Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"prizewinning" Definitions
  1. having won a prize

133 Sentences With "prizewinning"

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

Which Nobel prizewinning American economist wrote "The Price of Inequality"?
Say farewell to the prizewinning marrow at the summer fete, then.
The butter cow is cold, and the prizewinning pigs are snoozing.
The butter cow is cold, and the prizewinning pigs are snoozing.
Already, the local butcher says sales of his prizewinning sausages are down.
For its 100,000th entry, they approached prizewinning author Péter Nádas for a contribution.
In 2008, he published it as a prizewinning novella in The Missouri Review.
Sarah DeLappe's prizewinning play about a high school soccer team returns to the field.
The first two collections feature iconic and prizewinning photographs taken by Associated Press photographers.
Latvia, with a population of 2m, has some ten youth choirs of international prizewinning calibre.
Gentlemen farmers, they raised prizewinning cows and sought to protect the riverfront land from development.
TÉA OBREHT, a prizewinning Serbian-American author, has a penchant for ghosts and exotic beasts.
He returned to Brazil, composing the soundtracks for prizewinning films, but still felt Europe's tug.
"WE ARE on the verge of turning off Alexa," reveals Ian McEwan, a prizewinning British writer.
Hadassah, "a prizewinning bitch and the dam of champions," in Mazer's phrase, went everywhere with Mazer.
Caro had just published "Working," a collection of pieces about how he writes his prizewinning books.
Milton Friedman, a Nobel-prizewinning economist, argued that printing money could never fail to boost the economy.
Follow Leslie Lehr, a prizewinning author, screenwriter, essayist and story consultant living in Southern California, on Twitter.
Her editor (Miguel Sandoval) hopes she'll find a sense of purpose as much as a prizewinning story.
This novel by a prizewinning Portuguese journalist intertwines the political and the personal through its incantatory prose.
"Hard work is stronger than Harvard," he quipped when Amartya Sen, a Nobel prizewinning economist, criticised his policies.
His books include the prizewinning "The Promised Land: The Great Black Migration and How It Changed America" (1991).
Every week I visited the guinea-pig lady's house to learn how to brush and clean prizewinning rodents.
Such were the experiences described by the Nobel prizewinning ethologist Konrad Lorenz in his insightful book Man Meets Dog.
Two missing children are at the center of the sixth novel by Belinda Bauer, a prizewinning British crime writer.
But this is California, the land of gold and grapes, and the ornamental grapevines are now producing prizewinning wines.
And his follow-up ­novel, "The ­Tetherballs of Bougainville," features another hero named Mark Leyner, a prizewinning ­teenage screenwriter.
Kate Wilhelm, a prolific, prizewinning author of science fiction and mystery novels, died on March 8 in Eugene, Ore.
In the meantime, Caro has just published "Working," a collection of pieces about how he writes his prizewinning books.
Herbert wrote his previous, prizewinning book, "Tomb Song," in his mother's hospital room, as she lay dying from leukemia.
Correction: This piece has been updated to give Sir Fraser Stoddart's affiliation at the time he did his prizewinning work.
At Harvard, he received a master's degree in 1950 and a doctorate in 1954, writing a prizewinning essay on Shakespeare.
The festival continues through April 24, with additional screenings of some of the prizewinning films to be held this weekend.
Presenting a version of Junot Díaz's prizewinning novel, Repertorio Español is also showing off a confident cohort of Latino actors.
LONDON — Andrea Levy, a prizewinning author whose novels chronicled the experience of Jamaican immigrants in Britain, died on Thursday night.
In the 20th century Egypt produced cultural icons like Naguib Mahfouz, a Nobel-prizewinning author, and Umm Kulthum, a celebrated singer.
More than a dozen names have been suggested, including those of male writers such as a Strega-prizewinning novelist, Domenico Starnone.
Dozens of prizewinning Times journalists, as well as editors who oversaw their work, took part in the celebration at the Newseum.
