbs the crevices of your keyboard to sweep out crumbs, then retracts with a snap for easy storage.
If Mr. Habjan's puppetry plumbs the depths of Salome's subconscious, Mr. Barlog's production's charms are all on the stylish but straightforward surface.
He pruned the libretto drastically to enhance the dramatic pacing, and wrote complex music that plumbs the emotional turmoil of the characters.
Aparna's is the strongest among the bunch, as she plumbs the depths of her own anxieties among other plights of the internet age.
But despite passages of richness, ambiguity and complexity, especially in the orchestra, the music seldom plumbs the darkest strands of this psychological drama.
The film feints at darkness more than it actually plumbs it, but it builds on The Last Jedi's exploration of guilt and sacrifice.
Walsh plumbs deeply the hope and lure of the mystical amid global chaos; darker, more primal concerns take over from coolly cerebral strategies.
Damon Davis plumbs the depths of Black history, fantasy, and mythology to create a vision of power and resilience in his St. Louis exhibition.
Written by the great investigative journalist William Langewiesche before the giant Yahoo breach was revealed, it plumbs the mysteries of the web's vast unknowns.
Every year that the war goes on plumbs new, previously unimaginable depths of violence against children, and violations of international law by all sides.
The nihilistic filmmaker plumbs the digital revolution's impact on humans, from the birth of the Internet to its inevitable (or, possibly already existing) sentience.
Employing stark, somewhat abstract sets and costumes that blend realistic and surreal touches, the production plumbs the teeming yet murky emotions of the opera.
Opioid and heroin addiction is an ugly disease that impacts many lives in a very negative way, and the Plumbs' efforts are ultimately saving lives.
The recording artist headlines Madison Square Garden, a play plumbs the gay experience in Uganda and the Nobel Prize-winning novelist anchors a new documentary.
Mr. Höller, Belgium-born and based in Sweden and Ghana, plumbs the antipodal reaches of human experience, and the conflicting feelings that come with it.
In Human Revolution, a former Detroit cop named Adam Jensen plumbs a sinister plot behind "augmentations" — advanced implants and prosthetics that enhance users' bodies and minds.
Directed with care by Lee Sunday Evans, this irreducible, transcendent "Macbeth" commands engagement as it plumbs the internal life of these characters, revealing their fragile emotions.
"The American election again plumbs new depths in its bottom line," read the headline of an editorial from Xinhua, the main state news agency, on Monday.
Thankfully, the awkward analogizing is soon forgotten as Skaife plumbs the depths of his knowledge of raven lore, of their place in history and in literature.
Rather than tracing the familiar arc of the hero's journey, the film plumbs Mr. Bauman's ambivalence about being noisily celebrated as a patriot after the atrocity.
Fear festers, burrows and blooms in Caryl Churchill's "Escaped Alone," a short and wondrous play that plumbs the depths of 21st-century terrors, large and small.
Tonight in London, May will open a third "meaningful vote" on Britain's departing terms—a phrase which, even by British comedic standards, plumbs new levels of irony.
The result, Immortal Americans, plumbs the depths of his own memories as a young outsider as well as more universal themes of personal growth, love, aging, and loss.
Time Well plumbs the monotony, wonder, and existential dread of the human condition, from dreams to rituals, evolution, cosmic doubt, disembodiment, and flickers of light in the darkness.
In both "Election" and "The Abstinence Teacher," Perrotta features the perspectives of educators — and other members of the community — as he wryly plumbs the pathos of the suburbs.
He is a student of hip-hop history and a keen sociopolitical observer who plumbs both bravado and paranoia; his gravelly voice rumbles over muted, jazz-inflected beats.
More Songs About Buildings and Food simultaneously plumbs a political realm and the mysteries of the human heart, connecting them through a structure of feeling that isn't often articulated.
Julius Caesar is a political play, one that plumbs the uneasy relationship between power and populism, as well as the conflicts that arise between personal relationships and loyalty to country.
Directed by Lila Neugebauer, with a tightly interdependent ensemble, this portrait of a quorum of high school teachers, planning a charity telethon, wittily plumbs the dysfunction in group dynamics (247:2888).
Directed by Lila Neugebauer, with a tightly interdependent ensemble, this portrait of a quorum of high school teachers, planning a charity telethon, wittily plumbs the dysfunction in group dynamics (26200:21987).
Directed by Lila Neugebauer, with a tightly interdependent ensemble, this portrait of a quorum of high school teachers, planning a charity telethon, wittily plumbs the dysfunction in group dynamics (1:45).
Directed by Lila Neugebauer, with a tightly interdependent ensemble, this portrait of a quorum of high school teachers, planning a charity telethon, wittily plumbs the dysfunction in group dynamics (453:245).
Directed by Lila Neugebauer, with a tightly interdependent ensemble, this portrait of a quorum of high school teachers, planning a charity telethon, wittily plumbs the dysfunction in group dynamics (1:51963).
In the subsequent scenes, in exchanges with mourning neighbors and a man of the cloth played by Ventura, a long time Costa performer, Vitalina plumbs the depths of the aforementioned nothing.
