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"stiflingly" Definitions
  1. in a way that makes you feel unable to breathe, because it is too hot and/or there is no fresh air

59 Sentences With "stiflingly"

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

The criteria are poorly articulated and currently issued by the stiflingly conflicted DOJ.
And you never know when the airplane will be exceedingly cold or stiflingly hot?
It was a stiflingly hot summer night about a decade ago when I first met Ceyenne.
In a stiflingly hot chamber, as parliamentarians fanned their moist faces, Mr Macron sent two broad messages.
There are a couple of theories about why people get so worked up when it's stiflingly hot.
The army tents were cold at night and stiflingly hot in the day; when it rained they flooded.
Some have argued that, without the Moon, the Earth would have a stiflingly thick atmosphere like that of Venus.
And Alicia Vikander won Best Supporting Actress for bringing some vulnerable humanity to the stiflingly tasteful "The Danish Girl".
Zionism, then in its infancy, rescued him, giving him a purpose—and an escape from a stiflingly dull provincial town.
It's stiflingly hot up here, even with the sun down, and everyone is drenched in sweat on the dance floor.
In winter, thousands of those left homeless by war freeze in temporary shelters; in summer, these same shelters become stiflingly hot.
The windowless rooms were stiflingly hot, and children as young as 9 sat snipping threads off pairs of pants on the floor.
She beat the top-seeded Garbiñe Muguruza, who retired in the third set because of cramping in the stiflingly humid summer weather.
At its worst, it functions as the purity police, calling people out for the slightest transgression of a stiflingly self-righteous orthodoxy.
Wait for the stiflingly still air to rise up before making room in my home for the inevitable visitors who have fled theirs.
Gamma Mu is less secretive than it had been in 1997, likely because American society is not as stiflingly homophobic as it once was.
If you take anything away from The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, it's that the '90s were still a stiflingly homophobic era.
He heard the clatter of dishes in the kitchen, and occasional traffic sounds outside, but other than that it was stiflingly silent in the apartment.
But new research suggests that life within these systems may be limited, due to the stiflingly hot atmospheres on Earth-sized planets that orbit the red dwarfs.
Let it be known, no conflict is too big or bitter enough for two Canadians to pass up an opportunity to be stiflingly polite to each other.
Set in a beauty salon, that film gently sketched Lebanon's devotion to beautification at the same time as highlighting the ugly aspects of a society still stiflingly conservative and divided.
But the kerfuffle belies a serious problem: the stiflingly narrow views we hold of what little girls should look like, the limitations we place on what they can do and be.
These passages are so "real," so stiflingly trapped in time, that I wanted to reach through the screen and have a beer myself, to make the seconds pass a little quicker.
He did not sing that song that will never leave your head (that was Bob West), but Joyner would have been panting it anyway, because the outfit was so stiflingly hot.
Kerr scored her second goal of the tournament with a header after 11 minutes to put the Matildas in the driving seat on a stiflingly hot night at the Stade des Alves.
Pliskova, at seven, was the highest seed to reach the fourth round after an extraordinary first week of upsets but her hopes of further progress evaporated on a stiflingly hot Court Two.
But the Westminster club remained a stiflingly male one in large part because Thatcher, across eleven years and three administrations, appointed just one woman to her Cabinet, and to a politically irrelevant post at that.
Who can forget the Metropolitan Museum of Art's fumbling rollout of their multimillion-dollar rebranding that replaced its beloved, architectural "M," with the Wolff Olin design firm's stiflingly cramped calligraphy that shouts THE MET at visitors?
Businesses in Palm Beach County have been told to expect the president to visit through May, but that Trump will likely stop visiting after that because the weather in the area begins to get stiflingly hot.
In this stiflingly hot city just south of the Equator, the authorities tried to dispose of bodies quickly, burying them in a mass grave after first taking DNA samples so that identities can be confirmed later.
He chose to die on an ordinary, stiflingly hot day in August, and he chose a room in a hotel near a station; he wanted to die like a stranger in the city to which he belonged.
Developers, eager to capitalize on cheap designs and interior floor space that would've been stiflingly hot previously, turned to solid office blocks, glass towers, and boxy, mass-produced tract homes, relying on air conditioning to make them habitable.
Upon finding the room at the Pitié-Salpêtrière hospital bustling with medics and other people – including the then-French President coming and going — Tebbutt helped secure it and ordered fans to cool the stiflingly hot late-summer temperatures.
Most vividly, I recall spending a stiflingly hot night with workers at New Orleans's Pumping Station 6, which had been swamped in Katrina and was an essential part of getting the storm's waters out of the flooded city.
The complaint described schools that were overcrowded with students but lacking in teachers; courses without basic resources like books and pencils; and classrooms that were bitingly cold in the winter, stiflingly hot in the summer and infested with rats and insects.
