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"suavely" Definitions
  1. in a way that is confident, attractive and polite, but perhaps not sincere

83 Sentences With "suavely"

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

Through Dee, Hyden met Carlos, a suavely dressed narcotics transporter.
They suavely, and convincingly, chipped away at the black tie wall.
He drove to the climax; lyrical details were suavely caressed but pressed into the onward rush.
The book, copiously illustrated, suavely turned, is prinked and spiced with quotes from marvelous poets and playwrights.
Suavely articulated over simple, dramatic beats, every word is thought through and all five songs work as songs.
Some pieces verge suavely on pure abstraction, while many works on paper are in the form of cartoonish doodles.
Pettibon's coarsely robust picturing and suavely refined prose do the same, but for initiates who are more strictly fanciful.
Painted in mostly flat planes of suavely muted colors, these works are metaphorically piquant, subtly funny and often erotically suggestive.
I never learned to navigate, repair a canoe, or suavely persuade aproperty owner to let us camp on his land.
The backgrounds are uniformly dark blue, but the paintings are bathed in light, which emanates from suavely painted areas of bare skin.
The stage was populated by figures adorable yet uncanny: A fox suavely smokes a cigarette in one of the fluently rendered drawings.
" Or, more suavely, "It might be right to write of just the hour / That's a structure good as love's or any measure.
It shows the artist looking wise beyond his years, already adept at a suavely brushed surface redolent of Manet, Ingres and Degas.
Taylor, after training Rainford in the art of documentary photography and darkroom skills, suavely left him the business when he perished in 1929.
And in his suavely tender falsetto, Romeo Santos tells her how desirable she is, how jealous he is and how he can't live without her.
A problem with her recent work, however, is that it looks too suavely practiced, the unruly, dissonant dimension overly harmonized by her canny formal skills.
But this influence is often suavely merged with spirituals and African percussion accents — often deployed in the service of love triangles and mystic conjuring spells.
The baritone Igor Golovatenko, in yet another company debut, was a dignified Prince Yeletsky; the baritone Alexey Markov, a suavely superb raconteur as Count Tomsky.
She pillages but also suavely synthesizes art's eternal images of women from the Renaissance to Futurism and beyond: from Madonnas, angels and queens to warriors.
"You come to me if you want to get stuff done," says the suavely-suited Steve Harris from a coffee spot in one of Lagos's smarter corners.
Mr. Temperley, who played soprano saxophone and bass clarinet in addition to baritone, made a handful of suavely authoritative albums, including "Nightingale" (1991) and "A Portrait" (2006).
Album Review No one converts an apology into a come-on more suavely than Usher, who releases his eighth solo studio album, "Hard II Love," this week.
In January of 1981, I awarded the top four-star rating to Vienna '79, a suavely stylish Austrian restaurant that opened on East 19833th Street in 1979.
Smith suavely pointed at fans and busted some dance moves, but when he sat down to talk with Jimmy he felt as though he could do better.
A new George Michael song has emerged from his archives for the movie "Last Christmas," and it suavely carries some deeply troubled reflections about drinking and smoking marijuana.
Esposito, as the suavely amoral Powell, and D'Onofrio, as the unapologetically racist Gigante, don't have such constraints, and their performances are correspondingly both more relaxed and more nuanced.
Lucas Blalock's photographic images of normal interiors inhabited by surreal whatsits are suavely sensual, and studio photographs by John Edmonds suggest Robert Mapplethorpe's tony classicism translated into slang.
While "Blue Christmas" is historically among one of the saddest holiday songs, but Elvis suavely updated this classic, so that you don't immediately feel depressed upon listening to it.
Jeff Goldblum is our modern-day canary in the coal mine, and the index finger parting lips to suavely remind us there's no way in hell the world is normal.
There happened to be a personal trainer walking by—looking like he was taking a Sunday stroll—who came over and very insanely suavely popped Nokorima's shoulder back into place.
Since the early nineties, it has served, alongside the Financial Times , as the suavely British-accented voice of globalization (scoring over the too stridently partisan and American Wall Street Journal ).
Walter Becker, the guitarist and songwriter who made suavely subversive pop hits out of slippery jazz harmonies and verbal enigmas in Steely Dan, his partnership with Donald Fagen, died on Sunday.
These silver-tongued inheritors of wealth and power appear reassuringly familiar — suavely cosmopolitan folks who are au fait with the codes of bourgeois liberalism, unlike coarse nativists like Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
His voice itself can sound like the echo of a bygone era, as he refers to movies as "pictures" and chuckles suavely to himself at the glamour and absurdity of it all.
