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"screamingly" Definitions
  1. extremely

58 Sentences With "screamingly"

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

That's the VAIO P. It is screamingly beautiful even today.
It seems screamingly obvious to me that Nakesha had schizophrenia.
It was screamingly obvious that this season might well be bad.
Because here's the screamingly obvious thing: not all YouTubers are created equally.
Coffee, eggs, chorizo, and water were all rushing—screamingly—to the exits.
If the next move is screamingly obvious then what are you doing here?
And I've partnered with a local comedian who does a screamingly funny Hitler impersonation.
"Screamingly bullish" is how analysts at Citi described the Shanghai market earlier this month.
Upon first listen, it's not screamingly obvious that Migration is about the refugee crisis.
And when you start looking at change over time, it becomes even more screamingly obvious.
"None of them are screamingly cheap," he said, adding U.S. stock valuations are much higher.
If this all sounds terribly depressing, it's worth noting that The Lobster is also screamingly funny.
It can be screamingly funny in one moment, then immediately become sad or scary or angry.
What the entire, three-episode interaction made screamingly obvious was that Frankel doesn't really care for de Lesseps.
D'hooge said finding attractive opportunities was now more difficult than a year ago, when valuations were "screamingly cheap".
The verbal acrobatics in which performers catch one another in midflight tend to be more clever than screamingly funny.
"The need for an airport in western Sydney has been screamingly obvious for many years," Turnbull told reporters in Sydney.
They often focused on race and class (and were screamingly funny), for which they won acclaim, including an Emmy in 220.
It gets screamingly hot and can sear chicken skin to a deep, rich brown or quickly sauté an onion to golden.
Gideon's our point of view character, and her flat, deadpan voice contrasts beautifully to her screamingly over-the-top gothic surroundings.
So it follows that turning the age my mom was when she bore me, lovingly, screamingly, from her body, feels significant.
One screamingly obvious parallel in young adult novels is one of the genre's biggest breakout stars, Katniss Everdeen from The Hunger Games.
The default setting on the 220T is the screamingly oversaturated assault on the eyes that OLED screens have traditionally been known for.
"It was screamingly obvious that we had stumbled onto a gold mine with these guys, and we brought them on right away," Mr. Chazelle said.
Data we already have from around the world makes it screamingly obvious that criminal laws targeting drug users don't protect the public from high levels of drug use.
But when San Francisco's renowned Dandelion Chocolate decided to stop by on a screamingly sunny day a couple weeks back, we had an instant mind-meld: Boozy chocolate milkshakes.
Video calling is going to be more important than ever in the coming months, so it's somewhat comforting to know that it can be done without screamingly fast internet.
Victor Mather: Four years ago, Norway had by all accounts a screamingly successful Winter Olympics, but failed to win the events it treasures the most: the cross country relays.
If there's one screamingly obvious lesson to be learned from the recent casting controversies over Ghost in the Shell, Doctor Strange, Aloha, Gods of Egypt, Exodus: Gods and Kings, etc.
But for all that, there are moments of Howards End that feel so screamingly contemporary, so cringe-inducingly relevant, that you may feel the urge to flinch away from your screen.
I still stand by what I said — yes, The Circle can be "screamingly boring" — but I have to admit I enjoyed it more once funneled into Netflix's three-week event format.
The theory: The Indians are handicapped by their own bad vibes, courtesy of a screamingly racist team logo and a team name that's less offensive but still uncool enough to merit replacement.
The simplicity — a whole fish on a plate — has her name all over it, and the application of fennel oil is the sort of nuance — invisible, politely insistent — she prefers to screamingly interventionist moves.
Blair would stop the sled every once in a while to change the lineup, swapping the dogs around according to split-second behavioral signals that were invisible to me but screamingly obvious to Blair and Quince.
Pecker's intention was not to publish the information, but rather to keep it hidden from the American public, which was already seeing screamingly negative headlines in the Enquirer about Trump's opponents — from Ted Cruz to Hillary Clinton.
"Turkey always comes up as screamingly cheap — we've avoided it, partly because of the risks of the economy, the fact it has these huge current account deficits," said Miller, chief investment officer at wealth management firm SMC Direct.
Liberte Austin does a mix of sponsored posts for things like super-right-wing or screamingly patriotic apparel companies, protein supplements, trauma kits, a tactical gear subscription box, Second Amendment-related home decor, and, of course, teeth-whitening kits.
It might offer up a screamingly funny scene right next to one that ends in tragedy, and then it might cut to another character offering a soliloquy to the powers that be or a representative of the prison or a chicken.