The contrast with the Ekdahls' world is designed to be stark: The sets, designed by Ms. Deliquet together with the Comédie Française director Érif Ruf, shrink to a stiflingly sparse room, where Emilie's son Alexander bears the brunt of Vergérus's humiliating punishments.
" — Thom Wise, 64, West New York, N.J. "When the weather suddenly gets warm like it will this week, New York buildings rarely make the adjustment from heating to cooling in time, which means every interior is stiflingly hot and miserable and my skin itches from the sudden change.
When he opened the door, he found Mr. Levit pounding away at Shostakovich bare-chested and barefoot, in only jeans and a belt, since it was a stiflingly hot day and the Salzburg Festival's general air of luxury does not extend much in the way of air conditioning.
Since her residency space in a century-old home didn't have a darkroom, she found herself crawling into a stiflingly hot attic to create cyanotypes from her photographs, a 19th-century technique inspired by the natural history work of Anna Atkins, who visualized algae (Atkins's work was previously covered on Hyperallergic).
Directed by Little Miss Sunshine's Valerie Faris and Jonathan Dayton, Battle of the Sexes is also a personal examination of King's sexual awakening with her hairdresser (Andrea Riseborough), as well as a portrait of how Riggs' gambling obsession and stiflingly wealthy wife (Elisabeth Shue) drove him to reclaim the spotlight by any means necessary.
Or maybe it will be the feeling of being totally alone, on your third hour without water, with the scorching sun beating down, and the stiflingly thick windless air radiating off the sprawl of bone dry sticks, and the buzzards circling overhead as you realize how much you suck at this—that will bring you to your knees.
There, for instance, in the front row of Virgil Abloh's Off-White show (preceding his triumphal debut at Louis Vuitton) is Christian Combs (known as King), son of Sean Combs, sitting in the stiflingly hot Palais de Chaillot dressed in an emerald green vinyl tracksuit as a blizzard of artificial snow drifts down on his head.
Thumbing a button, she raised the disc to her head and began to speak, intoning the routine blither in a stiflingly mind-numbing voice.
Richardson decided to become the first cyclist to cross the stiflingly hot Nullarbor Plain. On 24 November 1896, Richardson left Coolgardie for Adelaide by bicycle. Carrying only a small kit and a water-bag, he followed the telegraph line, as he crossed the Nullabor. He later described the heat as "1,000 degrees in the shade".
Cherry said she has never really thought of herself as a rapper. She sees herself as a "singer that does a bit of rapping." Breaking into the U.S. music industry was not a positive experience for Cherry. She said that while "Buffalo Stance" gave her a mainstream crossover moment in the U.S. she found the American music industry stiflingly attached to labels and genre identities.
Plaque in Sunnyside, NY where the jazz musician Bix Beiderbecke died.Beiderbecke died in his apartment, No. 1G, 43-30 46th Street, in Sunnyside, Queens, New York on August 6, 1931. The week had been stiflingly hot, making sleep difficult. Suffering from insomnia, Beiderbecke played the piano late into the evenings, both to the annoyance and the delight of his neighbors.Evans and Evans, pp. 544–545.
Her odd classroom in the North Tower of Hogwarts is a cross between "someone's attic and an old-fashioned tea shop";Rowling, J.K. (1999). Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, p. 102. it can only be reached by climbing to the top of the stairs and then up a ladder through a trapdoor set in the ceiling. This dim, heavily scented, and "stiflingly" warm room often affects students' wakefulness.
The state's attorney was William Jennings Bryan, a Christian, pacifist, and former candidate for the U.S. presidency. He agreed to take the case because he believed that evolution theory led to dangerous social movements. And he believed the Bible should be interpreted literally. The weather was stiflingly hot and the rhetoric equally heated in this "trial of the century" attended by hundreds of reporters and others who crowded the Rhea County Courthouse in July 1925.
' There's something stiflingly theoretical about the movie." Matthew Gilbert of The Boston Globe wrote, "What could have been an evocative journey into the mind of a lost veteran, as he opens up his thinking across a one-man show set entirely inside his house, is more like a quasi thriller revolving around a very mad hatter." Oyelowo's performance was met with unanimous acclaim from critics. Alessandra Stanley of The New York Times wrote that "Mr.
" It was recorded at Castle Studio in Nashville on July 25, 1951 with Fred Rose producing and backing from Don Helms (steel guitar), Jerry Rivers (fiddle), Sammy Pruett (lead guitar), Howard Watts (bass) and probably Jack Shook (rhythm guitar). Acuff-Rose songwriter Helen Hudgins later recalled the stiflingly hot summer session: "Hank had his shirt unbuttoned all the way, and he was absolutely soaking wet. It seemed that all he was...was voice. It came up from I don't know where.
