Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"poignantly" Definitions
  1. in a way that has a strong effect on your feelings, especially when it makes you feel sad
"poignantly" Synonyms
sadly movingly heartbreakingly touchingly distressingly affectingly tragically upsettingly harrowingly stirringly emotionally heartrendingly saddeningly pitifully disturbingly painfully pathetically mournfully agonizingly(US) miserably pungently piquantly zestily sharply zingily savourily(UK) caustically bitingly cuttingly stingingly pertly keenly piercingly savorily(US) acutely saltily spicily tangily racily strongly expressively evocatively strikingly passionately powerfully graphically vividly pointedly warmly ardently imaginatively intensely spiritedly animatedly energetically sentimentally soppily mushily mawkishly cornily sloppily schmaltzily cloyingly drippily maudlinly saccharinely slushily sugarily sappily soupily cheesily cutesily syrupily sicklily eloquently tellingly persuasively meaningfully suggestively significantly forcefully impressively potently meaningly pregnantly revelatorily outspokenly bitterly cruelly grievously harshly unpleasantly disagreeably gallingly hardly severely nastily awfully direly disquietingly excruciatingly scathingly sarcastically sardonically mordantly acerbically acidly trenchantly satirically corrosively snarkily acidulously acrimoniously tartly fiercely profoundly deeply extremely violently ferociously terribly dreadfully heavily vehemently almightily blisteringly explosively inspiringly inspirationally rousingly stimulatingly upliftingly encouragingly excitingly exhilaratingly motivationally emotively hearteningly breathtakingly dramatically dynamically More

386 Sentences With "poignantly"

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

" He poignantly added, "I've learned to never give up.
The passing of the beloved snowman poignantly makes that point.
"Sandi said it very, very poignantly to me," he says.
"Going From Broke" poignantly puts a face to these problems.
From this angle the object is much more poignantly abject.
Poignantly, Sharlet also writes about sharing snapshots with his subjects.
This is poignantly clear in the world of video streaming services.
Brown's anthem poignantly reflected the psychic problem it sought to address.
Still, the disturbed faces of the three girls are poignantly convincing.
To me, this spoke most poignantly to Parks's dedication to his subject.
Do they not poignantly describe the heartbreak and fear of so many?
Poignantly, Abdelaziz says it was possibly Khashoggi's advice that saved his life.
It's all so poignantly relatable that it makes me a little achy.
It was so simple and human—so poignantly insufficient to the situation.
It accurately and poignantly portrays the status of the climate change movement.
Not surprisingly, some of Patterson's best work subtly and poignantly addresses both.
View cartoonish Mandy Moore of TV's Clone High poignantly fingering her baby grand.
Billionaire entrepreneur Marc Andreessen poignantly talked about improvement rate in a recent interview.
It looks, a little poignantly, like what "Remains" has been doing all along.
The emotion linking Sneed's poignantly relatable characters is a paralyzing sense of equivocation.
But the symphony ended up being poignantly resonant for an entirely different reason.
The radiant soprano Angel Blue was again wonderful as the poignantly troubled Bess.
Somehow her characters, which defy racial and gender stereotypes, are poignantly, heartbreakingly human.
These assemblages showcase art's power and, poignantly its limitations, to effect material transformations.
Greenwell poignantly evokes the narrator's inability to resist the draw of Mitko's erratic neediness.
The movie poignantly captures this nuance, and the tragedy of conflict across national allegiances.
Poignantly, it also emerges as a question in the long arc of Brown's life.
The novel poignantly conjures the difficulties of reconciling the present with "an ungraspable history."
The two may share DNA, but any emotional bond remains poignantly out of reach.
Fillon revealed, poignantly, a politician's wife who had spent years in her husband's shadow.
The soprano Hana Blazikova's sweet sound and tenderness made her a poignantly trusting Euridice.
Poignantly so, straining to the right or left, "you want them to be perfect."
Poignantly, these images show many more human figures than any of Hatakeyama's earlier photographs.
Most poignantly, the Neil Diamond-penned "Love to Love" featured a forgotten vocal by Jones.
And the casual way she does this all the while fanning sheets is poignantly funny.
But as The Boiling River so poignantly illustrates, fantastical discoveries are lurking all around us.
"It's hard to have a sense of humor at college these days," she admits, poignantly.
Most poignantly, she recalls asking Jobs if Apple's early Lisa computer was named for her.
Maybe he has revealed me, but, in my opinion, he has more poignantly revealed himself.
The book, she adds, "poignantly reflects on why some memories fade and others do not."
Perhaps most poignantly relevant to Americans this week is Morrison's seminal work on American whiteness.
It poignantly and often hilariously humanizes so many people and their loyalty to the game.
They illustrate poignantly the changes to American society that dynamically occur around us each day.
More centrally, Ms. Dunning — who, poignantly, had worked as an oral historian in Berkeley, Calif.
Cars, the great American signifiers of social ascension and escape, figured poignantly in these narratives.
Cars, the great American signifiers of social ascension and escape, figured poignantly in these narratives.
Shin is a master of simple gestures poignantly enacted; her work contains no unnecessary verbiage.
"I probably wouldn't have made it this far if I were a refugee," she said poignantly.
This is poignantly significant at this point in history, too, when human rights feel exceptionally delicate.
Despite a later marriage, she poignantly describes Héger as "the only master I have ever had".
A few weeks ago, Jonah Goldberg poignantly put into words how so many of us feel.
Margaret is still resonant because it centers a poignantly realistic depiction of a teenager in crisis.
I suppose this prophecy was part of the family-separation strategy that Turner so poignantly describes.
The seed packets exemplify Geys's interest in packaging, perhaps most poignantly in his Bubble Paintings series.
Because it, again, it just poignantly seemed cool and that's really all the backstory right there.
But the different sonic worlds came together poignantly in a touching duet for the two women.
Silberman's background shines through especially poignantly in the parts of autism history that intersect with LGBTQ issues.
The kitchen is ambitiously large, with a double oven and a wine fridge that is poignantly empty.
Here was Schubert entering mystical realms, while poignantly drawing upon a heritage of Viennese song and dance.
Mr. Polenzani makes a poignantly believable Nadir, who arrives soon after the election of his old friend.
"This administration is basically trampling on the tribe's history — and to put it poignantly, its ancestry," Rep.
And, poignantly, the perpetrators of those limitations stand to lose just as much as any of us.
But TV also suffered another kind of loss on Sunday night, as actor Steven Yeun poignantly explained.
But as Kirkpatrick's mother so poignantly made clear, those names and faces should be known to Americans.
It contains cascading bursts of fast notes poignantly curtailed, as if to underline the futility of flight.
And June grieves, poignantly—even if she had felt trapped, she is now both devastated and guilty.
The loss of Phife Dawg from A Tribe Called Quest this week drives this home especially poignantly.
The characters are memorable and complex, and the author poignantly explores the dynamics of sexuality in Jamaica.
"How do we love ourselves with sweet defiance?" asks a poignantly-written press release for the show.
The Maestro's responses thunder all the more loudly — and more poignantly — for their consignment to white space.
One interviewee in the book poignantly described the crisis as 'a sad undercurrent in [our indigenous] communities.
They're at their most poignantly expressive when they're dancing together (in dwindling numbers) at one another's weddings.
Now a teenager, Peyangki's formerly idyllic life has become fraught with tension and distraction — and, poignantly, romance.
Mr. Pisaroni made a suave Almaviva; the shimmering soprano Rachel Willis-Sorenson was a poignantly melancholic Countess.