WATCHING AN ADAPTATION of "The Secret River", Kate Grenville's prizewinning novel, on the banks of the Thames is a disconcerting experience.
To answer the question properly the late Gary Becker, a Nobel-prizewinning economist, devised a simple measure for racial bias in 1957.
More than 25 years ago Abdus Salam, a Nobel-prizewinning physicist, called for a synchrotron to be built in the Middle East.
First, the prizewinning writer, and a friend, Christian Giudicelli, agreed to hide incriminating letters and photographs of Ms. Springora, Mr. Matzneff wrote.
His prizewinning piece haunts the central trio of violin, cello and piano with an ensemble of shadows, sometimes benevolent and sometimes threatening.
His prizewinning men's wear designs are based not only on male vanity, but also on the fragility that is at its core.
The actor directs and stars (along with Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Alec Baldwin) in a big, ambitious adaptation of Jonathan Lethem's prizewinning novel.
Some of the stuff that impressed us this week: For readers and especially for journalists, an analysis of what makes a prizewinning article.
The first—prizewinning—spot, in 2015 is reckoned to have been the consequence of two black holes colliding 1.3bn light years from Earth.
This endless procession of overlapping generations creates some interesting economic problems and opportunities, as Paul Samuelson, a Nobel prizewinning economist, explained in 1958.
In Louis Vuitton's Marina Bay Sands boutique in Singapore, a large piece from the British prizewinning artist Richard Deacon hangs from the ceiling.
Their studios are now decorated with posters given to them by the photographer Wolfgang Tillmans, a prizewinning artist who lives in London and Berlin.
The Center for Public Integrity laid off two prizewinning senior investigative reporters of its own in May and is delaying hiring for open positions.
The prizewinning Reuters journalists had been in prison for more than a year for covering the country's brutal crackdown on the Rohingya minority group.
Fuller, who teaches English at the University of Tulsa, is the author of a prizewinning study of the Civil War's impact on American literature.
His most prizewinning lunch is "a make-your-own-bowl-type thing," in the style of fast-casual restaurants like Dig Inn and Sweetgreen.
William Sharpe, a Nobel prizewinning economist, argued in 20173 that the "arithmetic of active management" means that the average fund manager is doomed to underperform.
"This is the sort of narrow view that rightly gives economics a bad name," said Angus Deaton, a Nobel-prizewinning economist, of the efficiency question.
Here this prizewinning novelist has written what he calls a "landscape memoir," one that considers our place on the planet and calls it into question.
Or if Robert Shiller, the Nobel-prizewinning author of "Irrational Exuberance", were given a similar post, only to depart having allowed a stockmarket bubble to inflate.
Mr. Venturi, whose father, the prizewinning architect Robert Venturi, once said, "Less is a bore," compared the scale of his vision to that of Robert Moses.
Rumors had proliferated almost immediately after The New York Times and The New Yorker published their prizewinning exposés of the Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein in October.
Mr. Ingrassia and Mr. White followed up their prizewinning reporting with a well-received book, "Comeback: The Fall and Rise of the American Automobile Industry" (20163).
The May 15 murder of Javier Valdez Cárdenas, a prizewinning crime reporter in Culiacán for the investigative newspaper Ríodoce, underscored the threats faced by Mexican journalists.
The roots of factor investing go back at least as far as a canonical paper in 1992 by Eugene Fama, a Nobel-prizewinning economist, and Kenneth French.
The audience included Nobel prizewinning physicist Murray Gell-Mann, a distinguished fellow at the institute, and the two men formed what proved to be a fruitful collaboration.
He claims that there are only 12 restaurants who know how to make the prizewinning recipe, and only a handful of chefs who truly master the technique.
Front Burner Aging does wonders for Chandoka, a prizewinning Cheddar-style cheese made with a mixture of cow's and goat's milk by LaClare Farms in Malone, Wis.
