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31 Sentences With "stratospherically"

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

Less stratospherically priced restaurants accomplished the same goal with shared plates.
Those are stratospherically high numbers for any politician in any situation.
She's always been dazzling (Blondie still performs, you know) and stratospherically cool.
Was this stratospherically powerful man really making small talk about Chinese food and jackets?
Bands formed in their wake that would go on to become stratospherically successful within the genre.
Even comparing to just stylers that use hot air, like this one from Conair, that's stratospherically high.
But their life with the kids is stratospherically expensive, as experts detail to PEOPLE in this week's issue.
He'd call me "sweetheart" and regale me with anecdotes about fancy golfing excursions that involved dalliances with stratospherically pricey escorts.
Bitcoin's price has risen stratospherically, a fact that leaves many minor players in the market with massive gains and many bigger players millionaires.
In May, he fought Floyd Mayweather Jr. in a hugely hyped and stratospherically profitable bout that ended with Pacquiao's defeat by a unanimous decision.
But the odds of buying a winning ticket was stratospherically slim - one in 292.2 million, in fact, according to the Multi-State Lottery Association.
It begins with Gordon making the fatal mistake of telling her he still loves her, which quickly propels Renata's anger to stratospherically sweary levels.
And nothing symbolizes that like the couture: stratospherically expensive clothes made by hand for the ivory tower few, just as it has been for decades.
Other options include following the Denmark model and raising the debt limit stratospherically high or forcing the limit to increase in lock step with new funding.
But the ambitions of Walt Disney Imagineering staff and Parks management are stratospherically high for what is the largest single land expansion ever in a US Disney park.
Republicans in Congress who are terrified by the prospect of being locked in an embrace of the stratospherically unpopular Trump will continue their war of personal destruction against Nancy Pelosi.
Yeah, I feel really lucky that I got to interview him and go to his shows because I really expected him to just become stratospherically famous and be here forever.
But if I can persuade just one of you to bypass its milquetoast masochism and watch the stratospherically superior "9 1/2 Weeks" instead, then I will have done my job.
Because of today's stratospherically-priced drugs, nearly 11 million seniors fall into the doughnut hole each year, forced to spend thousands of dollars out-of-pocket for the medications they need to stay healthy.
The end of the millennium saw leather go stratospherically pop with a frankly unpredictable trend for matching leather ensembles, sported by the Beckhams and by Destiny's Child in their proto-House of Dereon finery.
High-low combinations (even those as stratospherically high and basement-level low as these) are blips in the world of street style stalking that remind us you don't have to shell out beaucoup de coins on every piece of your outfit.
Struggling to find an apartment in San Francisco's stratospherically overheated rental market, Pein settles for an Airbnb in which he has to share a room with four people and, because of what appears to be its uncertain legal status, has only one key.
A visionary designer who, in the 1970s, put Patti LaBelle, Nona Hendryx and Sarah Dash, the three members of LaBelle, into campy space costumes of channel-quilted metallic leather, disc-like cowls and boots with stratospherically high stacked heels, Mr. LeGaspi exercised an outsize influence on pop culture and yet is remembered now — if at all — because his look was adapted by Kiss.
The sad truth is, we don't, or at least don't seem to, possess voices as pristine as Kenny Bobien's—for those in the dark on this guy PLEASE check the stratospherically wonderful "You Gave Me Love" and "Why We Sing" ASAP—or as rich as Yohan Square's, or as straight up sublime as Duane Harden's (which propels classics like "You Don't Know Me" and Powerhouses' "What You Need").
If that tension is something the designers aimed to transmit to the privileged consumers who have clamored for Valentino in recent years, it remains to be seen whether the man who eagerly adds himself to a waiting list for $640 camouflage sneakers, a $1,800 camouflage tote bag or some other stratospherically priced couture camouflage item will have the wit, the patience or the desire to indulge the designers as they subtly dismantle the label's now-familiar codes.