There's love and violence in Niru's first sexual experience, and most poignantly in his friendship with Meredith.
The goal is to get you to think like a working mother, which it pulls off poignantly.
Breathable, oxygen-rich air is a valuable commodity in the universe, as the movie Spaceballs so poignantly chronicles.
Most importantly, writing about death turns the writers' minds toward their own mortality, and Obit captures this poignantly.
In a New York Times Magazine interview, Kesha spoke candidly and poignantly about her past mental health struggles.
As the accompanying text notes, the work poignantly contrasts China's present endangered environment with its rich artistic past.
And so he was unmasked, poignantly, as exactly the type of drama queen the DAG's office doesn't need.
Fittingly, then, "Weak Pearl" is mysterious, bright and mesmerizing, but poignantly, its subject is legible only from afar.
The story behind The Room's creation is a surprisingly layered one, as Franco's film hilariously and poignantly details.
More poignantly, he was aware of life's importance and beauty, and understood that his legacy might be fleeting.
The austere beauty of the Machaut piece for two voices came through poignantly in Mr. Denk's subdued performance.
The second portion of the book poignantly depicts the unfathomable challenges faced afterward by young survivors like Michael.
But it was in the thronging crowd that Mr. Obama seemed to relive his campaign experience most poignantly.
If race is intimately tied to class, so is gender, as Ms. Rae's "Insecure" so poignantly reminds us.
Palimpsests of refuse, the assemblages in Sedimentations showcase art's power and, poignantly, its limitations, to effect material transformations.
The Janet Kurnatowski Gallery presented a solo show of his work poignantly titled Color Me Gone in 2013.
For that reason, an archaic meaning buried deep in the OED is poignantly telling of what green means today.
Drinking Buddies (Olivia Wilde, Anna Kendrick) explored the theme surprisingly poignantly, with a healthy dose of humor and realism.
" Poignantly, he adds, "To be honest, that's what I thought the response would be when I brought it up.
It's a well-worn path in art, but with Sunny War as the guide, the path feels poignantly different.
In a way, this ardent, rhapsodically lyrical and daringly long scene poignantly humanizes the demon and his beloved mortal.
Most poignantly, the movie focuses on the unique struggle of being both gay or queer and black or brown.
Though ostensibly positive, this is yet another of the "erasures" Dekel calls to our attention and so poignantly laments.
This is meant not as curatorial text or a press release, but, more poignantly, as a resource for schoolteachers.
"This administration is basically trampling on the tribe's history — and to put it poignantly, its ancestry," Grijalva told CBS News.
Kaine poignantly describe Castile's death as having occurred "for no apparent reason," an assertion that Governor Pence did not dispute.
Also, most poignantly, both narratives offer incisive observations about how marriages can grow insidious, and how instincts can be deluding.
This time, the ballad is poignantly covered by country star Keith Urban, whose croaky vocals tug at our very heartstrings.
Thank goddess for that leap of faith—these women had a lot to say and they said it so poignantly.
Poignantly, his ring finger still has a wedding tattoo, of the letters AYSF, which stand for At Your Side Forever.
In a Facebook post from July, Roybal poignantly reflected on what it's like being shot at from his time overseas.
But the show that most poignantly captured the effects of arbitrary identity in Beirut was at the Sfeir-Semler Gallery.
Seated in a studio, they spoke poignantly of growing up with loss, of milestones punctuated by the absence of fathers.
It's easy to see why: His poignantly bleak staging of "Parsifal," from 2013, is one of the house's finest today.
Americans have clearly and poignantly voiced frustration with "endless wars" and have long wanted to bring U.S. troops home safely.
" Passionately and poignantly, Dr. Zitter reminds us that "conveyor belts, regardless of their destination, are not meant for human beings.
It's a lively rendering completed at the peak of the artist's abilities and, poignantly, a year before his untimely death.
The photograph flags a space of potential bodily injury and also connects poignantly with Burr's aforementioned writing on corner bars.
Jordan mentioned it more than once, nowhere more poignantly (if anything in The Bachelorette is poignant) than during the hometown dates.
The music so poignantly sets the mood for each and every emotion that I had to know who was behind it.
" She also added, poignantly: "The best audiences I ever had made not a single sound at the end of the performance.
" She asked, poignantly, "Can you persuade people to take your side, if you're not sure you'll be there to take theirs?
Mr. Cuomo took the podium and poignantly recounted his family rallying around Ms. Lee during her harrowing battle with breast cancer.
Enacting a posthumous reassessment, the book Percy Rainford: Duchamp's "Invisible" Photographer has poignantly rescued the neglected artist Percy Rainford from erasure.
At today's news conference, Mr. Rosenstein poignantly emphasized the need for the American people to view these indictments in patriotic terms.
The essay "Now We Are Five" poignantly discusses, in Mr. Sedaris's familiarly discursive way, the suicide of his troubled sister, Tiffany.
And in Violetta's great aria in the final act, "Addio del passato," Ms. Oropesa poignantly balanced bleak expressivity with arching lyricism.
After a million twenty-seven-dollar contributions, each one so poignantly close to the retail price of a single hardcover book?
And while Mr. Stiller's Matthew is both reliably and appealingly neurotic, it is Mr. Sandler who excels, both riotously and poignantly.
Poignantly, her family has also released a beautiful black and white photograph taken at a cousin's wedding at the end of June.
Poignantly, Mosse's photographs of the surveillance state reveal our own innate and deeply human capacity for surveilling others, whether involuntarily or otherwise.
The collage is one of the poignantly personal pieces that anchor his survey, Tenemental (With Sighs Too Deep For Words), at Howl!
They were instead triggered by unknown hackers, who also managed to poignantly (if unintentionally) raise awareness about the threat of infrastructure insecurity.
Perhaps most poignantly, his main project interrogated a site that was no longer there, communicating its absence with the most tangible affectation.
By far the most likely outcome of the tournament is the one described so poignantly at the beginning of "Three Lions '98".
Fans went wild in celebration, proving how desperate queer women continue to be to see themselves accurately and poignantly reflected on television.
The dystopian road emerges plainly, and poignantly, in Cult and Deconstruction of the Revolutionary Nation, the exhibition's largest and most incisive constellation.
She was honored with Ansari for the episode "Thanksgiving," which poignantly featured a young lesbian navigating her family relationships after coming out.
Wotan craves both power and love, a tension that plays out poignantly in his relationship with Fricka, his exasperated (and childless) wife.
When she frantically rushes off, Charles frets that by opening up he has driven her away — the opera's most poignantly revealing moment.
Season 2 finds the queen dealing poignantly with aging amid the rise of sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll in British culture.
He doesn't know who he is or where he comes from, and — most poignantly — wonders why he has been born at all.
Portraying a miserable young woman trapped in a forced marriage to an abusive bully, Ms. Norman was vocally splendid yet poignantly vulnerable.
In this production, the mezzo-soprano Romina Basso sang Penelope's scene poignantly, drawing out the grief and queenly dignity in the music.
"But it does once again make poignantly clear this is an EU problem asking for an EU solution," the Dutch mission said.
More poignantly, they're imbued with placeless history, bound forever to the person for whom they served some sort of purpose, however brief.
Similar to Issa and Molly, Jayde and Van's relationship is poignantly depicted over a meal, here in a half-empty upscale Thai restaurant.
He said Harry opened up about his new son and spoke about how becoming a father poignantly reminded him of his late mother.
Poignantly, the Séléka had crushed a flute that had belonged to the last Bayaka who had known how to play and make it.
The lines also poignantly examined the insidious ability of the media to highlight the mundane and unimportant while simultaneously bypassing the real issues.