The author, a prizewinning Swedish journalist and novelist, has published several books related to the Holocaust, including "The Emperor of Lies," a novel about the Lodz ghetto.
Myanmar released two prizewinning Reuters journalists who had been in prison for more than a year for covering the country's brutal crackdown on the Rohingya minority group.
Music that "was never intended for anything but prizewinning and the impressing of other musicians, has given a black eye to all music written since 1918," Thomson wrote.
An agronomist, Norman Borlaug, did win a Nobel in 1970 for wheat breeding research that arguably saved more lives than any physics, chemistry or biology prizewinning discovery ever.
In memoriam: Lorenza Mazzetti, 92, who survived the killings of her caretaker family during World War II, wrote a prizewinning novel and helped create Britain's Free Cinema movement.
In the 1961 edition of his seminal economics textbook, Paul Samuelson, a Nobel-prizewinning American economist, predicted that the Soviet economy would be larger than America's by the 1990s.
Her previous, prizewinning biographies were of August Strindberg and Edvard Munch (incidentally both of them passionate Nietzscheans; Munch painted "The Scream" after being introduced to Nietzsche's work by Strindberg).
Myanmar: Two prizewinning Reuters journalists were released from prison on Tuesday after more than a year in detention for covering the country's deadly crackdown on the Rohingya minority group.
The period is brought to life by "Second-Hand Time", an oral history by Svetlana Alexievich, a Nobel-prizewinning author, notable for a bleak pattern: its characters keep killing themselves.
Emily Nasrallah, a prizewinning Lebanese writer whose novels struggled with bigotry against women, the horrors of civil war and the vacuum left by fleeing refugees, died on Tuesday in Beirut.
This is Mr Saunders's first novel, but he has been producing prizewinning short fiction for decades—often chronicling a fractious America (his 1996 debut collection is called "CivilWarLand in Bad Decline").
Robert Lucas, a Nobel prizewinning economist, once wrote that after you have started to think about the gap between poor and rich countries it is hard to think about anything else.
In 6, newly declassified documents had become the basis for Gary J. Bass's prizewinning history, "The Blood Telegram: Nixon, Kissinger and a Forgotten Genocide," which cast his dissent in heroic terms.
Indeed, the day after Dr. Gubser plunged to his death, Ann Nelson, another prizewinning theoretical physicist and mountaineer, died while hiking in Washington State when she slipped and fell into a gully.
How else to explain why Layla (Kavi Ladnier), a professor of contemporary literature, ends up tangled in the sheets with Imran (Sendhil Ramamurthy), a prizewinning novelist whose books she finds "inimical to humanity"?
This is the story the prizewinning Wall Street Journal reporter John Carreyrou tells virtually to perfection in "Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup," which really amounts to two books.
" Rosenthal — formerly a reporter for The New York Times, now the editor in chief of the nonprofit Kaiser Health News — is best known for a prizewinning series of articles, "Paying Till It Hurts.
The image calls forth "The vulture and the little girl", a Pulitzer prizewinning photograph taken by Kevin Carter in 1993, of a starving Sudanese child (actually a boy) and a vulture stalking close by.
Petina Gappah, a prizewinning novelist and lawyer from Zimbabwe, is taking another tack by recasting the oft-recounted story of David Livingstone's travels in southern Africa from the viewpoint of one of his African porters.
It's your last chance to see "Hard Truths," an exhibition of prizewinning photography from The New York Times at the University of Melbourne that features powerful images from Mosul to rural Cuba and remote Australia.
LONDON — A few weeks before her London Fashion Week show, scheduled for Sunday, the prizewinning fashion designer Grace Wales Bonner was wandering around a show of a different kind at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery here.
While the childlike Spooky Pumpkin Garden played on the silly side of gourds — cartoonish jack-o'-lanterns mounted atop stick figures flanked the trail — the prizewinning fruit made it clear that big pumpkins are serious business.
