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"suffuse" Definitions
  1. suffuse somebody/something (with something) (especially of a colour, light or feeling) to spread all over or through somebody/something

70 Sentences With "suffuse"

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

Climate crisis talk seems to suffuse just about every class.
Such unearthly elements suffuse "Sagittarius Ponderosa," which is also a domestic drama.
It should suffuse the built environment, as it did in his beloved Venice.
If you could figure out how to get in, the music would suffuse you.
PARELES Impermanence and transparency suffuse "Speaking of the End" by the English songwriter Lapsley.
Nothing happens when you breathe it in, swallow it, or let it suffuse your skin.
It has a core of tragedy that seems to suffuse every character (except maybe Seb).
Suffuse your own life with glamour and drama by using this micro playlist as background accompaniment.
A massive part of allowing adult enjoyment to suffuse into your life is accepting the importance of responsibility.
But character and hard-won experience seemed to suffuse her songs, and it connected with audiences and critics.
He often stands with his left shoulder a little slouched and lets a baritone reasonableness suffuse the room.
He was able to somehow suffuse them with the same kind of intimacy as if they were portraits.
And it's now clearer than ever that this core material dimension must suffuse any serious invocation of the word.
This is known and widely reported, and yet the knowledge that it's true rarely seems to suffuse the reporting.
This album is a symbolic re-exchange of rings, a symphonic take on #blacklove in a moment suffuse with it.
As they pour water into the raging inferno, the camera pulls back and the firefighters suffuse in a yellow sickly glow.
Not content to accept the limits of the medium, Rejlander continually pushed its technical boundaries to suffuse photography with an undeniable artistry.
Giant concrete buildings curve and settle into the canyon, while around 80 year-round citizens suffuse it with plant life and personality.
The Hill, however, was a happy home for this balderdash, thanks to the famously lax editorial standards that suffuse the paper's operations.
A palpable sense of decency, self-deprecating humor and personal honor suffuse his roles in films from Forrest Gump to Saving Private Ryan.
Album Review The passage of time, tenacious love, a life on the road and inevitable mortality suffuse "She Remembers Everything," Rosanne Cash's new album.
The front windows are set back from the street far enough for a cinematic glow to suffuse the elevated train as it sweeps by.
Even the most mundane moments in Control are suffuse with an other-worldly energy, a sense that anything could happen around the next bend.
As you take in what is around you — feeling the warmth of the flames — see if a sense of appreciation can suffuse the moment.
The colored light did not obscure the painter's application of layers of various media—egg white, glue-size, oil—that suffuse the clouded, glowing expanse of canvas.
Amid the nightmares that suffuse the narrative, VanderMeer has dreamed up some fantastical creatures: a messianic blue fox, a dangerously violent duck and an ancient fish with a secret.
The paintings' jangly details and conceptual tensions — between utopia and dystopia, nature and culture, photography and painting, reality and fantasy — suffuse them with ambiguity, a sense that something's not quite right in paradise.
Yet contemporary Europe is incomprehensible without it, so thoroughly does the E.U.'s existence suffuse the everyday lives of its 508 million citizens, the governance of the 28 member states and a $15 trillion economy.
From this day forth, you'll always be thought of as a pair of pranksters, an easily-invocated reference point for any musician or musicians who attempt to suffuse their serious art with a sense of humor.
We see animations of a happily pregnant mother or innocent child drinking milk aglow in neon orange to signify its hidden dangers and then see that neon color suffuse their unaware bodies—if they only knew!
Gene Okerlund, who as a ringside interviewer and commentator served for decades as a straight man to the outsize personalities who suffuse the world of professional wrestling, died on Wednesday at a hospital in Sarasota, Fla.
Ms. Maiolino was born in 1942 in Calabria, the less developed south of Italy, and early memories of wartime privation, as well as the burdens of immigration and leaving one's native tongue, suffuse her later art.
Her new collection takes up the life of an 83-year-old great-aunt in the south of France, whom she visited in her country home, staying in the attic, whose long-held memories suffuse the whole.
Others noted that Slat's approach, targeting the top 3 meters of the gyre, would do little to address the problem of micro­plastic, the tiny fragments that now suffuse the seas and get eaten by fish—and then by us.
And throughout, all kinds of brushes and tools enable an entire palette's worth of colors to flow, stutter, twist, suffuse and fold, while freehand additions à la de Kooning — and Mr. Green's earlier work, as well — occasionally flit about.
O.J. Simpson helped examine the way racial politics suffuse the justice system; similarly, The Menendez Murders works, not because it's great television, but because it presents the case as a legal, cultural, and media phenomenon that puts sexual abuse on trial.