But not all of them are saying the same things — as a new series of comics from the Nib poignantly and painfully articulates.
The movie poignantly shows Julie channelling her creative energies into the stumbling conduct of her life, rather than into the making of art.
Mr Harding poignantly describes the churning of emotions that many migrants (not just Somalis) experience as they are tossed and tugged between competing cultures.
But there were poignantly-chosen prayers too, read by six people, including one of whom was born on the same day as the Queen.
The series is at its best when it realistically and poignantly shows how people with good intentions can still hurt, disappoint, and neglect others.
" He added poignantly, "I think that's something that whether you're a Republican or a Democrat or something else, we all agree on that, right?
As the author so poignantly described, weight loss may not signify a choice, but it often is an outward display of stress or illness.
Men don't need Playboy for their porn anymore, at least not the men the magazine -- and, more poignantly, its advertisers -- are trying to reach.
But what lingers most poignantly are the softly intoned concluding words of a paean to victory: And may we Never forget What happened here.
Their relationships are expressed in asides and periodic growls but more poignantly when they are separated in the frame and when they're gloriously united.
The notion of friendly dispute is increasingly alien to us, and this might be the thing that feels most poignantly lost about James's temperament.
Not just the murder, but the lies that surround it, and perhaps more poignantly, the lies Cunanan told himself that got him in this position.
Most obviously, she has depicted many of her subjects, including her daughters, in body-painted suits that simulate clothing yet leave the wearers poignantly exposed.
As Mr Miller, a TV journalist, poignantly shows, one of Asia's oldest democracies and its 103m people are suffering—even if many seem to approve.
Given the devastation wrought on native populations, the obsessive focus on a handful of Anglo-Saxon settlers—including, most poignantly, the infant Virginia—is overblown.
As Adu once poignantly stated "If they don't have you then you'll be invented completely" and that sentiment has followed both her and Drake's careers.
Schreiber moves with bearish stolidity, even when boxing, and nothing is more poignantly delayed than Chuck's realization that most of his wounds were self-inflicted.
And while we feel the problem poignantly on a voluntary, consumer level, it's exacerbated when we feel like we have to post against our will.
Most poignantly, urgently and successfully, he put the world's focus on the least among us, as the world's great moral traditions bid us to do.
In "New Era," technology is a force of nature, an integral — and perhaps inescapable — part of the landscape that is both alarming and poignantly beautiful.
As the child shuttles between two wildly different parents, the soft and poignantly detailed art marks time in passing seasons and the child's chaotic dreams.
He remembers — with hilarious accuracy — how conversations with this crowd can boomerang between outrageous comments and remarks that poignantly hit a nail on its head.
After she has died a second time, Eurydice writes a sisterly letter to Orpheus's future wife, giving Ms. de Niese a poignantly fragile final aria.
But as a dance critic, I will fight for Ms. Carlson, a multidisciplinary artist whose work poignantly explores social issues through the lens of performance.
Kochai's novel poignantly speaks to the importance of family, navigating one's own identity, and finding a sense of belonging that will speak deeply to all readers.
Her photographs, so poignantly presented alongside the words of each hibakusha take you into a world we can't possibly fully comprehend, and hopefully will never experience.
It's not that her sacrifice isn't a moving moment — it's played poignantly — but isn't clear why it was even necessary for her to make that sacrifice.
It is somewhat ironic, for instance, that Jurassic Park places expounds so poignantly upon the relationship between dinosaurs and birds, while still depicting them as featherless.
The Egyptian-born Australian artist Raafat Ishak's work "Responses to an Immigration Request From One Hundred and Ninety-Four Governments" intersected poignantly with the refugee crisis.
Too young to care or notice that a unibrow was slowly growing, and then poignantly aghast practically overnight, I began tweezing my eyebrows at about 11.
There is the archetypal arched footbridge over the modest raised tombs of Giuseppe and Onorina Brion, which poignantly pierce formal geometry by leaning toward each other.
He recalled the essay she had given him that so poignantly described the challenges of her mental illness, titled "Living With Schizophrenia," and then reread it.
His struggles — with addiction and depression, with family life, with handling success — are addressed candidly and poignantly, but the offstage Williams never comes completely into focus.
Karen Silkwood might be a bit of an anti-heroine, but it's nearly impossible not to be moved by her mission, so poignantly captured in Silkwood.
The question split the county in two, with an intensity felt poignantly in Nashira, where many of the women have been directly affected by the war.
They poignantly sing the national anthem and read out the preamble of the constitution while holding a picture of B.R. Ambedkar, architect of the Indian Constitution.
I believe that Benjamin's intervention is important because he poignantly raises the fundamental questions, and not answers, that need to be confronted in dealing with violence.
More poignantly, we have a Department of Education with the lethal crocodiles whose contempt for the eight values of my political party have no equivalent precedent.
That's what Riggs did with "Black Is… Black Ain't," a bluesy intellectual achievement but, also, given Riggs's appearance from his sick bed, a poignantly crepuscular one.
Black Sabbath and Napalm Death poignantly depict the negative energy that industrial life instills, but Godflesh is a direct recreation of the factory and its indifferent thrum.
This is a parent-child impasse that has been explored everywhere from TV to the Cat Stevens song "Father and Son," but it's handled particularly poignantly here.
During his band's set, Charlie Daniels poignantly brought to the stage Randy Travis, still recovering from a 2013 stroke, and he was greeted with a standing ovation.
It is the account of the bizarre events involving Field and, more poignantly, his family once the Cold War began and waves of paranoia swept both superpowers.
What's more, Gilbert & George weren't depicting homosexuality as salacious but as ordinary — one aspect of the duo's work is its pinpointed restraint and poignantly dry British humor.
Sexuality functions in culture as the metaphor for secrets about identity, and Killer Inside poignantly chronicles Hernandez's self-awareness of how much he never revealed about himself.
It also tries, poignantly, to press against the limitations of its own medium, to breach, or at least protest, the impregnable boundary established by the screen itself.
Poignantly, in London where it became famous, there is also the "split-glove" that Ali wore, and broke, during his 1963 fight against Briton Henry Cooper at Wembley.
She writes about puberty, her romantic relationship with a well-known feminist (whom she never names), and, perhaps most poignantly, her only son's incarceration and recovery from addiction.
The show, which has won 32 Emmy awards and was nominated for an Oscar in the animated short category in 2012, often playfully and poignantly satirizes American culture.
Books that concluded, rather poignantly, right where they began: In a crowded train station with parents setting their children free to come of age in a magical castle.
Now, it is time to enter the decree and thereby require all involved to get to work on repairing the many fractures so poignantly revealed by the record.
The book, "Early Stages," was instead a frank examination of her childhood and the years of turmoil that formed her, ending poignantly with the deaths of her parents.
You see that charge now and then in the footage of applauding crowds, though it's seen most poignantly in the post-concert tears on a young woman's face.
Where this is felt most poignantly is the former site of St. Vincent's in Greenwich Village, where so many AIDS patients were treated in the 1980s and '90s.
But as this show poignantly reminds us, when these issues come up, it is imperative to remember what lies at the center of these institutions: real human beings.
It is instead the vision of people frozen as if for a photograph, beckoning with poignantly immediate life from a distant time before they dissolve into anonymous darkness.
One is poignantly titled, This is Hong Kong, Not China…Not Yet and pairs evocative photos of protests from June 9 through 14 alongside quotes from international media.
Created by the former principal Virginie Mécène for Ms. Chien-Pott, this reimagined solo — eerie yet poignantly forthright — reveals connections among the hip, the shoulder and the pelvis.