As part of a Pulitzer-prizewinning series, the Charleston Gazette-Mail discovered that between 239 and 260 a single pharmacy in Kermit, a town of 22006 people in West Virginia 261, ordered close to 033m hydrocodone pills.
For the last few days I've been thinking about Severance, the prizewinning 2018 novel by the author Ling Ma, because of its premise: a fungal fever in China spreads across the globe and kills millions, decimating society.
Douglass North, a Nobel prizewinning economist, and co-authors have written that in Russia, as in many other countries, access to valuable rights, economic activities and resources is determined by privilege enforced by the political and military elites.
Michel Tournier, a French novelist who blended myth and philosophy in prizewinning novels that revisited "Robinson Crusoe," Goethe's elf king and the biblical tale of the Three Magi, died on Monday at his home in Choisel, near Paris.
This was how microcredit, as promoted by Muhammad Yunus, a Nobel-prizewinning entrepreneur from Bangladesh who launched his Grameen bank in 1.583, was supposed to work: credit would allow the poor to establish microbusinesses and improve their lives.
"The Art of Rivalry" by Sebastian Smee—a Pulitzer-prizewinning art critic for the Boston Globe—is one of those rare books that manages to show, convincingly, the exalted stuff of genius emerging from the low chaos of life.
The prizewinning designs included aprons and martial arts-inspired smocks with graphic lines by Ji Won Choi, delightfully clownish knits by Emma Cleveland, and light ecru jackets sprouting what appeared to be wispy strands of grass by Jacob Olmedo.
"Beneath her wrinkly exterior lies a complexity not often found in such a young cheese," reads Capriole's description of the Wabash Cannonball, a popular, prizewinning cheese named for the folk song about a fictional train sung by Johnny Cash.
Ms FitzGerald, a Pulitzer prizewinning historian, shows how the rise of evangelical creeds, during the Great Awakenings of the 18th and 19th centuries, was itself a sort of populist revolt, by "a folk religion characterised by disdain for authority and tradition".
" A month after Professor von Hagen issued his report, the Pulitzer board concluded that Mr. Duranty's prizewinning articles had indeed fallen far short of "today's standards for foreign reporting," but that there was "no clear and convincing evidence of deliberate deception.
The Swedish artist Niki Lindroth von Bahr's prizewinning "The Burden," set in a grim, anthropomorphized Nordic city filled with singing fish, simian telemarketers and tap-dancing mice, has been growing on me since it showed at Film Forum this fall.
Her 2015 play, "I'm Gonna Pray for You So Hard," unsparingly examines the relationship between a vicious, narcissistic, prizewinning playwright and his daughter, an actor, in a night of binge-drinking and drug consumption in their Upper West Side apartment.
The creator-writer-star, Frankie Shaw, who based the series on her Sundance prizewinning short film, plays Bridgette Bird, a working-class single mom in Boston with dreams of playing in the WNBA and a toddler son named Larry, for the Celtics star.
American publishers, he noted, had also refused to publish the Trump-inspired novella "Pussy" by the Man Booker prizewinning writer Howard Jacobson, about an idle reality show-loving prince who dreams as a child of bedding prostitutes and becoming a Roman emperor.
A decade ago, not long after her father died unexpectedly, Helen Macdonald — the historian, illustrator, poet and falconer — retreated to an English cottage to train a ferocious goshawk she named Mabel, recounting her experiences in "H Is for Hawk," her prizewinning 2014 memoir.
Lorenza Mazzetti, who as a child in Italy survived the wartime killings of her caretaker family by German soldiers and went on to help create an influential British film movement and write a prizewinning novel based on her experiences, died on Jan.
Christine Kay, a veteran editor at The New York Times who had a strong hand in shaping prizewinning articles and investigative projects and who helped conceive "Portraits of Grief," a celebrated series of remembrances about the victims of the terrorist attacks of Sept.