One of the most memorable previous examples of climate-change art was Olafur Eliasson's "Weather Project", in which the Icelandic artist rigged up a huge circular mirror and orange lights to suffuse Tate Modern's Turbine Hall in a golden glow.
But anthropologist Jerome Barkow has pointed out that evolution did not prepare us to distinguish among those members of our community who have a genuine effect on us, and those who exist in the images, movies and songs that suffuse our daily lives.
Others are more sanguine: the history of science is, after all, littered with much-loved but wrong theories, from the idea that Earth is the centre of creation to the "luminiferous ether" that was thought, in the 19th century, to suffuse the universe.
But anthropologist Jerome Barkow has pointed out that evolution did not prepare us to distinguish among those members of our community who have a genuine effect on us, and those who exist in the images, movies and songs that suffuse our daily lives.
The directive, issued by the Communist Party organization of the Ministry of Education, calls for "patriotic education" to suffuse each stage and aspect of schooling, through textbooks, student assessments, museum visits and the Internet, which is the chief source of information for many young Chinese.
This terminological ping-pong reaches its most excitable state in one of the collection's key longer poems, "light" (1984), in which the words "light" and "dark" — two of the most basic literary symbols — permute a series of verbs and prepositions that suffuse the movements with causality.
Thanks to the democratization of distribution platforms, it's easy enough for a producer in the suburbs of Lisbon to take inspiration from American rap music, suffuse it with a local approach to polyrhythms and upload it back to Soundclound to be played in clubs worldwide—further localized and iterated into new forms entirely.
Her 2011 best seller, "How to Be a Woman," offered a gateway into the kind of fizzy feminist rhetoric that has gone on to suffuse celebrity culture; its fictional counterpart, 2014's "How to Build a Girl," pulled from Moran's bleak upbringing to extol the life-changing alchemy of sex, rock music and hair dye.
"Public health experts and pediatricians, when a child comes in for a visit, may warn against the risks of excessive weight, but for every positive message like that, 10 negative messages undermine the benefits -- negative messages in terms of food advertisements, which suffuse media today, broadcast media, the internet and athletic sponsorships, as this study shows," said Ludwig, who was not involved in the study.
In a recent interview, Mr. Booker described himself as intimately involved with policing, though he framed that involvement in the sort of communal, we're-all-in-this-together terms that suffuse his campaign arguments for himself — his omnipresence at community meetings, his contact with block leaders into the wee hours of the morning, the civilian caravans he dispatched into dangerous precincts of the city.
In advance of the exhibition, this Sunday, Vroman's Bookstore in Pasadena will be hosting a panel discussion featuring the exhibition's curators and catalogue contributors, Erin M. Curtis and Jessica Hough, alongside muralists Barbara Carrasco, who got her start painting banners for the United Farm Workers in the mid-'70s and continues to suffuse her art with activism, and David Botello, founder of the influential mural collective East Los Streetscapers.
Antennae ciliated in both sexes. Thorax brown, with fuscous irrorations. Forewing pale, and variegated with suffuse and fuscous. There are indistinct double waved subbasal and antemedial lines.
The Great Lover also maintains a very vivid imagery and sensory elements related to The Orchard; as Vanessa Curtis of The Scotsman says, "the fragrance of honey, apples and flowers suffuse the novel".
Such networks are highly suggestive of the microvascular capillary systems that suffuse living tissues with blood. Hence, Matrigel allows them to observe the process by which endothelial cells construct such networks that are of great research interest.
A less common variation, called the bubble-reservoir glass, contains a bubble-shaped reservoir connected to the glass by a narrow neck or portal, which allows the absinthe and water to slowly suffuse into each other, accentuating the appearance of the louche.
Hetrick, Adam. "The River, Starring Tony Winner Hugh Jackman, Will Open at Broadway's Circle in the Square This Fall" playbill.com, 9 May 2014 Reception was positive, with London critics finding the work "lyrical"; "beautifully written" and "suffuse[d] with wonder and beauty".
Underside: Forewing: White, costa black and the apex suffuse with yellow. Hindwing: Rich chrome yellow up to a postdiscal band. Beyond this the ground color is white with a series of large terminal vermillion-red spots. These spots are rectangular or truncated cone shaped.
In 1939, while Boston was still at university, Lucy Boston bought The Manor, which was to so suffuse the Green Knowe books. Mother and son worked together to refurbish the house, which dates to the time of the Norman Conquest. Boston's mother based the fictional character Tolly (short for Toseland) on her son Peter. Visitors to the Manor can still see many of the rooms and items that inspired Peter Boston's illustrations.