With the help of their eccentric Guatemalan housekeeper Agador (the screamingly funny Hank Azaria), Armand and Albert agree to the plan; chaos — involving Albert in drag as "Mother Coleman" ("the D is silent"), shrimp-and-egg soup, and some, er, questionable china — ensues.
JENNIFER SCHUESSLER The talk-dirty-to-me monologue in Kate Tarker's bizarro comedy "Thunderbodies," at Soho Rep, was flamboyantly gross-out filthy, and the great Deirdre O'Connell wallowed magnificently in it, delivering a screamingly funny, revoltingly blue aria to a lover's prowess with his nose.
Hillsong, a Pentecostal megachurch that was founded more than 30 years ago in Sydney and spread on the back of a hugely successful Christian recording label, has between 9,000 and 10,000 members in New York — most of them young, racially diverse and screamingly fashionable.
The Trump-era Republicans have made screamingly clear what should have been obvious for a long time: The G.O.P. is no longer a comfortable home for anyone who cares about the rights of women — or of minorities, immigrants, L.G.B.T. people, and the poor — or about the Constitution.
There are literally hundreds of screamingly drunk people around me—standing on benches, clashing glasses, shouting "Prost!" as they swill beer down their chests, dancing in the aisles, singing along to the live band like wolves howling at the moon—and yet it was the fish I couldn't believe.
Reviews for the play were mixed. In The New York Times, Alexander Woollcott said it was "screamingly funny at times and rather dull at others". A critic for The Drama called it "vulgar and immoral" and said it gave the wrong impression of chorus girls. The opinions of reviewers did not stop the play from being a hit.
Tom Carson has called Get Your War On a "glorious excoriation of our post-9/11 loony bin",Carson, Tom (October 3, 2004). "Last Comic Standing". The New York Times, Pg. 20G while Connie Ogle, in her review of the second Get Your War On book, called it "Profane, decidedly anti-war and screamingly funny ... guaranteed to make you laugh yourself sick."Ogle, Connie (November 24, 2004).
" He regularly featured in pantomimes and in music halls in London, and toured in South Africa, Australia, and the United States.Raymond Mander and Joe Mitchenson, British Music Hall: A story in pictures, Studio Vista, 1965, p.131 It was said of his first appearance in New York in 1909: "Nothing funnier.. has been seen in a New York vaudeville theatre. The burlesque is pure artistry, subtle and screamingly funny.
Bird has also garnered critical acclaim for his performance. Nell Minow of Common Sense Media wrote that Bird "plays the funniest character in the film", while AllMovie's Perry Seibert described his performance as "screamingly funny". Pete Vonder Haar of Film Threat wrote that Bird contributes "the best work" to the film as Edna in terms of dialogue and vocal performance, calling her rant about the "idiocy" of capes "priceless." Scott Chitwood, writing for ComingSoon.
A review in The Advertiser in Adelaide said of the production: > "Sheerluck Jones, or Why D'Gillette Him Off" which is now the second item at > Terry's Theatre. To enjoy the latter thoroughly, and Mr. Clarence > Blakiston's inimitable imitation of Mr. Gillette, you want to see the > former. The travesty shows up the absurdities of the original in a > screamingly funny fashion. The detective's deductions fail, and Professor > McGillicuddy, the Lipton of Crime (Professor Moriarity, "the Napoleon of > Crime" in the original) simply romps in.
He noted that it had "cheeky rap poking stereotypical fun at Southerners". J.D. Considine from The Daily Gazette said it is "the piece de resistance, a track so infernally catchy that you almost don't notice how screamingly funny it is." Tom Ewing from Freaky Trigger said that "Cotton Eye Joe” work "on that basic, energetic, ass-moving level". He added that "the hollering diva interludes actually change things up a little, though that decades-old hook is solid enough to stand on its own.
It became one of director Barry Levinson's most successful films after his initial successes with Good Morning, Vietnam and Rain Man. In a review, Nathan Rabin described the film as superior to its source novel: "If there were an Academy Award for Best Screen Adaptation Of A Screamingly Awful, Viciously Sexist Novel, Disclosure would triumph. The film takes a preachy, disingenuous, and poorly written jeremiad against sexually aggressive women and turns it into a sleek, sexy, and only moderately sexist piece of Hollywood entertainment."Disclosure Nathan Rabin, The Dissolve, August 16, 2013.
The Bunnygraphs, as a genre, were representative of the cinema of the period, and were very successful, making Bunny the first American comic film star and Finch the first female star comedian. A Cure for Pokeritis, released February 23, 1912, was individually well-received, including in showings outside the United States. The Thames Star, a New Zealand newspaper, described the film as "screamingly funny". After John Bunny's death, interest in his films led Vitagraph in 1917 to announce the re- release of this film (retitled A Sure Cure for Pokeritis), along with many of his other works, as "Favorite Film Features".