At first, they made sandwiches only on weekends, with one offering: the Twice as Nice, a molten wonder that doubled down on Cheddar (Prairie Breeze, from Milton Creamery, and the prizewinning, clothbound Cheddar from Cabot Creamery Cooperative), brightened with a bit of apricot-orange jam.
Fogel helped arrange interviews with Mr. Rodchenkov for The New York Times's prizewinning reports on doping.) INGRID GOES WEST An unbalanced loner with a few screws loose (Aubrey Plaza) becomes obsessed with a social media celebrity (Elizabeth Olsen) and worms her way into her life.
Kiron Open Higher Education is a prizewinning, crowd-funded "virtual university" that provides refugees entering higher education, or those who were already students in their homelands, with free online courses at 7003 partner universities, enabling them to study for recognized degrees and then land jobs.
Clinton's staff and security team had mapped out a route so she could admire the prizewinning stalks of corn, see an exhibit on agriculture and pick up a pork-chop-on-a-stick before climbing into a black S.U.V. to catch a private flight to Martha's Vineyard.
Yet many of these, such as Lynn Nottage's Pulitzer-prizewinning "Sweat", about struggling factory workers in Reading, Pennsylvania, and Sarah Burgess's "Kings", which probes the sleazy machinations of political lobbyists in Washington (at New York's Public Theatre through April 1st), have a dutiful, anthropological quality to them.
At the root of all these biases seems to be what Daniel Kahneman, a Nobel-prizewinning psychologist and author of a bestselling book, "Thinking, Fast and Slow", calls "cognitive ease": humans have a tendency to steer clear of facts that would force their brains to work harder.
For Rodgers and Hammerstein, who wrote the songbook of old-fashioned American values (with a wink), it's a place, as portrayed in their 233 musical ''State Fair,'' where housewives derive their self-worth from prizewinning mincemeat, and restless young farm folk seek romance with worldly strangers.
Writing children's literature "has helped me grow in confidence as a person, which in turn has helped me develop … as an officer, too," said Gavin Puckett, a U.K.-based policeman (it remains his primary income source) and author of the prizewinning 2013 "Fables From the Stables" series.
In "What the Constitution Means to Me," which premiered at Clubbed Thumb in 2017 before winding toward Broadway via Berkeley Rep, New York Theater Workshop and the Greenwich House Theater, Ms. Schreck, 47, recreates the prizewinning speech she gave as a teen debater in Wenatchee, Wash.
After stints at the Staten Island Advance and the Associated Press, Dolnick started at the Times in 2009 as a metro reporter—the same year as his cousin A.G.—and wrote a prizewinning series on halfway houses before becoming a senior editor for mobile and then an associate editor.
The book took Ms Proulx five years to write, but it was born some 30 years ago when the now 80-year-old Pulitzer prizewinning author saw a Michigan roadsign that proclaimed the surrounding bare scrub landscape to have once been the finest white pine forest in the world.
But it will, boosters say, at last allow businesses to see the computer age in their productivity statistics, freeing them from the shadow of Robert Solow, a Nobel-prizewinning economist, who in 23 observed that investment in information technology appeared to do little to make companies more efficient.
We take the weekend to highlight recent books coverage from The Times: The noted historian Robert A. Caro, known for his monumental biographies of Robert Moses and President Lyndon B. Johnson, has a new book out, "Working," a collection of pieces about how he writes his prizewinning books.
PARIS — On a Wednesday night in December, amid civic strife over proposed pension reforms, Cédric Villani, a prizewinning mathematician and a deputy in the National Assembly, packed the Trianon Theater and made the case that he should be elected mayor when Parisians go to the polls in March.
TO THE crowds at the Cody Stampede—a four-day rodeo that draws thousands to Wyoming over the Independence Day weekend—the bull-rider Bryce Barrios is just a name among many, drawing cheers with a confident, prizewinning ride on a bucking, wheeling animal weighing three-quarters of a ton.
