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32 Sentences With "rousingly"

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

" His plea is rousingly plain: "Look, I'm recruitin' for a national firm.
It is written so rousingly that it just may make you reconsider your priorities.
His movie is missing the clarity of vision to whip psychopathology into something rousingly intellectual.
Aside from "Marvelous Party" and the rousingly patriotic "London Pride," the selections are more uncommon.
Both sing and dance in the rousingly received film from Damien Chazelle, who previously directed Whiplash.
Thor himself, of course, living with him would be a wonderful, uh, adventure and a rousingly sweet time.
Here was something at once rousingly far-out and reassuringly accessible, throbbing with what could be fancied Russian soul.
Rather, it rousingly introduces a comprehensive overview of the nature of reality that exposes the limits of Job's human perspective.
"Encore," his second major-label album, is an often lustrous revisiting of raucous Southern soul, rousingly delivered and pinpoint precise.
A rousingly egalitarian doubles act comes courtesy of Virginia Tuells and Ihosvanys Perez, a married couple who perform as Duo Fusion.
The bright-voiced, vivacious Italian soprano Eleonora Buratto had a rousingly received Met debut as Norina, the young widow who loves Ernesto.
But in the minutes that followed, it was New York that came rushing to the rescue, a fact the film rousingly embraces.
People who constantly have their radar attuned to slights don't fare well on critical thinking, but youths learning in rousingly diverse environments do.
" The critic Jennifer Senior especially loved the book's ending, which is "written so rousingly that it just may make you reconsider your priorities.
Based in Washington, D.C., since its founding in 1994, this stepping troupe visits Brooklyn College for one night with a rousingly percussive program.
Reflecting on how the "bloodbath" of World War I had been facilitated by industrialization, Benjamin closes out One Way Street on a rousingly positive note.
They can admire old nursing uniforms, listen to the sounds of a coal mine and watch a rousingly nationalist film glorifying the emigrants' contribution to Korea's economic growth.
The singer, who in addition to being a rousingly poetic musician is remarkably elegant and shockingly cool, looked timeless: somehow old-fashioned and not entirely of this world.
Mr Xi took aim at these by establishing a new service called the PLA Rocket Force—an upgrade of what was previously known less rousingly as the Second Artillery Corps.
And while the Academy Members rousingly applauded a statement by Asghar Farhadi, who used his absence to protest the immigration policies of Donald Trump, they were less bold about confronting scandal in their own midst.
I particularly liked the gentleman at the Eisenhower Center (a real place, in Milwaukee) who has a mental impairment and delivers a proud rendition of "Born in the U.S.A." At once breakneck and tolerant, "Give Me Liberty" manages to be both rousingly Russian and touchingly all-American.
TV Sports NBC's Summer Games broadcasts should be thought of as an Olympic edition of "America's Got Talent," a 17-day series about a rousingly successful American team tailored to an American audience that is probably happy to watch Americans do fantastically well in Rio de Janeiro.
Luckily for him Mr Corbyn was playing safely from the baseline on his trusty topics of gay marriage (delivered by modernising Tories with Labour votes), the return of a prisoner from Guantánamo Bay (not a rousingly popular achievement among Conservatives), the housing shortage and failure to redistribute wealth.
Its inspired lines and expressive density makes it the emotional center of the whole quintet. The finale reminds of Mendelssohn, in the way of being a quasi uninterrupted movement throughout. A rousingly fast tempo requires piano virtuosity, while the strings complete and interrupt each other's phrases in the most amicable manner.
Dombal mused that with the song, he "rousingly highlights his own douchebaggery, turning it into a rallying cry for all humanity" and described the vocal manipulation towards the end as sounding like a "dying cyborg".Dombal, Ryan (2010-11-21). Review: My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. Pitchfork Media. Retrieved on 2010-11-21.
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a contemporary approval rating of 86% based on 21 reviews, with an average rating of 6.8/10. Robert Alden of The New York Times called it "a rousingly funny — and perceptive — motion picture about a desperately unfunny world situation."Alden, Robert (May 26, 1966) "Screen: 'The Russians Are Coming'". The New York Times. 55.
The prayer of St Richard (attributed to the Saint himself) is often recited at college. It goes as such: "Thanks be to thee, my Lord Jesus Christ, for all the benefits Thou hast given to me, and for all the pains and insults Thou hast bourn for me. Most merciful redeemer, friend and brother, may I know Thee more clearly, love Thee more dearly, and follow Thee more nearly. Amen." The prayer has been adapted to music and forms the school hymn, which is sung rousingly on special occasions.
With only his trusted sword in hand, the honorable Marquis departs, but not before he declares his love to Desiree. The Marquis is not killed in the battle, and the tale of his unexpected victory is rousingly told by the Musketeers and Drummer-boys. The victorious Marquis returns and is reunited with Désirée, but Pomaret arrives with the Cardinal's approval of Désirée's request for an annulment. The Count neatly resolves this final glitch by tearing up the annulment paper and announcing that he is marrying Marie – now eligible to be his wife since she is now the cousin of a Marquis.
Lise Waxer wrote in her book Situating Salsa: Global Markets and Local Meanings in Latin Popular Music, that "Ese Hombre" is a "strong feminist song". Virginia Marie Raymond wrote in her book Mexican Americans Write Toward Justice in Texas, 1973--1982 that the lyrics are "rousingly hostile", while John Lannert of Billboard magazine praised the recording's lyrical content calling it a "fiery, stand-up-to-that-man testimony". David Cazares of the Sun Sentinel called the track an "outrageous song that bashes an egotistical and womanizing man". Cazares believed the track suited La India because it revamped her salsa career.
During the 1879 election campaign, called the Midlothian campaign, he rousingly denounced Disraeli's foreign policies during the ongoing Second Anglo-Afghan War in Afghanistan. (See Great Game). He saw the war as "great dishonour" and also criticised British conduct in the Zulu War. Gladstone also (on 29 November) condemned what he saw as the Conservative government's profligate spending: > ...the Chancellor of the Exchequer shall boldly uphold economy in detail; > and it is the mark ... of ... a chicken-hearted Chancellor of the Exchequer, > when he shrinks from upholding economy in detail, when, because it is a > question of only £2,000 or £3,000, he says that is no matter.
After the war, she continued this activity at the newly founded Frankfurt University of Music and Performing Arts, where she taught, as professor since 1971, until 1982. Due to a heart condition, Sott had to reduce her concert activity considerably over time, and in 1959 she finally swapped the concert podium for the radio studio. There she made a number of remarkable recordings, including piano concertos by Britten, Tchaikovsky and Scriabin and music by Prokofiev and Strawinsky, which testify to a piano playing that is as differentiated as it is rousingly vital. Sott's pedagogical legacy is a synthesis of the tradition of Franz Liszt, the playing technique of Alfred Cortot and the system of keystrokes of Alfred Hoehn, which she passed on to numerous students.
James concluded that "for all its clever updatings, stylish action and witty escapism, Licence to Kill ... is still a little too much by the book." Roger Ebert for the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 3½ stars out of 4, saying "the stunts all look convincing, and the effect of the closing sequence is exhilarating ... Licence to Kill is one of the best of the recent Bonds." Jack Kroll, writing in Newsweek, described Licence to Kill as "a pure, rousingly entertaining action movie". Kroll was mixed in his appraisal of Dalton, calling him "a fine actor who hasn't yet stamped Bond with his own personality", observing "Director John Glen is the Busby Berkeley of action flicks, and his chorus line is the legendary team of Bond stunt-persons who are at their death-defying best here".

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