The summer of 1908-9 was stiflingly hot in Durban. Nonetheless, in October 1908, delegates from across South Africa braved the heat and humidity to attend Smuts' convention. Smuts had planned carefully his line of attack, tailored to the needs and demands of each delegate, and he was sure that he would succeed. He knew that compromise on all issues would be impossible, so he focused on the general principles, intending to leave more technical and less significant matters to the future South African Parliament.
The book tells the story of three women, Claire, Guinea, and Deb, who are co-workers in the beauty salon of an exclusive Sydney hotel. The story weaves together these characters with their familial and romantic relationships, as they struggle to manage the realities of working for the privileged upper classes, to whom no rules apply, while their own families cope with wartime deaths and losses, rationing, government manpower recruitment, and stiflingly conservative attitudes surrounding the role and perception of the "acceptable" behaviour of women.
In the Digital Audio and Compact Disc Review, a review of the album commented "...but there's just no hope for such dull, lethargic ballads as "Blow Wind Blow" and "Sleep Like Breathing"." The Trouser Press Record Guide singled-out the song as the album's "low point", describing it as "stiflingly schmaltzy". In a retrospective review of Raindancing, Paul Scott-Bates of the music website Louder Than War commented that the song's release as a single was "almost criminally ignored". Loz Etheridge of God is in the TV described the song as a "tragically overlooked duet" and a "standout" on Raindancing.
In a now more competitive job market, the head of the household or householder is expected to be more educated, which makes it hard for rural families to compete with a lack of access to higher education, subsequently resulting in income inequality between urban and rural areas. Some attribute income inequality to a change in traditional household head dynamics in South Korea. An increase in single headed households and a stiflingly low access to new jobs has created a financially challenging situations for many families in South Korea, leading many not to have families at all.
BBC foreign service broadcasts were popular in Greece throughout the dictatorship years. In 1968 he was declared persona non grata by the junta, and after a final meeting with Stylianos Pattakos, the junta's number- two-man, during which Pattakos gave him a stern rebuke, Finer was deported from Greece for "having the courage to report on what he saw and thought". The Spectator reported in 1968 that the junta was very annoyed with Finer's three daily broadcasts to the BBC, which caused "tidal ebb and flows of customers" in Athenian cafés. The Spectator also commented that Greece was "stiflingly blanketed by censorship" at the time.
Brisbane has continued to produce acts which espouse punk ideologies and/or aesthetics, diversifying in attitudes and stylistic influences according to international trends characterising the nineties. While the overt police brutality of the Bjelke- Petersen era waned after the end of his reign in 1987, Brisbane was still experienced as stiflingly conservative, and post World Expo 88, increasingly expensive. Alternative rock, post-punk and skate punk continued, with additional influences of 90s grunge, hardcore, shoegaze, indie-pop, ska and pop-punk trends. Performances diversified to reflect an increased representation of feminine, queer, post-modern, surrealist and/or overtly ideological perspectives relative to the raw, 'snot-driven', straightforward approach of punk predecessors more closely influenced by rock and roll.
Harry and Cora, now almost entirely Martian, agree easily, and the other two children quickly adopt Martian names as well. As they return to the town, the Bitterings discover that the colonists are retreating to the ancient Martian villas in the mountains, as the summer has made the valley stiflingly hot. Harry briefly expresses a wish to stay and work on his rocket but is easily persuaded to go with the rest of the colonists and come back when the weather is cooler. Five years later, the United States, having won the war and rebuilt New York, sends a small military dispatch to recover the colonists sent to Mars, only to find their settlement abandoned.
Pinto at the alt=Pinto is smiling and looking towards her left Pinto's third film role in 2011 was playing Princess Lailah in the poorly received independent film Day of the Falcon, a period drama set in the 1930s Middle East, where she was cast alongside Antonio Banderas, Mark Strong and Liya Kebede. Despite overall negative reviews, Andy Webster of The New York Times described Pinto and Kebede as "refreshing" and praised their "independent presences amid the stiflingly male-dominated milieu". Pinto's final screen appearance of the year was in the fantasy-action film Immortals, in which she played the oracle priestess Phaedra. Despite receiving mixed-to-positive reviews from critics, the film grossed worldwide.
His other novels were classified into the groups by José Montesinos:Montesinos "Galdos" # The early works from La Fontana de Oro up to La familia de León Roch (1878). The best known of these is probably Doña Perfecta (1876), which describes the impact made by the arrival of a young radical on a stiflingly clerical town. In Marianela (1878) a young man regains his eyesight after a life of blindness and rejects his best friend Marianela for her ugliness. # The Novelas españolas contemporáneas, from La desheredada (1881) to Angel Guerra (1891), a loosely related series of 22 novels which are the author’s major claim to literary distinction, including his masterpiece Fortunata y Jacinta (1886–87). They are bound together by the device of recurring characters, borrowed from Balzac’s La Comédie humaine.

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