Disoriented in a historical re-play, as headlines would have it, that seems to have crammed the timeline from the Machtergreifung to the Truman Doctrine into a mere nine months, The New Republic called up prizewinning Cold War historian Arne Westad at the Harvard Kennedy School to get his thoughts.
His remarkable memoir reads, unaccountably, like the most hair-raising of psychological thrillers, despite the fact that the saga of Eichenwald's life as an epileptic from his late teens up until the present, when he has become a prizewinning journalist, would not seem to contain the potential for so much suspense.
Alistair Horne, a British historian whose prizewinning works included a gripping account of the battle of Verdun and a keen analysis of the French-Algerian war that President George W. Bush read closely for insights into the American war in Iraq, died on Thursday at his home in Turville, Buckinghamshire, England.
American admirers of Andrew Miller's earlier books — his first novel, "Ingenious Pain," for example, or "Oxygen" or his most recent, prizewinning "Pure" — will know that whether he sets a story in the 18th century or the present, and no matter his subject, his prose is highly distinctive in its detached precision.
HONG KONG — Two prizewinning Reuters journalists were released from prison in Myanmar on Tuesday after more than a year in detention for covering the country's deadly crackdown on the Rohingya minority group, ending a drama that had brought global scrutiny upon the country's de facto civilian leader, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.
Perhaps even more viscerally even than on television, America's most wrenching war in our time hit home in photographs, including these three searing prizewinning images from The Associated Press newsmen Malcolm W. Browne, Eddie Adams and Nick Ut. They are the subject of retrospectives now, in a new book and accompanying exhibitions.
At something of a loss for an evaluation matrix for these prizewinning designs, and determined the best metric for the marriage of form and function would be how well I was able to incorporate them into my workout on roller skates, so I strapped in and headed to town on an absurdly beautiful late-summer day.
When the Jason who is a modestly successful and somewhat happily married physics professor at a small Chicagoland college is traumatically translated into Jason the prizewinning scientific superstar at work on a zillion-dollar secret project to alter space and time, he can't avoid the central question of who the real Jason is, and how he can possibly tell.
Rachel Hauck's diorama-like set, a heightened evocation of one of the American Legion halls in which a teenage Ms. Schreck once delivered prizewinning encomiums to the United States Constitution, includes many carefully selected details: a few carrot-colored banquet chairs; a flag with the insignia of the Legion post in Ms. Schreck's hometown, Wenatchee, Wash.
Mr. Ross consulted some of the leading experts in the era — including Eric Foner of Columbia University, whose "Reconstruction" is the definitive study, and Martha Hodes of New York University, author of a prizewinning study of interracial sexuality in the 19th-century South — and has done a good job of balancing the factual record with the demands of dramatic storytelling.
In a step-by-step account in his new book, the investigative journalist Ronan Farrow accuses high-level executives and producers at NBC News of interfering with his monthslong effort to report on the film mogul Harvey Weinstein, an investigation that would become part of the prizewinning series he published in The New Yorker after leaving the network in 2017.
Ms. Roth, who has extensive experience producing challenging (and prizewinning) plays as well as deep financial resources as the wife of billionaire real estate investor Steven Roth, was on the board of the Vineyard in 1997 when she saw "How I Learned to Drive," and was so impressed that she led a commercial Off Broadway production; last year, she saw "Indecent" at the Vineyard, and was determined to bring it to Broadway.
We reach over 500 million people around the world with our content; our revenue grew over 65 percent this year continuing a trend of 20053 quarters in a row of double-digit year-over-year revenue growth; we have prizewinning journalists around the world breaking important stories with major impact; we operate as a venture-backed tech startup with engineers and data scientists giving us advantages traditional media companies can't match; and we create much of the most popular and compelling content on Facebook, YouTube, Snapchat and other digital platforms.

No results under this filter, show 133 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.