She admitted as much, once poignantly writing that part of her envied "gorgeously glamorous" stars like Crawford and thought she might never be as popular as they were.
" In the end, cancer claimed Grafton before she could embark on that final book, which she had planned — poignantly, it turns out — to call "Z Is for Zero.
The Mitchum brothers send him a new car and a sweet new playset for Sonny Jim, which looks poignantly like an abandoned fairground with only Sonny Jim on it.
It culminates in the shoulder's intensely pale pink-ochres, which wend through space as face and arm before rejoining poignantly as the painting's climactic moment: chin meeting folded fingers.
Kevin Costner poignantly watched his daughter Annie Costner exchange "I do"s with fiancé Danny Cox this past weekend at an outdoor wedding on his private estate in California.
For example, Joyce Carol Oates writes poignantly about the loss of her husband; Lev Grossman shares the story of the dish that lifted him out of decades of depression.
Nothing could have made this point more poignantly than the tragic return and subsequent death of Otto Warmbier, the U.S. student wrongly imprisoned and mistreated by North Korean authorities.
Thus Srebrenica came to symbolize the danger of establishing enclaves for vulnerable civilians without protecting such areas with military force and, more poignantly, of the terrible price of inaction.
" Here's what else is happening: As Mungo Jerry once poignantly put it: "In the summertime when the weather is hot, you can stretch right up and touch the sky.
It charts their lives together from lovesick to complacent and poignantly illustrates the ways our identities erode within relationships and what happens when couples don't speak the same language.
In the book, Crawford poignantly describes the scene one night as Houston prepared the dinner table for Murphy, who was scheduled to visit her at her New Jersey mansion.
While "Ipsa Dixit" is precisely crafted, it wittily and poignantly evokes the process of creation: flickering with ideas; moving in halting steps forward and back; seeming improvisatory, jotted, sketched.
And in a show of questions, a show that in falling short of its crazy ambition gives more than smaller shows that fully succeed, that final question echoes poignantly.
In What Happened, Clinton poignantly recalls various struggles with sexism, including a linguistic expert who told her that she needed to make her voice softer and lower in speeches.
The novel expertly portrays the rituals and mores specific to ethnic Korean culture even as it also poignantly captures the universally complicated relationships between family members, lovers and friends.
He poignantly underplayed Nabucco's descent into madness — no flailing or wild eyes — and his heartfelt prayer, "Dio di Giuda," felt less a showpiece than a moment of sober intimacy.
But he has been cast into immigration purgatory nonetheless, his troubles caused by a toxic mix of bureaucracy, fear, prejudice and, most poignantly, his naïve faith in American honor.
In a passage I can relate to too poignantly, she consoles herself that Joan Didion honed her prose style in the equally thankless task of drafting captions at Vogue.
Many of you wrote poignantly of how a mother tongue was a formative connection -- sometimes tenuous, sometimes lost, other times cherished -- between yourself and your family, especially your parents.
How, the show asks might a modest, almost unnoticeable, artistic gesture nonetheless constitute a form of social and political engagement that ripples outward — poignantly, evocatively —into the larger world?
He's used his platform to staunchly champion LGBTQ rights, poignantly denounce Trump, and repeatedly and publicly prod his most prominent Instagram follower, Ivanka Trump, to alter her father's policies.
TIGLUN MANAYE MANDEFROAddis Ababa Football crazy, football mad Out of curiosity, I was moved to watch those World Cup moments you depicted so poignantly in "A beautiful game" (June 9th).
Elizabeth Marks, the gold-medal winning Invictus Games swimmer who became an Internet sensation when she poignantly returned her medal to Prince Harry, told PEOPLE how her big moment unfolded.
The Last Defense often features Routier's sad, resigned face — still carefully made up, poignantly holding on to the glamour that once helped villainize her, as she reminisces about her children.
There is a "war on homeless recyclers," filmmaker Amir Soltani wrote in a July issue of Street Spirit, an argument he makes even more poignantly in his documentary Dogtown Redemption.
An emotional piano ballad, "Girl Meets Boy" and its accompanying music video, premiering exclusively with PEOPLE, finds the famous drummer poignantly reminiscing on her 38 years of friendship with Prince.
In a viral spoken word poem about being a girl, 13-year-old Olivia Vella poignantly describes many of these tough aspects of girlhood, from cliques to sexist beauty standards.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Enacting a posthumous reassessment, the book Percy Rainford: Duchamp's "Invisible" Photographer has poignantly rescued the neglected Jamaican artist Percy Rainford (1901–211) from erasure.
" (Sunday Review, May 5), Rachel Louise Snyder poignantly concludes her argument for evidence-based prosecution of domestic violence by quoting a prosecutor, Casey Gwinn: "It's about cultural norms and values.
Though they live 3,903 miles apart and rarely interact, Cousy and Russell have created a respect and appreciation for the other's humanity — as poignantly defined in moments 53 years apart.
" C and M's poignantly unfinished business was based on an argument Lowery had with his wife, Augustine Frizzell, about where she should live while he was working on "Pete's Dragon.
This tale of lost innocence is poignantly told, "written" by a self-aware narrator who seamlessly shifts perspectives, giving the impression of being every character as well as the storyteller.
While it might seem like you're signing up to get squished, it can be peaceful if you have a long commute; plus, it's great for gazing poignantly out the window.
Pogrebin writes poignantly of connecting the dots of Jewish identity for her children through a Yom Kippur prayer or a Passover debate she devised about the extent of Pharaoh's culpability.
As Chahi puts it, "It's difficult to get out of the flow [of data]," which is why the juxtaposition of real and digital worlds becomes so quickly and poignantly affecting.
" She describes her envy of the anorexics on the unit, who "were clearly and poignantly victims of a culture that said you were too fat unless you were too thin. . . .
The show quietly and poignantly explores the lives of six Japanese strangers as they live in the same house in Karuizawa, eat, go to work and engage in chaste flirtations.
Stormzy's vulnerability is poignantly clear on the self-flagellating new ballad "Lessons," in which he addresses rumors surrounding his recent split from the British TV presenter and D.J. Maya Jama.
On Tuesday, Harry will, poignantly, meet with an organization called CAMFED, which tackles poverty and inequality in sub-Saharan Africa through the education of girls and the empowerment of young women.
He is, within his opening monologue, portrayed beautifully and poignantly as somebody who is literally on the outside looking in — as you can imagine on social media, but also in life.
The condemnation of the policy, moreover, is often conveyed more poignantly through dramas like "The Wire," which can personalize character arcs and put faces -- even if they're fictional -- on the statistics.
With the French and English speaking music or art conversations that happened in this rural francophone part of Canada, a festival like FME matters, and Negusse encapsulated it all rather poignantly.
As Amy Goldstein has poignantly illustrated in her book Janesville: An American Story, when factories close, an entire world collapses—a source of self-worth, a basis of solidarity and trust.
Bryant (who played more than 48,000 minutes in the NBA) poignantly uses the poem to find closure with walking away from the game that had been the foundation of his life.
Following a shooting at California's Saugus High School, presidential candidate Kamala Harris went on MSNBC to poignantly lament the ways in which the government has failed to act on gun control.
Linda Cho's costumes have the captive Hebrews dressed in poignantly tattered, grayish clothes; the Philistines look like absurd characters from an old-Hollywood costume drama, all garish colors and gold trim.
There is much more in "We the People": altered photographs, videos, more installations and immersive environments that relate pointedly and poignantly to the history of black Americans and Harlem in particular.