If you're in need for a little refresher ... Salt Bae's the famous butcher whose January 2017 video showing him suavely sprinkling Maldon salt flakes on some bone-in steak IMMEDIATELY took off.
During the brief cooking, some of the avocado will melt into the mixture, suavely coating the strands of linguine, but you also want to be sure that there are still pieces of avocado.
Mr. Lucic (stepping in for Bryn Terfel) is better at conveying the suavely aristocratic ways that Scarpia manipulates those he tries to control than he is at tapping into the character's warped malevolence.
The tequila company's co-founders, who sold the brand for $1 billion in 2017, wore sleek shades, professional suits and black and gold caps as they suavely turned in their seats to grin at the camera.
The tequila company's co-founders, who sold the brand for $1 billion in 2017, wore sleek shades, professional suits and black and gold caps as they suavely turned in their seats to grin at the camera.
Other authors being interviewed include Patti Smith, Ta-Nehisi Coates, and Elvis Costello, who suavely discusses the wielding of anger in music and grips a copy of his memoir under one arm, like a clutch purse.
Consider Julian Schnabel's brawny Neo-Expressionist paintings, Cindy Sherman's canny, staged self-portraits, Jeff Koons's sumptuous sculptures of kitschy objects and Barbara Kruger's suavely designed leftist agitprop: The '21981s abounded in eye- and mind-grabbing work.
Barely out of their teens, and stoked by cyclical military coups, Pink Floyd, and DC Comics, the musicians melded American rock, British pop, and Brazilian bossa nova, ornamenting political messages as suavely as Harrison and Hendrix.
Mr. Duwenhögger is a sly, seductive stylist and storyteller, adept at figurative painting as well as film, sculpture and suavely domestic installations — all guided by a decorative sensibility that is both between-the-wars and among cultures.
As it is, Rodin's reputation was long qualified, in the twentieth century, by an imputation of laggard taste, like that of the painter Pierre Puvis de Chavannes, several of whose suavely executed Arcadian scenes complement the show.
L'Orchestre Afrisa International reunited Congolese musicians who forged the suavely irresistible syncopations of soukous — an African reclamation of the rumba topped by gleaming guitar lines — as the backup band for Tabu Ley Rochereau, who died in 2013.
And while NYFW has been all about Kaia Gerber everywhere you look, her brother Presley got his moment to shine at Ralph Lauren, modeling a classic black and white suiting look with his blonde hair suavely slicked back.
The very next day, the cops are putting a toe tag on Heather, and Jill is a person of interest and soon on the run, having fled a detective (John Cho) who's more suavely cinematic than professionally adept.
That's not something we usually listen for in Chekhov, but, as Trigorin suavely sizes up Nina, saying, "I'd love to be in your shoes, for just an hour," we want to warn her to get out while she can.
Early on, Volumnia most suavely asks her son to play the politician (read in this context: hypocrite), but it is also she who later seals his dark fate by beseeching him, when others have failed, to abandon his vengeful campaign.
"The Gentlemen," the latest from the excitable British director Guy Ritchie, gives you exactly what you might expect from a Guy Ritchie movie that hasn't been constrained by studio decorousness (and ratings) or suavely tricked out with big-Hollywood cash.
The suavely aristocratic and yet strangely gullible Hugh Trevor-Roper first encountered Peters at Oxford in 1958 when Trevor-Roper, then a Regius professor of modern history, received a letter from an unknown supplicant on behalf of a Mr. and Mrs. Peters.
When Sylvia and her attendants arrive in Act III, they disembark from Eros's boat to a barcarole led by the suavely surprising sound of a saxophone (highly unusual in 19th-century orchestration); when Aminta carries Sylvia, arched and aloft, onto the stage, it's to a solo violin, singing sweet and high.
Alexander Bruno, like Lethem, was raised by bohemians in the late 1960s and '703s and earns a glamorous living doing what millions of people do for fun — in Bruno's case, playing backgammon against rich guys, "suavely robbing them at clubs and in their private drawing rooms" all over the world.
The album includes the Nigerian stars Burna Boy (who gets a song of his own, "Ja Ara E," that suavely warns, "Watch out for them hyenas") and Mr Eazi (who shares "Don't Jealous Me" with Tekno, Lord Afrixana and Yemi Alade and "Keys to the Kingdom" with Tiwa Savage, all fellow Nigerians).
Not only does it provide an opportunity to watch the New York City Ballet star Sara Mearns perform the choreography of her husband, Joshua Bergasse, and to hear a Richard Rodgers score suavely reincarnated, but it also makes you think about the role musical theater has often played in maintaining odious social norms even while advancing purely artistic ones.