The film has had mixed critical reception, but the writing and acting have been widely singled out for praise. Variety, which described it as a "strong, well-thesped pic", indicated that it "scores simultaneously as romantic, tragic, grotesque and screamingly funny." Salon.com, which characterized it as "a highly disturbing combination of gruesome gore and earnest, tragic romance not encountered since David Cronenberg's "The Fly," if ever, singled out for praise the acting and the script, summarizing that "the film's strange blend of tragedy and surreal gore, à la Dario Argento and Lucio Fulci, is surprisingly effective.
His mistress, the daughter of a Communist party bigwig, says she's pregnant and Tadeusz knows he'll have to marry her to save his reputation and his job. But divorce is never simple and Bareja's screwball comedies are never boring. What Will You Do shares many themes in common with Bareja's other comedies, especially Teddy Bear, with an emphasis on the sheer absurdity of life under Communism. The plot is too convoluted to be believed, but the director makes screamingly funny scenes from watching hapless citizens of Warsaw using a glass in a cafeteria that's been chained to the table so it won't be stolen or waiting in line for days to buy furniture.
"In one sense, the middle of 1989 saw a mood of irrational grief and helplessness which slowly but steadily grew into an unstoppable rage". On 3 October 1989 Braband's own young teenage daughter was one of approximately 6,000 protesters who invaded the grounds of the Czechoslovak embassy in a desperate attempt to obtain permissions necessary escape from East Germany via Czechoslovakia, just as Communist victims of Nazi persecution had done more than half a century earlier. The real breakthrough this time came in November 1989, however, when the Berlin Wall was broken open and then crossed by street protestors. At that point it became screamingly obvious that the Soviet forces standing by had received no orders to intervene and rescue the Honecker government.
How Brown Saw the Baseball Game was released into theaters by Lubin Manufacturing Company on November 16, 1907, and was still being shown as late as August 1908. During this time, the film sometimes was presented as part of a double feature with the 1907 film Neighbors Who Borrow, a short comedy film about a man who lends nearly everything he owns to his neighbors until his wife returns home and berates him for doing so. Advertisements for the film touted it as "such fun", and Lubin himself promoted the film as a "screamingly funny farce". It received a positive review in the June 1908 issue of The Moving Picture World which described the film as "truly funny" and that it proved to be "a veritable success".
"This is heady ground," according to Peter Millar of The Times, “for a camp comedic thriller, especially when it is littered with references to rampant homosexual practice." "The novel promises at first to be as screamingly camp as its hero/ine's wardrobe," agrees Jake Kerridge of The Daily Telegraph, “but turns out to be quite sober and thoughtful, witty rather than arch and restrained even when filthy." "The mystery part of The Prophet Murders unwinds fairly predictably: it's a paint-by-the-numbers work in that respect,” states The Complete Review, “though competently enough done to satisfy most fans of the genre." "I couldn't have cared less ‘whodunit’ in The Prophet Murders,” confirms Chris Wiegand of The Guardian as, "Somer says he considers plot secondary to character and atmosphere.
Raphael ended the review writing that the Galaxy Nexus is "screamingly fast [...] delivering what may be the best overall performance of any mobile device available". In a T3 review, Thomas Tamblyn noted the primary (rear-facing) camera was "quicker than many digital cameras", and praised the phone's experience to be "very fluid" and that "it feels like a version of Android that is already very polished." The Verge's Joshua Topolsky stated the phone is one of the "best smartphones ever made, and with a couple of minor tweaks (particularly to the camera), it could be the best smartphone ever produced." Charlie White, at Mashable, described the screen as "gorgeous", offering "an exquisitely sharp view", and describing the hardware design as "a spectacular success", concluding the Galaxy Nexus "is by far the best Android phone I’ve seen yet".
In spite of this exposure, Blackstone does not appear in the actual film. The hype for Come Play with Me also spread to the letters pages of Sullivan’s magazines. A fan letter of dubious authenticity (as it refers to scenes that do not appear in the film) from "Bert U" to Mary Millington in issue 27 of Whitehouse claims: "Dear Mary, I must congratulate you on your film Come Play with Me, I found it screamingly funny and very sexy as well…I loved every randy moment… everyone was so natural, and Henry McGhee [sic] as the PM was superb." The letter goes on to falsely claim that the actor Roy Kinnear appears in the film, and that "(Roy) looked like a Roman Emperor in the swimming pool scene. I‘ll bet it took him all his time to keep his towel on during rehearsals for the film… it looked to me, Mary, as though you were fucked rigid during the film".

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