Her final moment in the staging, wondering where her venality has finally brought her, shows her hilariously and poignantly unwilling to return to the annals of history — that is, to die.
A teenage Michelle Wie came the closest, but injuries stalled her flight, and she spoke poignantly last week of not knowing how much more competitive golf her crumbling body will allow.
But not everyone can pull off Sanders' crusty charm, and trying to may not endear members to a new audience — and more poignantly, might leave their policy or political points unmade. Sen.
Though some residents have returned to poignantly decorate the vacant and destroyed sites where homes used to be: While Mr. Dylan and I were both miraculously spared, he suffered a notable loss.
I was suddenly gripped by the realization that I was witnessing a defining moment, and even then I was poignantly aware that it marked a peak which would never again be scaled.
This truth is poignantly captured by Kathryn Edin, Timothy Nelson, Andrew Cherlin and Robert Francis in a paper titled "The Tenuous Attachments of Working-Class Men," in The Journal of Economic Perspectives.
On that blasted heath, in the fabled storm of the third act (bizarrely played on the shallow ledge left by the fallen drop curtain), what registers most poignantly aren't the violent imprecations.
" The rebuilding Marlins lost the game, 11-6, but Galloway's moment left an indelible impression, summarized poignantly in a tweet by the team broadcaster Glenn Geffner: "THAT is the beauty of Baseball.
Poignantly, the Olympic flame was lit in ancient Olympia but the road to the Tokyo Olympics appears, at present, a distant one with the spread of the virus impacting across all sports.
Slater's lyrics tend to flatten out characterization, except for the moments when Calogero and Jane poignantly sing about how the world isn't ready for the two of them to fall in love.
Volpe's work oscillates between the actions of the living, who appear poignantly in pops of color picking up the pieces, and the immortalization of the dead and destroyed covered in thick, gray, mud.
But she is careful not to condemn the workers of this bloody trade, routinely dismissed as sadists by environmental activists, and poignantly records a female abattoir manager showing her pictures of pet dogs.
Rep. John Lewis, a civil rights icon who has been at the forefront of civil rights struggles, spoke poignantly about his own experience with racism Wednesday during a congressional hearing to confirm Sen.
The overlap of their work speaks to New York's art community, which largely consists of immigrants and has international connections; the precarity of the immigrants' lives is poignantly evoked by the ephemeral balloon.
"To come here today and to be on the tee, with Arnold being a part of us, it was gratifying and sad, because everything shall pass," Player said more than a little poignantly.
As so often happens, awkward discipline produced better art; a limited vocabulary produced a more poignantly memorable poetry and constraints made for cultural advance — or at least for a better-selling children's book.
In an era when "fake news" and "post-truth" have become buzzwords, documentary film seems poignantly important, a force for chronicling the world — even through a filmmaker's eyes — that we share in common.
She sings the arching melodic line that begins Strauss's transcendent trio with seamless phrasing and ethereal sound, her more mature voice blending poignantly with the youthful colorings of Ms. Morley and Ms. Garanca.
In the poignantly titled "Heart Attack of the Soul" series (1994), the artist documents couplets in which patients at the psychiatric hospital Philippe Pinel de Putaendo are paired up with their loved ones.
" She ends the piece poignantly, writing of her wishes for the future: "I was once asked if my goal in life was to be a good actress, and at one time perhaps it was.
Premiering on Facebook's new platform, Watch, Strangers is a wonderfully compelling, and poignantly relevant, meditation on the struggles young adults continue to navigate, even when they've already survived at least one quarter life crisis.
But even more than that — and this touches upon why this exhibition is so poignantly timely for the time we live in — history also points us to our future that we're going to share.
This suits Ms. Yoncheva, her face a changeable canvas of feeling and her hands poignantly articulate: Watch how she briefly grasps the hem of her lover's coat, as if holding on for dear life.
It will be the end of another too-lengthy tennis season, but more poignantly, it also will be the end of an era for the men's team event that began in Boston in 1900.
"Not many people have asked if I'm O.K.," the Duchess of Sussex said poignantly of adjusting to the pressures of her royal role, the harsh media coverage and her struggles as a new mother.
She writes poignantly about her "sense of everyone gone," and her trips to see her old flame Sam Shepard in Kentucky and California when he was in a mortal battle with Lou Gehrig's disease.
More poignantly, the city is the site of the 1968 "Orangeburg Massacre" that left three black students dead and 27 injured after state troopers opened fire on unarmed demonstrators picketing a segregated bowling alley.
He struggled with the social tumult of the 1960s, a conflict poignantly reflected in his relationship with his son, a Vietnam War veteran who overcame a drug problem only to die in a car accident.
Unlike The Night Manager (another BBC drama based on a le Carré book, arguably famed for a scene featuring Tom Hiddleston's bare bum), The Little Drummer Girl sits very poignantly in an earlier time period.
Prince William poignantly gave the diamond and sapphire sparkler that was Diana's engagement ring to Kate Middleton when he proposed in 2010, a lovely reminder that she was with them on their royal wedding day.
A self-advocate with Down syndrome who has spoken poignantly against 14(c) said that the "sub-minimum" in "sub-minimum wages" communicates "subhuman" to people, and who wants to be thought of as subhuman?
The couples, following the formula now standard in much choreography, were male-male, female-female, male-female and female-male; and Ms. Xin's isolation poignantly suggests that she would like some of what they're having.
To the Editor: "What It Takes to Get an Abortion in the Most Restrictive State in the U.S." (news graphic, July 23) poignantly demonstrates just how hard it is to get an abortion in Mississippi.
Or, more poignantly, it is the art of an immigrant like me, for whom B+ is the highest grade achievable, having never been bestowed the code to success nor felt privileged enough not to care.
The early-90s era seems unremarkable to the characters in the thick of it — "We live in … insignificant times," Lucy says between hits of a joint — but feels poignantly pre-9/11 to today's reader.
His most profound experiences with wine seem to have been so poignantly personal that readers may feel like an audience listening to the most articulate guru in the world without actually feeling the spirit themselves.
The brass chorale that opens the slow movement was grim and resounding, rather than majestic, which set up the poignantly sweet main theme, Dvorak's evocation of an American spiritual, to be all the more affecting.
Poignantly, the truth seems to have been the opposite: That day at the falls can be understood as a counterphobic attempt by the professor to overcome his own cautious temperament as well as his son's.
On foreign policy, Mayor Pete Buttigieg spoke inspiringly about America's role in the world, and on the subject of immigration, noted poignantly that he would make America a country of laws but also of values.
PEOPLE en Español's Armando Correa, who was born in Cuba, returned to the country following the death of former leader Fidel Castro in November, and poignantly recounts his experience in an online feature for the magazine.
His mother poignantly recalls one morning when they were carpooling to football practice, and her son was focused on her stress level: He put his hand on top of his mom's, tracing circles on her skin.
The topic remains as poignantly relevant to women in the #MeToo era as it was for women in the early 19th century, or in the '60s and '70s when both the book and film were released.
With his record seventh crown at Melbourne Park, Djokovic moved ahead of Pete Sampras as third on the men's all-time list of most Grand Slam titles (15) and probably more poignantly just two behind Nadal.
See also Nakayama's documentary-style video You're Every Song I Ever Sing (Version 1) (2019), in which child actors perform monologues written by adults, thereby poignantly presenting the troubles of older generations via a unique perspective.
But even as the celebrities enjoyed the leisurely spa-town setting, and with blockbuster escapism dominating multiplex screens elsewhere, in this era of Trump, Brexit and refugee crises, cinema can still poignantly reflect wider feelings of unease.