Each photograph shoulders aside its neighbors and stops you dead: a glittering nocturnal view of a West Side high-rise above a soulfully trusting Italian donkey, a naked young man and an expanse of unquiet Hudson River waters, William S. Burroughs being typically saturnine and a young man placidly sucking on his own big toe, a suavely pensive older man and a pair of high heels found amid trash in Newark, a dead seagull on a beach and a Hujar self-portrait.
I guess Hough may well have been busking this, tinklingly and suavely, as some in the audience actually crooned along.
My truck doesn't have sports-car driving dynamics but it has a kind of authoritative languor about it, just kind of suavely rolling along.
He dresses suavely, often appearing in suits. Faceman carries a Colt Lawman Mk III revolver for protection, and drives a custom white 1984 Corvette with red trim. Sergeant Bosco "B.A." (Bad Attitude) Baracus is "The Muscle" for the A-Team, able to perform exceptional feats of strength.
Holmes suavely responds: "You may do what you like, Doctor".A Study in Scarlet/Part 2/Chapter 7 Wikisource. Retrieved on 7 June 2013. Therefore, the story is presented as "a reprint from the reminiscences of John H. Watson", and most other stories of the series share this by implication.
The district is situated in the south portion of municipality of Santa Maria. Altogether the relief is suavely undulating and is characterized by the presence of floodplains and coxilhas without big difference with its altimetric elevations.TELLES, Fátima Regina Oliveira. Atividade turística no distrito Passo do Verde - Santa Maria/RS: Problemas e perspectivas. CCNE/UFSM.
With much valor Shambhu Kaka saves Suraj and scrams, but Professor, not so lucky, dies a macabre death. Time goes by and now Suraj (Anil Dhawan) has grown up andy is in love with his uncle's (Krishna Dhawan) daughter Rachna (Shamlee). After few romantic sequences they get married. However, not everything goes on suavely as Suraj is tormented by the haunting memories of past.
Behind a revolving door, Wilbur experiences a few close calls with the monsters; whenever he tries to get Chick's attention, the monsters have disappeared. Meanwhile, Joan discovers Dr. Frankenstein's notebook in Sandra's desk and Sandra finds Joan's insurance company employee ID in her purse. As the men and women prepare to leave for the ball, a suavely dressed Dr. Lejos (a.k.a. Dracula) introduces himself to Joan and the boys.
James Gamble Rogers II (January 24, 1901 – October 30, 1990) was a celebrated American architect practicing primarily in Winter Park, Florida in the middle years of the twentieth century. He is noted for suavely elegant residential and commercial work, in the Spanish Revival, Mediterranean Revival, French Provincial, and Colonial Revival styles. His occasional forays into the Art Deco and International Style also garnered outstanding contributions to the built environment.
Leonard Louis "Lenny" McBrowne (born January 24, 1933) is an American jazz drummer. He was a prolific hard bop drummer with a recording career that started in the 1950s and ended in the mid 1970s. As a bandleader he fronted Lenny McBrowne and the Four Souls, which released two albums in 1960. A disciple of Max Roach, McBrowne was often compared to Chico Hamilton due to the "suavely exotic tendencies of his solo work".
C.E. Pearce, Sims Reeves, Fifty Years of Music in England (Stanley Paul & Co, London 1924), pp. 172–73. Mario sang it suavely, and with an Italian accent, so as to break one's heart; Reeves made it vigorous and soul-stirring.Smart, Musical Memories, p. 250. Hatton composed Anglican church music including a morning and evening service in E, and a number of anthems such as Come Holy Ghost and Blessed be the Lord of Israel.
While Raffles discusses stealing the gold cup, a constable overhears and approaches. After suavely assuaging the constable's fears, Raffles observes that the three of them are alone; the room's attendant who is supposed to be present is down the corridor with speaking to attendant. To Bunny's surprise, Raffles knocks out the constable with his fists, before the constable can blow his whistle. At Raffles's bidding, Bunny ensures that the two attendants did not hear.
Rebecca was also the architect of Worthing's Royal Baths (now demolished) and several other buildings around the town. The Royal Sea House in Worthing, later the Royal Hotel, with Ionic columns and pilasters was rebuilt to Rebecca's designs in 1829 (and destroyed by fire in 1901). Rebecca designed Castle Goring at Goring-by-Sea for Sir Bysshe Shelley, 1st Baronet. Howard Colvin called the house "an extraordinary fantasy, suavely neo-classical on one side and romantically castellated on the other".