The show plumbs the mind of Charles Dodgson — the logician, photographer and church deacon better known by his pen name, Lewis Carroll — and his obsession with the 11-year-old Alice Liddell.
The guidance from the PBOC's was the latest in a string of measures to stem surging capital outflows as the yuan currency plumbs 8-1/2 year lows against the surging U.S. dollar.
Whit Stillman plumbs the malaise of the young and privileged in this tale about two denizens of the New York nightclub scene of the early 1980s: Charlotte (Kate Beckinsale) and Alice (Chloë Sevigny).
Songs like "Firewood" and "My Employer" see him no longer using narrators as vehicles for his own emotions, as he plumbs the depths of his experience and puts the discoveries on full display.
But the play, directed with clinical focus by Gaye Taylor Upchurch, has the virtue of allowing us to sit within touching distance of Ms. Hall as she plumbs the depths of toxic unhappiness.
The formidable mezzo-soprano Stephanie Blythe offers a recital on Friday afternoon of a song cycle by Alan Louis Smith based on the Ellis Island Oral History Project that plumbs the American immigrant experience.
As per the advertisements hanging in the shop, a kilo of Askari grapes are 16,500 toman ($1.50), yellow plumbs are 17,500 toman ($1.60) and white nectarines are going for 25,900 toman ($2.35) a kilo.    
Dream cameos, old photos, nausea, useful but upsetting boxes of tampons discovered under a new lover's sink—Shapton quietly plumbs all the familiar trappings of the guilty fascinations we develop with those who came before.
At the same time McBride also plumbs the vast emotional terrain underneath performances of masculinity, questioning what it is to be a man rather than a woman rather than a boy rather than a beast.
Allegorically driven through 12 divine characters whose backstories are lyrically rendered in the gallery guide, the show plumbs the depths of Black history, fantasy, and mythology to propose a radical vision of resilience and transformative power.
In Kill All Normies: Online Culture Wars from 4Chan and Tumblr to Trump and the Alt-Right, published by Zero Books, Angela Nagle plumbs the depths of the noxious digital morass that fed off Trump's rise.
Yet apart from rampant asset price inflation in the decade since the Great Recession, and a sprinkling of wage inflation as the U.S. jobless rate plumbs half-century lows, there has been acceleration in little else.
It usually plays out something like this: To explain away a gaffe or to justify controversial policy, someone in Trump world, an administration notorious for its anti-academic tilt, plumbs the depths of history for precedent.
As Alissa Wilkinson writes for Vox: Julius Caesar is a political play, one that plumbs the uneasy relationship between power and populism, as well as the conflicts that arise between personal relationships and loyalty to country.
Witherspoon's accent may need a little work, but she's gripping to watch as she plumbs new depths in Becky's shallow soul, her impish smile suggesting that she's in on a joke that we're in that dark about.
On his track "Only Trying 2 Tell U," the young south London artist plumbs the depths of his emotions with smoky melodies, snatches of layered vocals and a wistful tale of heartbreak delivered in a fragile falsetto.
As the back and forth between rival candidates plumbs new depths in substance-free personal attacks, the nations of the world who look to America for leadership watch and worry about what has happened to our democracy.
China has also trimmed its new loan rate (LPR) three times since it became the official lending benchmark in August, and analysts expected further modest cuts in coming quarters as economic growth plumbs near 63-year lows.
China has also trimmed its new loan rate (LPR) three times since it became the official lending benchmark in August, and analysts expected further modest cuts in coming quarters as economic growth plumbs near 30-year lows.
Atkinson plumbs a more obscure realm of MI5's activity: its infiltration, during World War II, of the so-called fifth column, a network of British Nazi sympathizers who revered Hitler and eagerly awaited Germany's conquest of Europe.
And, just because the images are beautiful, take a look at the slide show for "Adiós Utopia" at the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, an exhibition that plumbs the dreams and deceptions of Cuban art since 1950.
Retailers in Africa's most advanced economy have nearly all complained of tough trading conditions as consumer sentiment plumbs multi-year lows and high unemployment and inflation gnaws at disposable income in the nation's first recession in eight years.
They will look for the level of conviction policymakers have on their rate-hike views, and how much credence they give signs of a firming of inflation even as unemployment, at 4.1 percent, plumbs a 17-year low.
Zhou has been especially sparing with words in the heat of battle with currency speculators as China's economy plumbs its slowest growth in 25 years, it eats through its reserves at a record pace and capital flows offshore.
For a generation that plumbs the attics of their fathers not to discover war relics or antique trunks but rather old computers, Vaporwave serves as nostalgia and resistance: an homage to old technology, a re-taking of its control.
The unassumingly named crispy eggplant plumbs the depths of the Sichuanese classic eggplant with garlic sauce, and delivers a delectable original, fried to a flavorful crunch and tossed to a glistening plum gold in a peanut-soy-garlic caramel.
Despite signs the economy is on steadier footing, economists expect forex reserves dipped again to $213 trillion in October after dropping to the lowest since 23 in September, suggesting continued capital outflows as the yuan currency plumbs six-year lows.