Although the study of time has yielded few firm conclusions, one lesson is poignantly certain: most people complain that time seems to speed up as they get older, in part because they feel more pressed for it.
Shortly after he released the animated short for the controversial track, The Story Of O.J. In the song, Hov poignantly tells the story of O.J. Simpson, which ultimately unfolds into a broader discussion on race in America.
He places them aptly at the heart of the nuclear conflict and poignantly in the personal odyssey of a lanky, gay pianist from a small prairie town who never wanted to do much except play Russian music.
"It is far easier to hate than to love, but what Black Lives Matter taught me is that you can only be silent for so long before you feel parts of yourself die," Osborne poignantly puts it.
Against this backdrop, the Getty Research Institute's (GRI) first online exhibition, The Legacy of Ancient Palmyra, announced just days before ISIS recaptured both the ancient ruins and the adjacent namesake modern town in December, is poignantly relevant.
Presented against Gay's poignantly told personal account, these observations do not constitute a manifesto, the sort that can be adopted by fat-activists; they are more of an assessment of the cost of these aspersions on fatness.
Tybalt's death at the hands of Romeo on the final page of the comic is cast as a moment of revelatory pacifism, but it is the expanded role of Petruchio that comments most poignantly on the violence.
As is often the case with Ms. Varda's movies, this one folds in assorted detours, including a stopover in a Swiss village that poignantly brings her face to face with some of the ghosts that haunt her.
The idea behind the book is that one can speak truthfully and poignantly about the political philosophy and economic history of capitalism and communism in much simpler language than that of economists, political scientists and policy experts.
For most of the 1980s into the early 1990s, Tallent's meticulously observed and poignantly inconclusive stories about wobbly relationships appeared in The New Yorker as well as literary publications such as Grand Street and The Paris Review.
Most poignantly, we see her anorexia, exercise mania and macabre plastic surgeries — heck, her entire professional drive — in the context of her mother's unforgiving gaze: Cleo Gurley made it clear that she never thought her daughter was beautiful.
Which is to say that I did not solve the assigned mystery, but those few wonderful, terrible minutes onstage clarified — usefully and in this strange, showless moment, poignantly — how little theater needs: a stage, purloined linens, willing humans.
" The rest of us have to struggle with the fact that too many of our fellow humans believe in an entirely different reality from the rest of us, as expressed first hilariously and then poignantly in "Forehead Sweat.
Acknowledging what she calls her own privilege — the "lighter complexion and green eyes" that make her someone who "passes" for white — Jauregui poignantly outlines why she feels the politics of Trump are a threat to her and fellow women.
Essence's Deena Campbell, meanwhile, caught Robin Roberts' stunning gown in motion: But it was The Zoe Report's Stephanie Montes who got the pièce de résistance: a video of Leo: To which gabifresh's Gabi Gregg said simply and poignantly, #goals.
Both are reasonable points, and the opposing stances are expressed poignantly in the film's surprise conclusion, which makes clear that the family and counterterrorism officials have irreconcilable views of who Mr. Sadequee was and what he might have done.
Last week, on her Hulu show I Love You, America, Silverman addressed the allegations against her longtime friend Louis C.K. Speaking poignantly, she appeared saddened while talking about C.K. and how hard it is to answer these painful questions.
Republica Colapsada is split into three sections: the first, The Venezuelan Breakdown, features the work of 15 photographers who bravely and poignantly capture the tense and sometimes violent political demonstrations that have been taking place in Venezuela since 2014.
Ironically, the films from this year that most poignantly address what it means to be human aren't really about traditionally developed characters, but robots (Blade Runner 2049), animals (War for the Planet of the Apes), and anonymous soldiers (Dunkirk).
In June, when the World Cup began, many Iranian women fulfilled lifelong dreams of seeing Team Melli in action by attending Iran's opening match with Morocco in Russia's St. Petersburg Stadium, and spoke publicly and poignantly about the experience.
Sinclair and Katja Blichfeld, the ex-husband-and-wife team who created this web series-turn-HBO standout, have woven in glimmers from their real lives throughout, making one of television's best shows just that much more poignantly affecting.
Judith Butler outlines this idea poignantly in her 1993 essay "Endangered/Endangering: Schematic Racism and White Paranoia": The fear is that some physical distance will be crossed, and the virgin sanctity of whiteness will be endangered by that proximity.
In the song and its accompanying visuals, Ramos — who appeared in A Star Is Born opposite Lady Gaga, playing Ally's best friend Ramon — poignantly reflects on his New York City roots and saying goodbye to his family to pursue his dreams.
We need to look at the cost of the "package deal" for a reliable, low-carbon electricity system, as Simon Müller of the International Energy Agency poignantly puts it, without assigning the derogatory term "subsidies" to individual components of that package.
The late Princess Diana only had one engagement ring — and Prince William poignantly gave the diamond and sapphire sparkler to Kate Middleton when he proposed in 2010, a lovely reminder that she was with them on their royal wedding day.
The loss redefined (and ultimately strengthened) Claire's relationship with her husband, and allowed Caitriona Balfe to give the performance of the year, gracefully and poignantly articulating the arc of Claire's grief in an episode that was both riveting and harrowing.
Ultimately, though, Randall released his grip after reflecting on a conversation he had with William (Ron Cephas Jones), who'd poignantly explained to him why he did not overstep the boundaries Rebecca had set up and reenter 9-year-old's Randall's life.
Two years later, Merkel poignantly pointed out the route of the wall during an Obama visit to Berlin, and told him that, trapped in the East, she used to listen to trains on the other side and dream of being free.
Yet when I look closely at these posts, I realize that the moments I remember most poignantly are the nights out and secret beaches I never thought to document for social media—I was too busy soaking it all in.
I'm far more moved about what Michelle Obama's tenure as first lady says about feminism — about black feminism — her raising black daughters, as she so poignantly pointed out during her convention speech, in a house that was built by slaves.
The images that perhaps most poignantly capture white America's feelings about race, which remain unresolved to this day, are Charles Paxson's and M.H. Kimball's carte-de-visites of children who traveled as emancipated slaves on the abolitionist circuit during the Civil War.
After poignantly describing how he learned of the death of his own son in combat, Mr Kelly then attacked a Democratic congresswoman critical of Mr Trump's call to the bereaved woman, falsely accusing her of exploiting an earlier fatal tragedy for political gain.
"Whenever you have a tool at your disposal that allows you to tell the story more efficiently and more poignantly, you use it," Pieter Jan Brugge, executive producer of the Amazon series "Bosch," told The Wall Street Journal in a 2015 interview.
It was that, despite the fact that he looked like a middle school kid's drawing of A Great Big Professional Football Player, Tebow's body was transparently and almost poignantly at cross purposes with itself every time he tried to throw the ball.
Though his convention speech dwelled on gloomy themes, Nixon did something else, too: He spoke poignantly about his dreams as a boy growing up poor in California, and he appealed to highly educated suburban voters who have eyed Mr. Trump with deep suspicion.
We'd hire these specialized experts all the time to help illuminate how opioid addiction, often generational in Alabama as Hull's article poignantly notes, should mitigate a client's sentence – usually, to LWOP, an overly-benign acronym for life without the possibility of parole.
His philosophical statements anchor the movie, as he goes from jokingly describing the line "I was lost and now I'm found," as actually being about coming out to poignantly stating that grace is a feeling of acceptance that can come from having community.
Francis also has said sorry time and again — but never more forcefully and poignantly than he did this month in a letter to Chilean bishops that came after his own missteps on the sexual abuse issue that threatened to stain his papacy.