He addressed his first book of Epistles to a variety of friends and acquaintances in an urbane style reflecting his new social status as a knight. In the opening poem, he professed a deeper interest in moral philosophy than poetryEpistles 1.1.10 but, though the collection demonstrates a leaning towards stoic theory, it reveals no sustained thinking about ethics.V. Kiernan, Horace: Poetics and Politics, 149, 153 Maecenas was still the dominant confidante but Horace had now begun to assert his own independence, suavely declining constant invitations to attend his patron.
The pace of the song changes with its chorus, which Mikey MiGo cited as being "a bit off setting". "FutureSex/LoveSound" is "brimming over with attitude, sharp beats and rhythm", according to Linda McGee of RTÉ.ie. The song, which was described as being "suavely portentous" by Pitchfork Media's Tim Finney, was cited as being a mixture between "the carnal strut" of Nine Inch Nails' "Closer" and the "masochistic flutter" of the Junior Boys. Finney said the song "derives its charm" from its "lofty" aspirations, "like a familiar lover staging an elaborately exaggerated seduction".
At Cannes, critical reception was largely positive, though it was not expected to win the Palme d'Or. Varietys Owen Gleiberman called the film "a suavely merciless take-down of the decadence of the contemporary art world," remarking the museum depicted is motivated by greed, and the film is "more outrageous but less effective than Force Majeure." Peter Bradshaw gave it four stars in The Guardian, judging it a "sprawling and daringly surreal satire". In The Hollywood Reporter, Todd McCarthy called it "madly ambitious and frequently disquieting", suggesting it might try to include too much, but had an impact.
" The Guardians Philip French opined, "Jeremy Irons is excellent as the suavely villainous lion Scar." David Sterritt of The Christian Science Monitor exalted Irons's acting, describing him as "positively brilliant." Also hailing the film's cast as "incredible," Desson Howe of The Washington Post highlighted Irons as a "standout." Praising the film for successfully combining "grand-opera melodrama and low-comedy hi-jinks," the Orlando Sentinels Jay Boyar concluded that "One reason they work so well together is that even most of the serious sections contain an undercurrent of humor, provided ... by the deliciously droll voice-performance of Jeremy Irons as Scar.
"In a European city in the year 1930," 17-year-old music student Lisa Koslov (Bryan) sees her mother off at the train station, and as she is leaving, is handed an envelope containing two tickets to a piano concert she suspects come from a well- dressed man she thinks may be stalking her. Her friend Hildegard persuades her to attend the concert and realizes the man is the pianist himself, the renowned Michael Michailow (Rathbone). On Lisa's behalf, Hidegard accepts Michailow's dinner invitation to Lisa when she has misgivings. There he suavely pleads his loneliness and begs to see her the next day.
The trio have been mapping out this version in concert for years, and you could never accuse them of scaling this mountain without planning ahead of time. But the Rite should elicit gasps, not cock eyebrows—the latter of which is the most extreme reaction the Bad Plus manage to provoke. It's ironic that after tackling (and matching) Black Sabbath and Nirvana, it would be Stravinsky that would finally make the Bad Plus sound positively tame." Zachary Woolfe wrote in The New York Times, "a suavely hallucinatory Coltrane/Coleman flavor ... confident playing that makes for fun listening ... for sheer strangeness and shock, Stravinsky’s original keeps outdoing its descendants.
He collects huge fees. "Its hero, less dashing than Philo Vance and less whimsical than Charlie Chan, but more mercenary than either, will be a highly acceptable addition to the screen's growing corps of private operatives," wrote Time (July 27, 1936). "The comedy and the guessing elements have been deftly mixed, the well-knit narrative precludes any drooping in interest and the cast disports itself in crack whodunit fashion," wrote Variety (July 22, 1936): :In bringing the Rex Stout figment to life Arnold has contributed lots more than girth and a capacity for beer guzzling. His Nero Wolfe jells suavely with the imagination and makes a piquant example of personality conception.
Caravello never questions these coincidences on film aside from expressing doubts as to the identity of a man purporting to be Charlton Heston (Bob Legionaire), who refuses to leave Caravello's assigned trailer. To placate him, he suavely offers the old man a cameo in the film, which he enthusiastically accepts with humorous results. The film culminates in an intentionally hindered race to the fake film's "one time only screening," during which the Big 3 are delayed by a number of setbacks, finally making it in time to see only a select few scenes of the film. They finally arrive at the theater and discover that Caravello's name is misspelled on the marquee.
"It was the toughest scene for me of the entire six months we spent filming the series... Stacie is supposed to be calm, cool and collected... she looks down, checks him out and casually and suavely makes a comment. I kept looking down, dissolving into fits of laughter and was almost unable to deliver my line. So all you'll see is me laughing". Although the programme typically contains few non-trivial stunts or dramatic special effects, the first episode includes an example of Ash Morgan's favourite con, known as "The Flop": having previously received a fractured skull in a bar brawl, Morgan deliberately steps in front of moving cars and exaggerates the accident.