Higashino's works often include scientific elements, such as nuclear power generation and brain transplantation. Sports references, such as archery and kendo, ski jumping, and snowboarding, also occur often. As can be expected, Japanese elements suffuse his novels; for example, in Suspect X a major character works at a bento lunch shop, while a murder is committed with the electrical cord from a kotatsu. Suspect X inverts the classical whodunit structure, as the reader learns early on who the murderer is.
Hung Tung's paintings suffuse strange beings, coloured faces, flowers, birds, trees, boats and air planes with hieroglyphic symbols. These elements give a very childlike spirit and imagination to Hung Tung's works. Also taking inspiration from Taiwanese opera, puppet shows, temple fairs, temple sculptures and ritualized performance troupes; the imagery he adopts infuses his works with elements from Taiwanese folklore, Daoism and mysticism. His paintings adopt a lively palette and the compositional elements interact on the same plane, since Hung Tung adopts a one plane perspective.
The Aviva Stadium in Dublin, Ireland, on the site of the old Lansdowne Road site, was designed by Populous in collaboration with Scott Tallon Walker Architects. The sustainably-built stadium features a host of green building features that enable it to integrate into its site while making the most of available resources. Designed as a sweeping crystalline bowl, the stadium harvests rainwater to irrigate the field, reuses waste heat for hot water, and is topped with a transparent roof that allows daylight to suffuse the interior spaces.
For his work on election broadcasts, Cartwright was appointed an MBE. Australian Broadcasting Corporation presenter Ramona Koval described Cartwright's novels as being "based in contemporary settings but he’s able to suffuse them with the big questions that haunt us". Three of Cartwright's early novels feature a character named Timothy Curtiz, named partly for Kurtz from Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, and partly for Cartwright's own brother. In Interior, Curtiz is in Africa investigating the disappearance of his father in 1959 while on a trip for National Geographic.
The Arts and Crafts traditions of honesty to materials and construction, and respect for the dignity of the craftsperson working with his or her hands suffuse the work of Luke Hughes & Company, but in a modernized and technologized version. At scale, the precision achievable by a craftsperson at a ‘one-off’ level needs the most sophisticated digitally driven machinery. Hughes himself has lectured and written widely on this subject and the relevance of craft to modern industrial production; he calls the British furniture industry ‘neither an industry nor a craft but a machine-assisted craft’.
The adventures, set in Paris in the years before and after World War I, revolve around the protagonist Adèle Blanc-Sec. A cynical heroine, she is initially a novelist of popular fiction, who turns to investigative journalism as her research and subsequent adventures reveal further details of the mystical world of crime. Themes of the occult, corruption, official incompetence, and the dangers of patriotism suffuse the series. One interesting feature is the hiatus which separates Adèle's first exploits, taking place in 1910s Paris, from later ones, instead set in the interwar milieu.
It appeared to the court that the more profound the interest being protected, and the graver the violation, the more stringent should be the scrutiny. The two- stage process was not to be applied mechanically and in a sequentially divided way. The values derived from the concept of an open and democratic society, based on freedom and equality, were to suffuse whole process, such values being normative in the employment of such a process. The court would frequently be required to make difficult value judgments where logic and precedent were of limited assistance.
Vogel first began working with electronic compositions in the late 1980s with the Cabbage Head Collective, where he worked with Si Begg, among others. He attended the University of Sussex under the tutorship of Martin Butler (composer) and Jonathan Harvey (composer), graduating with a degree in 20th century music. He began to suffuse techno compositions with influences from musique concrète and other avant-garde styles. In the early 1990s, Vogel issued two EPs on Dave Clarke's Magnetic North Records label, the first of which was the underground success, Infra.
Zeus and Hera situate themselves likewise, and all the other gods are arranged in order. The cupbearer of Jove (Zeus's other Roman name) serves him with nectar, the "wine of the gods"; Apuleius refers to the cupbearer only as ille rusticus puer, "that country boy," and not as Ganymede. Liber, the Roman god of wine, serves the rest of the company. Vulcan, the god of fire, cooks the food; the Horae ("Seasons" or "Hours") adorn, or more literally "empurple," everything with roses and other flowers; the Graces suffuse the setting with the scent of balsam, and the Muses with melodic singing.
Starting in 1934, the SS hosted "solstice ceremonies" (Sonnenwendfeiern) to increase team spirit within their ranks. In a 1936 memorandum, Himmler set forth a list of approved holidays based on pagan and political precedents meant to wean SS members from their reliance on Christian festivities. In an attempt to replace Christianity and suffuse the SS with a new doctrine, SS-men were able to choose special Lebenslauffeste, substituting common Christian ceremonies such as baptisms, weddings and burials. Since the ceremonies were held in small private circles, it is unknown how many SS-members opted for these kind of celebrations.