Readers wondered what could be done for other Nakeshas, questioned the current practices of mental health care and care for the street homeless in the United States, and, perhaps most poignantly, compared Ms. Williams's story with those of their own loved ones.
It's at birthday parties where I think about this most often, and often most poignantly, as I watch dads in daffodil hats, or wrapped in toilet paper, finding their way among a crowd of mothers who have been navigating these waters for years.
Lee, still the cinematic enfant terrible whose masterpiece "Do The Right Thing" set my 16-year-old heart aflame during the summer of 1989, gave a poignantly stirring acceptance speech dressed in full purple regalia in homage to the late artist Prince.
The small triumphs and tragedies of rural life, such as drought, material wealth, and run-ins with a comically inefficient provincial government, are relayed through the goat's trenchant observations, which poignantly expose how tightly the lives of caretakers and their livestock are bound.
It is Lincoln, the final man on that road — "the last casualty of the war," as he puts it — who gently and poignantly helps the woman accept her own demise so she can join her husband, who waits for her in the distance.
Mr. Nézet-Séguin opened with Bernstein's Symphonic Suite from "On the Waterfront," a 22-minute work that rarely turns up on orchestra programs and is drawn from some 35 minutes of raw, tender and poignantly tragic music for Elia Kazan's classic 1954 film.
" Stewart then poignantly summed up his view of Trump by joking that it's "hard to get mad at Donald Trump for saying stupid things, in the same way you don't get made at a monkey when it throws poop at you in the zoo.
Faithful to the original universe, fresh enough to capture a new audience, and poignantly political in a way that would make Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry, who died in 1991, beam—the new Star Trek is the science fiction the world needs right now.
Referring to the era of The Circle, Progress poignantly articulates how artists like Kardinal Offishal, Saukrates, and Jully Black made for a more cohesive urban scene than today's disjointed collective, which is more hinged on persona and social media presence rather than craft and experience.
This piece illustrates poignantly how hard it is to not lash out at a toddler who has driven you to the brink of your patience (and sanity) — particularly if you were spanked as a child, and it's a default reaction in your lizard brain.
But it is particularly sad to see countries that so poignantly celebrated the lifting of the Iron Curtain now argue, as Hungary does, that being asked to take in a small number of Muslim immigrants is somehow a violation of European laws and values.
"Locking Up Our Own" is also very poignantly a book of the Obama era, when black authors like Alexander and Bryan Stevenson and Ta-Nehisi Coates initiated difficult conversations about racial justice and inequality, believing that their arguments might, for once, gain more meaningful traction.
Ford's latest book, "Dressed in Dreams: A Black Girl's Love Letter to the Power of Fashion," explores the impact of recent African American style on the community, on mainstream culture and, most poignantly, on herself, as a young woman finding her place in the world.
Having settled on oration and documentary filmmaking after an abortive musical career of her own, Jamie is in print a warm but unsparing eyewitness: peeking poignantly from the wings as her progenitor glories, sifting through the jumbo pillbox when he starts to fall apart.
In one display case of the exhibition, titled Death Production: The Archive of Janna Flessa, two items are poignantly tragic: a makeup compact marked with the words "Age Rewind" and a book whose title reads I'd Change My Life if I Had More Time.
" Other songs on the album – notably "Bein' A Dad" and "Eyes for Nobody" – poignantly speak to Janson's well-documented devotion to his wife, Kelly, their 3-year-old son and 6-year-old daughter and his two grown stepchildren – or, as he calls them, his "bonus kids.
And nothing illustrates the north pole's hot flash as poignantly as sea ice, that thick mantle of shiny white stuff that blankets a region of the Arctic the size of the United States and Mexico combined during the winter that shrinks back down in the summer.
"Last Flag Flying" happens to arrive at a moment where it shares the stage with fact-based projects addressing Iraq and its aftermath, but none deal more poignantly with the questions it raises about the nature of heroism and whether the mission was worth the price paid.
However, NASA is poignantly aware that the pandemic outbreak of a new coronavirus — which is very contagious, comes with a relatively high mortality rate, and can leave survivors with 20-30%  reduced lung function after full recovery — could affect and delay its long-awaited return to flight.
I used a sperm bank that had also been labeled "the best" and selected the VIP membership ($250) because it included several baby and childhood photos of the donors, in-depth health history, candid donor descriptions from the staff, and, most poignantly, voice-recorded interviews with the donors.
Nef is poignantly resilient as Bex, a trans woman who, like Lily, projects utmost fierce yasss feminist pride in her public persona; this is a smokescreen concealing a fragile being whose face crumples when the boy she likes uses her for sex but is ashamed to go public.
Quite poignantly, she zeros in from several angles (press reports, official documents, an interview with someone who knew him) on Marshal Sergey Akhromeyev, who was said to be a supporter of the 1991 coup attempt against Mikhail Gorbachev, and who hanged himself in his Kremlin office when it failed.
Notker (sung poignantly by the tenor Topi Lehtipuu) is called Prophet in the text; he has wide-ranging exchanges with a jaded male angel (sung by a woman, the earthy-voiced mezzo-soprano Iris Vermillion), who has not been sober, he explains, since getting drunk long ago with Nietzsche.
The years progress, and Laura's daughter starts asking about her cult icon father — and through their complicated, parallel journeys of self-discovery, Gould poignantly and carefully explores what happens when plans go awry, expectations and priorities shift, and people adapt in their pursuit of love, meaning, and fulfillment. —A.
While she has rejected the government's accusation of corruption against her husband and poignantly called "anti-corruption" a "tainted" term in China, she has refrained from naming President Xi Jinping, whose anti-graft dragnet has caught more than a million officials since he took power in late 2001.
"Told poignantly and with a blunt honesty that seems a characteristic of Alinejad's life and writing, here is a gripping tale that permits us to peek at the inner workings of the Iranian Revolution and consider the question of its health and longevity," our reviewer, Rafia Zakaria, writes.
It's also a fierce color composition — the deep blue window frames, mustard yellow windows, the green car interior, the dark skin of Castile pitched back in his seat, his lifeless, open eye, and his white T-shirt — splattered, poignantly, not with blood, but with blue and yellow drips of paint.
And, most poignantly, in an installation by the Colombian artist Natalia López, "The Soil under Our Feet," she takes small cubes of pressed soil and organizes them into various geometric structures for viewers to interact with, representing the distribution of power relations and playing with the notions of center and periphery.
But it's also been criticized by historians, critics, and the family of one of its subjects, Dr. Don Shirley, for putting a gloss on Shirley's life, conforming to tired "white savior" tropes, and, perhaps most poignantly, practically ignoring (and sometimes eliding the history) of the "Green Books" for which it's titled.
Performers wear masks to render them anonymous, which also evokes other masked protests (ex: actions by the Guerilla Girls).. More poignantly, Narcissister makes clear that while the law has acknowledged women's equal rights to bear their breasts, it was not followed by any public initiative that worked to de-sexualize women's breasts.
Poignantly, there recently has been a resurgence of old techniques to retrieve some actual contact with the external world: Both Quentin Tarantino and J.J. Abrams in The Hateful Eight and Star Wars: The Force Awakens, respectively, reverted to using 70 mm film and actual, real-life shooting as much as they could.
While William poignantly gave Diana's diamond and sapphire engagement ring to Kate Middleton when he proposed in 2010, Harry was able to mirror that gesture by giving his wife the aquamarine ring, which, it has now been revealed, was a gift for Diana to wear in place of her engagement ring after her divorce from Prince Charles in 1996.