He ably described their cultural colonialism when he wrote of the "ideal Canadian litterateur" as > a man who has been educated as an English gentleman, though certain New > England Universities will pass; in addition he should know about Canada as > accurately and sympathetically as possible from the point of view of an > omniscient tourist who, after all, knows better things. We want not so much > to be different as to have had different experiences about which we can talk > at tea as suavely as anybody. It amounts in fact to our wanting to be > American or English with an added background which will lend chic.Raymond > Knister, "Canadian Literati," Journal of Canadian Fiction, No. 14 (1975), > 160.
Cassiano dal Pozzo remarked of the painting in its former state, which he saw at Fontainebleau in 1625, that it had neither devotion, decorum nor similitude,Noted by A. Ottino della Chiesa, Leonardo Pittore (Milan) 1967:109, from a document in the Vatican Library. the suavely beautiful, youthful and slightly androgynous Giovannino was so at variance with artistic conventions in portraying the Baptist - neither the older ascetic prophet nor the Florentine baby Giovannino, but a type of Leonardo's invention, of a disconcerting, somewhat ambiguous sensuality, familiar in Leonardo's half- length and upward-pointing Saint John the Baptist, also in the Louvre.See Marilyn Aronberg Lavin, "Giovannino Battista: A Study in Renaissance Religious Symbolism" The Art Bulletin 37.2. (June 1955:85-101).
All the material is slow and mostly pared down, made to maximize space for his still generous supply of hooks and outlandish rhymes." Nick Catucci of Entertainment Weekly gave the album a B, saying "Black Panties won't humanize the man for anyone who prefers caricature. But his 12th album, a return to wafting sex jams after two soulful dance discs, also falls short of the Kelly we love: the tireless entertainer- as-lover and suavely esoteric devotee of churchy theatrics, inspirational- poster slogans, Chicago stepping music, and extreme wordplay." Greg Kot of the Chicago Tribune gave the album two out of four stars, saying "After two albums of elegant, old-school stepping music, R. Kelly is back doing the raunch.
A letter by one of Galeazzo's tutors to his father stated that amongst the group of "very notable singers" at a banquet in the boy's honour was "an English damsel who sang so sweetly and suavely that it seemed not a human voice, but divine." Lewis Lockwood notes (as does Blackburn) a payment record at the court of Borso d'Este, Duke of Ferrara in 1465 for "Anna, cantarina Anglica" ("Anna, English singer"). On this basis, James Haar and John Nádas have proposed that Anna Inglese may have been a relative (wife or sister) of another English musician at the Ferrara court, Robertus de Anglia (Robert of England), also known as Roberto Inglese. Robertus was at the Ferrara court from 1454 until 1467 and then went to Bologna as magister cantus at the San Petronio Basilica.
Anthony Boucher of the New York Times said that "the first 1952 book to reach this reviewer's desk is one which wouldn't disgrace any Best-of-the-Year list" and went on to say that it concerned: > ...an important murder trial, with real understanding of courtroom > psychology and technique. But the camera eye of the author constantly > flashes from this... to the efforts of two likable and believable amateurs > detectives who are striving to assemble last-minute evidence for the > defense; and their adventures, involving maquisards and collaborators from > the past, and gold-smugglers and secret agents of the present, make a > thriller as wildly exciting as the courtroom scenes are suavely persuasive. > It's hard to recall any technical tour de force of fusion quite so admirably > integrated as this. Mr. Gilbert is one of the most accomplished leaders of > the new British school of murder writing.
Before entering the auditorium, customers were entertained by the rare gold and ivory Knabe Ampico grand player piano in the lounge area just above the foyer. Patrons were escorted to their places in the nearly 4,000 seat auditorium by what the program booklet praised as an "alert, tactful, well trained" corps of ushers who provided "courteous, unostentatious service." The program promised "no fuss, no senseless genuflections, but ... welcome, quiet, considerate and alert attention on the part of each of these ushers — in other words, a gracious host making you feel that his home is yours, suavely, expeditiously, sincerely and without affectation." Interior and balcony of Paramount Theatre The Paramount Theatre is the first venue in the United States to have a convertible floor system, which converts the theater to a ballroom. Therefore, the maximum concert capacity can hold up to 3,000 fans with the main floor serving as an unreserved standing room area while keeping the seats in the balcony regardless of either a 2,807-seated theater or a general admission event by separated levels.

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