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10 Sentences With "sunk into obscurity"

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

Her indignant comments about the event might have sunk into obscurity, along with my speech, had they not been republished by The Guardian.
It hooked me on Sunday here at the Sosnoff Theater at the 2018 Bard SummerScape festival, which is offering a rare production of an opera that has sunk into obscurity.
While the Publius essays have become known as "The Federalist Papers," and are revered as trenchant commentaries on the nature of democracy and the American Constitution, Brutus's essays—sometimes called the Anti-Federalist Papers—have sunk into obscurity.
Accessed November 13, 2007. In spite of critical praise and popular success, however, the album has sunk into obscurity, becoming one of what journalist Richie Unterberger terms as "[Aretha Franklin's] most overlooked '60s albums".
However, his son Kōriki Takanaga (1604–1676) was dispossessed for bad administration and exiled to Sendai in Mutsu Province in 1668. The clan subsequently sunk into obscurity as a 3,000 koku hatamoto clan based initially in Dewa Province, and later in Shimōsa Province to the end of the Edo period.
The patient was an 11-year boy named Hanvil Anderson who had an inguinal hernia combined with an acutely inflamed appendix. This situation, where the appendix is included in the hernial sac, is known as an Amyand's hernia. Amyand described the operation himself in a paper for the Royal Society. Amyand's work soon sunk into obscurity, and various candidates were vying for the accolade of having performed the first appendicectomy in the 1880s, unaware that Amyand predated them by 150 years.
Thanks to ongoing lawsuits and ill-considered liaisons, "the whole family sunk into obscurity." His son Thomas by his first wife was executed for the murder of a servant boy. His son Richard by his second wife inherited an enormous patrimony from the Gargrave estates in Yorkshire, but dissipated it by drinking, gambling and exravagence and was eventually reduced to riding with the pack horses and died with his head on a pack saddle in an old inn. Among his daughters; Elizabeth, married William Fenwick of Stanton, Northumberland, Anne married Peter Venables, MP and secondly the equerry Sir Edward Bushell, and Mary was a Maid of Honour to Anne of Denmark.
William Wordsworth, in his 1797 poem The Reverie of Poor Susan, imagines a naturalistic Cheapside of past: Jane Austen, in her 1813 novel Pride and Prejudice, characterises Cheapside as a London neighbourhood frowned upon by the landed elite:Austen, Jane (1813). Pride and Prejudice, chapter 8 at Pemberley.com Charles Dickens, Jr. wrote in his 1879 book Dickens's Dictionary of London: > Cheapside remains now what it was five centuries ago, the greatest > thoroughfare in the City of London. Other localities have had their day, > have risen, become fashionable, and have sunk into obscurity and neglect, > but Cheapside has maintained its place, and may boast of being the busiest > thoroughfare in the world, with the sole exception perhaps of London-bridge.
"Old Halls, Manors and Families of Derbyshire, Joseph Tilley, GENUKI The story of the Gargraves became an oft-cited tale of the rise – and fall – of ambition. Of the Gargraves, it is said, the poet Byron was moved to write: "'Twere long to tell, and sad to trace, Each step from splendour to disgrace." The bulk of the Gargrave properties passed to Thomas Gargrave, eldest son of Sir Cotton Gargrave, who left them to his only daughter, who broke with the family's Royalist sympathies by marrying Dr. Richard Berry, physician to Oliver Cromwell. "Berry," according to one early history, "contrived to make himself master of their fortune, and the whole family sunk into obscurity.
It should be understood that during those years, Trotter read few new books, yet she had undoubtedly possessed her Bible, the works of Shakespeare and Milton, of Lord Bacon, Cudworth, and Bishop Cumberland. She had lived so long in the propulsive centre of British activity that, when sunk into obscurity, the gathering in of her reflections enriched her more than continued opportunities of observation would have done; and her fine faculties were kept bright and keenly edged by constant use. Extracts of her controversial writings show her style. In the preface to her "Letter to Dr. Holdsworth", Trotter said the following, with the person here alluded to probably being Lord King:— In a letter to her niece, dated “Long Horseley, September 29, 1748,” Trotter said:— It is interesting to know Trotter's opinion of the most illustrious of all her contemporaries, Bishop Butler.

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