During its annual 'In Memorial' reel, the Grammys decided to honor the late music manager by poignantly playing his widow Céline Dion's love ballad "My Heart Will Go On." The song began as composer James Horner – who died in a plane crash last summer – was observed and looped while as Angélil's picture flashed across the screen.
But you never feel as if Beanie Feldstein or Kaitlin Dever's characters are yelling their feminism at you — it's conveyed through the story (two high-achieving young women wanting to have a memorable high school party experience), and the careful way it's put together (the female gaze is everywhere from the clothes to the poignantly awkward sexual encounters).
The book, which takes its name from the power shortages that Glidden notices while in Iraq, effortlessly and poignantly tells the under-heard stories of the displaced and traumatized—many of whom have been betrayed by the American government in one way or another—while also depicting the logistical maneuvering and ethical gray areas underlying any journalistic endeavor.
ANCIENT CHRISTIAN RUINS DISCOVERED UNDER FORMER ISIS-HELD TERRITORY And the threat of even more damage to the country's trove of treasures looms large – perhaps most poignantly in the site considered to have once housed the mysterious and powerful Queen of Sheba (Bilquis in Arabic), located just 30 miles east of the small Yemen city of Marib.
But allow me to mention the scheming, petty burghers of Thomas Jay Ryan and Tina Benko; the anxious, spiritually challenged man of the cloth portrayed by Bill Camp; Tavi Gevinson's malleable, craven and poignantly credible serving girl; Jim Norton's folksy and unexpectedly heroic farmer; and the suave, snarling hanging judge given such unassailably authoritative life by Mr. Hinds.
" Poignantly and plaintively, writer Ta-nehisi Coates, demanded: "If the families of Roof's victims can find the grace of forgiveness within themselves; if the president can praise them for it; if the public can be awed by it – then why can't the Department of Justice act in the spirit of that grace and resist the impulse to kill?
As prominent Chinese historian Luo Xin poignantly pointed out in podcast SurplusValue's recent episode [1:00:00], some of the most efficient and effective responses to the public health crisis came not from the government but the private sector, whether it is online retailer JD.com or logistics firm SF Express delivering relief supplies to the epicenter of the outbreak.
The "foreign country" of the title is to be interpreted in different ways: as the writer's adopted country, Turkey; as her homeland, America, made new and unfamiliar by the journey she has taken; and, perhaps most poignantly, as the existential place she finds herself in relation to the present and the history that has led to it.
"We woke up late again and walked into town / My hand held yours / But who was prouder to be with the other / I think it was me" The song is sad and hopeful and dejected and enchanted all at the same time, and poignantly evokes the experience of being separated from a loved one but still feeling them present in your life.
And during the long stretch of the story at the hall of powerful Gibichung family, when Siegfried — under the spell of a potion that makes him forget Brünnhilde and fall for Gutrune (the gleaming soprano Edith Haller, in her Met debut) — Mr. Schager's vulnerable Siegfried often seems poignantly confused, with flashes of memory when he appears to know something is not right.
A PLACE TO CALL HOME on Acorn TV. This suspenseful melodrama is among the most popular series on Acorn TV. Set in 1950s Australia, the series chronicles the tumultuous lives of the wealthy Bligh family after World War II. It offers the juicy essentials expected from a soap — secrets, betrayal, romance — but also poignantly addresses social issues from that era.
Part of that was the gravity of the issues the startups were facing, and which we were reminded of repeatedly by the impending hurricane, the hatchery warning of salmon apocalypse, the visibly collapsing ecosystems, and perhaps most poignantly by the changes seen personally by Don and Sven, who were been on the seas professionally long before I was even born.
The legacies of left cultural activism were poignantly manifested in talks by Martha Rosler, whose principled defiance of authoritarianism dates back to the Nixon era, and by Avram Finkelstein, who recounted how he learned to silkscreen from a classmate who wanted help duplicating posters from the French protests of May 1968, and how that laid the foundation for his later work with ACT-UP.
Favorite Sons and Daughters: Balon Greyjoy, Theon Greyjoy/Reek, Yara Greyjoy, Euron Greyjoy The Dead: Rodrik Greyjoy, Maron Greyjoy Season 5: The usual response to Theon is contempt, pity, or a mixture of both, but the showrunners seem to have recognized in the once-and-future hostage a poignantly tragic figure who mistakes his own nature and winds up hated by everybody he ever sought to impress.
So heed our advice: In dark moments, turn to the effusively hysterical and poignantly relevant Chewing Gum for a needed change of pace (after, of course, first doing all you can to help fight the atrocities still currently happening at our borders.) This underrated Netflix show almost certainly flew under your radar, premiering in the UK in 2015 before quietly releasing overseas on Netflix in 2016.
Much like last season's episode that drilled down on two characters who you didn't know that well — Dr. K (Gerald McRaney) and the fireman who found baby Randall — Tuesday's installment, titled "This Big, Amazing, Beautiful Life," gave us fuller Deja view; it built off that cliffhanger and delved deeply and poignantly into the past of Deja (while deftly weaving in life moments experienced by all Pearsons via bursts of flashbacks).
Tim KaineTimothy (Tim) Michael KaineA lesson of the Trump, Tlaib, Omar, Netanyahu affair Warren's pledge to avoid first nuclear strike sparks intense pushback Almost three-quarters say minimum age to buy tobacco should be 21: Gallup MORE (D-VA) spoke poignantly about the need to address racial disparities in sentencing, and the fact that blacks and Latinos get punished for the same crimes at much higher rates than whites.
While William poignantly gave Diana's diamond and sapphire engagement ring to Kate when he proposed in 2010, a lovely reminder that she was with them on their royal wedding day, Harry was able to mirror that gesture by giving his wife the aquamarine ring, which, it has now been revealed, was a gift for Diana to wear in place of her engagement ring after her divorce from Prince Charles in 1996.
This administration is diminishing our country's political and social power by trying to interrupt the natural demographic shifts that would lead to a more progressive, more inclusive US. It is incumbent on those of us in immigrant communities who are at risk of further marginalization to become more adept at understanding the need to be part of the "moral arc of justice" that Martin Luther King, Jr. so poignantly declared.
While William poignantly gave Diana's diamond and sapphire engagement ring to Kate Middleton when he proposed in 2010, a lovely reminder that she was with them on their royal wedding day, Harry was able to mirror that gesture by giving his wife the aquamarine ring, which, it has now been revealed, was a gift for Diana to wear in place of her engagement ring after her divorce from Prince Charles in 1996.
During a press conference Thursday in Beverly Hills to promote the latest entry in the rebooted sci-fi franchise, co-stars remembered their colleague Yelchin – the actor who played Ensign Pavel Chekov in three films died at age 27 in a freak car accident on June 19 – both fondly and poignantly, but expressed hope that fans would revel in the late actor's performances in the new film and throughout his impressive body of work.
As Kun poignantly sums up in the catalogue: To speak of the contemporary border is to speak of nineteenth-century US expansionism and twentieth-century economic imperialism, decades of labor recruitment and labor deterrence, post-WWII industrialization and post-9/11 terror wars, pro-trade policies and anti-drug policies, Mexican drug supply and U.S. drug consumption, the pursuit of human rights and the violation of human rights, U.S. golf courses with their ninth holes in Mexico and two-bedroom American homes with the Border Wall in their backyard, and the open frontier of the Old West and the carceral frontier of the New West, where campfires become klieg lights and young mothers carry their infants across live gunnery ranges because, somehow, they're safer than the open desert.

No results under this filter, show 386 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.