With Utah fifth in the nation in heroin overdose deaths (an average of 20153 people die weekly), the Plumbs are working to get Naloxone — an antidote for opioid overdose – into the hands of any Utahn who wants it at no cost.
It sets some of them in cities like Chicago, Miami, and Los Angeles — not just places in Latin America — and plumbs the worlds of drug cartels (they call these shows narco novelas), border crossers, immigrant families and truck-driving empires.
Directed by Mary Harron from a script by Guinevere Turner, "Charlie Says" surpasses "Once Upon a Time" in evoking the New Age fantasies and apocalyptic mentality of the late 1960s, partly because it plumbs the mind-set of Manson's female followers.
As the baron prattles on to the Marschallin about the advantages of this arranged union, Mr. Rattle plumbs the bustling orchestra music to highlight intricate details, jagged bits and pungent shards of dissonance that often pass by in other performances.
Particle physics enjoys a particular prestige in part because of its early (and now dissolved) association with the development of nuclear weapons, in part because of the conceptual depths it plumbs, in part because of the sheer size and expense of its tools.
And how are there so many Americans willing to accept Trump's corrosion of our culture and our discourse, to gleefully follow him as he plumbs the depths, probing for a bottom of acceptability that, in his world, seems to have been obliterated?
Jean Zimmerman, who includes the book in her shortlist of recent historical fiction, says that "Soli plumbs the contradictions of a man who could massacre Native Americans while conducting an affair with an Indian woman," and describes Cummins's experiences "with grit and grace."
But it's really the parents who take center stage in this raunchy and fitfully quite funny directorial debut from "Pitch Perfect" writer Kay Cannon, which plumbs plenty of warm hugs from the idea of parental angst about their kids leaving the nest.
It makes sense that Marc Maron—who plumbs the dark parts of human experience on his podcast WTF—would feel some sort of kinship with Berman, and today, on this week's episode, he shared his own appreciation of the Silver Jews songwriter's art and life.
Programming that work in the same season as "Wartesaal," which so affectively plumbs the psychology of exile, sends the message that the only way forward in dealing with the largest refugee crisis since the end of World War II is to learn from the past.
These two statements are no contradiction for the young South African artist Bogosi Sekhukhuni, whose New York debut, following on promising appearances in a number of international biennials, plumbs the shortcomings of digital technologies, neoliberal economics and multiracial democracy through videos, drawings, sculpture and a single painting.
One question that Stalker plumbs — unsurprisingly, from a filmmaker working in the twilight years of the Soviet regime — is what it means to be free, to leave one place for another that we believe will be less restrictive, only to discover that freedom has its costs.
The lineup continues with Mr. Zvyagintsev's "The Return" (2152), in which a father suddenly reappears after a 22014-year absence; "Elena" (2011), which plumbs the divide between a nurse and the wealthy patient she marries; and "Leviathan" (2014), in which an auto mechanic wages war against post-Soviet bureaucracy.
The Plumbs are Jack, a struggling antiques dealer; Bea, a former "Glitterary Girl" who has long failed to deliver the manuscript of her novel; Melody, a mother who can barely afford her mortgage payments; and the brother they begrudgingly lionize, the aptly-named Leo, the founder of a Gawker-like media empire.
Over the course of S-Town, Reed plumbs the threads he thinks will lead to an explanation for what happened; he examines everything from the way clocks are gilded and the history of sundials to the incorporation of John's small town in the '90s and the fallout of many of his closest personal relationships.
Compared to much writing about adoption, which plumbs the motivations of parents who relinquish or adopt, or the local-level corruption of individual agencies or middlemen, Johnson's focus is larger: on the government of a huge country and how its social engineering efforts created a widespread crisis for hundreds of thousands of children and their families.
The transexual nature of the image, which Freud treats entirely casually — Dawson is set far back in the room, while the writer Francis Wyndham dominates the foreground, relaxing on a leather love seat with a book of Gustave Flaubert's letters, as Pluto, again asleep, curls at his feet — uncannily plumbs the heart of one of today's fiercest cultural debates.
When: March 6–53 Where: Pier 36, 299 South Street at Clinton Street, Lower East Side, Manhattan I love a medium-focused fair because you know exactly what you're going to get; although that may not be necessarily be true of Art on Paper, which plumbs the seemingly endless forms, shapes, and texture paper works can embody.
But the centerpiece of the record is "Colonizer," whose title sets the tone for a track that plumbs the depths of Garbus's white guilt: I use my white woman's voice to interpret my travels with African men / I turn on my white woman's voice to contextualize acts of my white women friends / I cry my white woman tears carving grooves in my cheeks to display what I meant / I smell the blood in my voice "Writing that song was disgusting," Garbus says.
Galleries worth visiting on the east side include 63) David Richard Gallery, lately of Santa Fe, which is currently showing the brightly colored steel of the Canadian sculptor Robert Murray (through May 4); the nonprofit 2) WhiteBox next door, just relocated from SoHo, and inaugurating its new home with the thought-provoking group show "Waiting for the Garden of Eden" (through May 5); and 3) Hunter East Harlem Gallery, whose "do it (in school)" plumbs the overlap of conceptual art and arts education (through June 1).

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