The work was well received, with the New York Times Book Review stating that Hillerman "is an expert at knowing what to leave out, and at making what he leaves in cut to the bone without seeming overwrought", and further that the prose is "laced with humor and worldly wisdom"; stating that "Seldom Disappointed is a splendid and disarming remembrance of things past". It was also well reviewed by David Langness, for Paste magazine, who called the book "touching", "modest" and "powerful"; stating that "Seldom Disappointed unfolds with the quiet country cadences of the storytellers that consistently suffuse Hillerman's prose" and praising its "hilarious, perverse black humor".
The novel spans 80 years of Minnie's life, cutting from present to past to show the individuality of a woman and a mother who is determined to save the family's farm. The Philadelphia Inquirer appreciated "Nolan's soaring language and lilting alliterative style [which] suffuse [...] much of the book with a sense of the miraculous" and the The New York Times Book Review found it "richly – even baroquely – told [...] Nolan writes with verve."Random House Dam-Burst of Dreams (published 1981), provided Nolan critical acclaim that compared him to the works of W. B. Yeats and James Joyce. The collection was published four years after Nolan was administered Lioresal but some of the poems were written when Nolan was just 12 years old.
" Will Hermes of Rolling Stone stated that the album "hits a sweet spot between the futuristic soul of their debut and the synth pop of 2009's Machine Dreams." Joe Lynch of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "Straddling the line between slinky funk and outsider electronica, [Ritual Union] is full of pheromone-drenched surprises: It's ambient R&B; for restless nights." Andy Kellman of AllMusic opined that while Ritual Union "represents a fusion and refinement of the group's first two albums", the group "puts some twists on its sound, and Yukimi Nagano's lyrical thorns, typically concealed by her subtle approach [...] are sharper than ever." Maddy Costa of The Guardian commented that Nagano's "impassioned vocals suffuse each song with emotion", adding that "as the album withdraws from the dancefloor to the lonelier darkness of 'Summertearz' and 'Seconds', Nagano lures you to follow.
In 11th-century Japan, an institutional system was developed called Shugendō, in which various parts of Japan's geography came to be regarded as symbols of the Buddhist teaching, or to stand for certain bodhisattvas or important historical figures in Japanese Buddhism. Numerous pilgrimage routes were developed to honor these sites, as narratives about them were written down and monasteries and shrines were established on them. In Tibetan Buddhism, many pilgrimage guides have been written with practical instructions for the pilgrim, but also to describe the mystical vision which accompanies the pilgrimage. Buddhists might go on pilgrimage for several reasons: to gain merit, to remind themselves of the Buddha's life, to suffuse themselves with the spiritual power of the pilgrimage places and its artifacts, as a promise made to a bodhisatta in exchange for favors, to gain protection from devas that protect the pilgrimage places, or to bring harmony to their family.
Charles Higham (pronounced HYE-um; 18 February 1931 - 21 April 2012)Elaine Woo "Charles Higham dies at 81; controversial celebrity biographer", Los Angeles Times, 4 May 2012Fox, Margalit "Charles Higham, Celebrity Biographer, Dies at 81", The New York Times, 3 May 2012; "A cloying vulgarity and coarseness suffuse this book", Carolyn See wrote in the Los Angeles Times in 1986, reviewing his Lucy: The Life of Lucille Ball. "But the author is either so cunning – or so closely allied in emotional terms with the subject of this biography – that the reader can’t tell if the vulgarity comes from Charles Higham or from Lucille Ball herself." was an English author, editor and poet. After moving to Australia in 1954, Higham began a career in journalism, before moving to the United States in 1969. In the United States, he became known as a celebrity biographer, mainly of film stars, such as Katharine Hepburn and Errol Flynn.
Jones makes these comments about Chasles, Pappus and Euclid:Alexander Jones (1986) Book 7 of the Collection, part 1: introduction, text, translation , part 2: commentary, index, figures , Springer-Verlag :Chasles's contribution to our comprehension of the Porisms tends to be obscured by the inherent unreasonableness of his claim to have restored substantially the contents of Euclid's book on the basis of the meagre data of Pappus and Proclus...one still turns to Chasles for the first appreciation of the interest in the Porisms from the point of view of modern geometry. Above all, he was the first to notice the recurrence of cross-ratios and harmonic ratios in the lemmas, and because these concepts suffuse most of his restoration, it is probable that many of his inventions coincide with some of Euclid's, even if we cannot now tell which they are. Chasles's name is one of the 72 names inscribed on the Eiffel Tower.

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