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7 Sentences With "regarded with awe"

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

Thakur, an arts student from the sleepy hill station of Manali in northern India, said she started training at the age of five and was often regarded with awe for travelling alone to train in foreign destinations.
Accessed August 22, 2018. "If he is right, the reason may well be the multiple screens and other technological advances that Richard M. Hollingshead Jr., the chemicals manufacturer who opened the first commercial drive‐in in Camden, N.J., on June 6, 1933, might have regarded with awe."Lewis, Mary Beth.
Judge Dredd Megazine vol. 2 #34 After several adventures in outer space, she returns to Mega-City One. Dredd and Anderson are both considered veterans and regarded with awe by less experienced judges. Later, after a deadly run-in with Judge Death, Anderson falls into a coma2000 AD #1294 and is infected with the psychic Half-Life virus.
The Manhattan Building, built by William LeBaron Jenney in 1890, was the first building in Chicago with a complete steel skeleton or "Chicago" construction, an innovation Jenney had introduced in the Home Insurance Building in 1884. The first 16-story building in America, at the time it was "regarded with awe and fear". Jenney's masterpiece, the Manhattan was considered a technical triumph in construction. The 17-story Old Colony, built by Holabird & Roche in 1894, was considered one of the structural masterpieces of its time for its revolutionary portal form of bracing.
32 This prediction proved correct: few British writers had first- hand experience of the US, and his articles about life in New York brought him higher than usual fees.Jasen, pp. 32–33 He later recalled that "in 1904 anyone in the London writing world who had been to America was regarded with awe and looked upon as an authority on that terra incognita.... After that trip to New York I was a man who counted.... My income rose like a rocketing pheasant."Wodehouse, Over Seventy, p. 38 Wodehouse's other new venture in 1904 was writing for the stage.
His mother, who had attempted to follow him, was met by the minister wandering in a wild glen, and on hearing her son's fate, she uttered terrible imprecations, and renounced all further intercourse with the world. She lived, however, for many years in her lonely cottage, regarded with awe and pity by her neighbours as the victim of destiny, rather than the voluntary cause of her son's death and her own wretchedness. At length, while two women, who had been set to watch her last moments, were sleeping, she disappeared from her bed, and was never heard of again.
Cornwell insists that this discrepancy is not explained by mercy, but rather by the petition system, under which the families and friends of condemned persons could plead for leniency, and their petitions were more likely to be granted if they could persuade wealthy or influential persons to add their signatures. Thus, the system was another tool through which the upper classes exercised control over the lower orders. Cornwell also writes with detestation about how the British aristocracy is regarded with awe and worship, despite their lack of noble qualities. Eleanor's mother dreams of her daughter marrying a man with a title; Sandman has none, and it was only his father's wealth that persuaded her to accept him as Eleanor's fiancé.

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