That's, of course, an impossible task for any one TV show — especially one as vague and elliptical as this one — but there are moments, like the meeting between Dolores and Maeve in last week's episode, or Grace running away from the tiger, or Dolores's discussion with her father this week, where it comes so close to telling that story on its own terms that I can't help but keep watching, in hopes it will somehow clear the bar it's set stratospherically high for itself.
The Concerto was recorded by the performers of the premiere, released by Deutsche Grammophon in 2003, coupled with Leonard Bernstein's 1954 Serenade after Plato's "Symposium" for solo violin, string orchestra, harp and percussion, with Mutter and the London Philharmonic Orchestra. A reviewer compared the first movements to concertos by Korngold and Prokofiev. Mutter's playing has been described as dancing "through the thorniest passages" and giving "a silky sheen to even the most stratospherically placed notes", while the orchestra plays "with an ideal mixture of sumptuousness and delicacy".
David Bedford's Song of the White Horse (1978), set for ensemble and children's choir and commissioned for the BBC's Omnibus programme, depicts a journey along a footpath alongside the Uffington Horse and includes words from Chesterton's poem. The composition requires the choir to inhale helium to sing the "stratospherically high notes" of the climax, accompanied by aerial footage of the horse animated to show it rearing up from the ground. A recording, produced by Mike Oldfield, was released by Oldfield Music in 1983. The Uffington Horse is illustrated on the cover of English Settlement (1982), the fifth studio album by the Swindon band XTC, and appears (among other symbols copied from Barbara G. Walker's The Woman's Dictionary of Symbols and Sacred Objects) on the back cover of Nirvana's final album, In Utero (1993).
" Tom Keogh of The Seattle Times gave the film three out of four stars, saying "Despicable Me appeals both to our innocence and our glee over cartoon anarchy." Jason Anderson of the Toronto Star gave the film three out of four stars, saying, "Despicable Me may not match the stratospherically high standards set by Up and WALL-E but that hardly matters when it's this much fun." Ty Burr of The Boston Globe gave the film three out of four stars, saying, "Despicable Me has enough visual novelty and high spirits to keep the kiddies diverted and just enough wit to placate the parents." Roger Ebert gave the film three out of four stars, saying, "The film is funny, energetic, teeth-gnashingly venomous and animated with an eye to exploiting the 3-D process with such sure-fire techniques as a visit to an amusement park.
" Ian Wade of BBC Music raved, "Free of anything in the slightest bit terrible, Head First is amazing stuff." At Spin, Lindsey Thomas commented that "Will Gregory creates a pitch-perfect neon-lit '80s wonderland with Hi-NRG bass lines and plenty of that fat synth sound made famous by Van Halen's 'Jump.'" Sal Cinquemani of Slant Magazine opined that "Head First is a brief trip, but it's saturated with enough hi-NRG motifs and sounds for countless sweaty workouts at Jack LaLanne." In a mixed review, Alexis Petridis of The Guardian noted that "Head First returns Goldfrapp to commercial waters—this time the glossy, optimistic 1980s pop that provides the playlist backbone of Magic FM", but found that "there are instances when the songwriting isn't that exciting, when the choruses don't ascend quite as stratospherically as they're supposed to, and you're left listening to what is, in essence, an MOR pop album.
According to the book Global and Modern Ayurveda, while Maharishi Ayur-Veda was instrumental in the popularization of Ayurveda in the 1980s and early 1990s, its role in global Ayurveda has now been marginalized. Authors Smith and Wujastyk attribute the virtual disappearance of MAV as an influence in global Ayurveda to the following factors: (i) isolating and describing itself as being authentic, thereby inferring that other forms of Ayurveda are "disbarred from legitimacy"; (ii) raising "its prices stratospherically" for its medicines and treatments, which placed it beyond the means of all but "the most committed and enthusiastic (and wealthy) followers"; and (iii) "become stridently opposed to allopathic medicine". In the same volume, Suzanne Newcombe cites criticism of the commercial nature of Maharishi Ayur-Veda, but says that "Maharishi Ayur-Veda is an important part of the practice of Ayurveda in contemporary society, despite the ideological claims of those who oppose the system."Suzanne Newcombe, "Ayurvedic Medicine in Britain and the Epistemology of Practicing Medicine in "Good Faith"," chapter 15 in Smith and Wujastyk write that previously it was a requirement that MAV practitioners have a medical degree, but in 2005, all medical doctors with MAV training were replaced by Maharishi Ayurveda practitioners from India.

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