Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

18 Sentences With "taken liberties with"

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

Companies have often taken liberties with time when notifying customers of a hack.
The author tells us, in his acknowledgments, that he's taken liberties with some facts, but this is the artist's prerogative.
Cooks have long taken liberties with the original Eton Mess, adding other kinds of summer berries or stone fruit as they come into season.
Amateur chefs and restaurateurs have taken liberties with the Waldorf Salad for the past century-plus, adding unexpected ingredients like marshmallows, fried chicken, and blue cheese.
While Mei isn't normally much of a rebel in her game, fans have taken liberties with her design to make her an emblem of the protests in Hong Kong.
The show's writers have taken liberties with Martin's original stories, changing characters and tweaking plot points along the way, but season six — currently airing on the cable network — marks the first time Game of Thrones has gone beyond Martin's written work entirely.
Queen Sugar is based on the novel of the same name by Natalie Baszile, and DuVernay and her writing team have taken liberties with the source material to create a rich black family drama about three siblings— self-assured Charley (Dawn-Lyen Gardner), brooding Nova (Rutina Wesley), and troubled Ralph Angel Bordelon (Kofi Siriboe)—who inherit an 800-acre sugarcane farm in the wake of their father's death from a stroke.
He said, "I had previously taken liberties with Shakespeare. Naturally, when you adapt a story, your vision also comes in it. But I have remained honest to its essence". He included Keemat Lal (who plays a police officer in all Bond's stories), although the character is not in the original story.
Kinlochmore = Fort William Loch Fionn = Loch Nan Uamh Kilcorrie and Melvick = a mixture of Arisaig and Mallaig. Fionnard = Ardnish where there is a deserted village, but not in the right place. The railway and the viaduct are real, but Loch-head, Kindrachill and Camas Ban are all imaginary, and I've taken liberties with the landscape – mountains, white sand mountain roads etc.
At the eastern edge it joins the Mare Frigoris. Many selenographers have taken liberties with the dimensions of Sinus Roris. Lunar maps often indicate a much larger region for this bay than the official dimensions. These can range out as far as the craters Gerard and Repsold to the west, Harpalus to the east, and as far south as 44° N latitude, approaching Mons Rümker.
In late April, Freed and Minnelli and their respective entourages arrived in Paris. The weather had become unseasonably hot, and working in hotel rooms without air-conditioning was uncomfortable. Minnelli began scouting locations while Freed and Lerner discussed the still incomplete script. Lerner had taken liberties with Colette's novella; the character of Honoré, nonexistent in the original book and very minor in the Loos play, was now a major figure.
The general political events depicted in the novel are relatively accurate; the novel tells of the period just after King Richard's imprisonment in Austria following the Crusade and of his return to England after a ransom is paid. Yet the story is also heavily fictionalised. Scott himself acknowledged that he had taken liberties with history in his "Dedicatory Epistle" to Ivanhoe. Modern readers are cautioned to understand that Scott's aim was to create a compelling novel set in a historical period, not to provide a book of history.
The story of the witchcraft accusations, trials and executions has captured the imagination of writers and artists in the centuries since the event took place. Their earliest impactful use as the basis for an item of popular fiction is the 1828 novel Rachel Dyer by John Neal. Many interpretations have taken liberties with the facts of the historical episode in the name of literary and/or artistic license. As the trials took place at the intersection between a gradually disappearing medieval past and an emerging enlightenment, and dealt with torture and confession, some interpretations draw attention to the boundaries between the medieval and the post-medieval as cultural constructions.
Not only are there chronological errors, especially when narrating the last phase of the Tamil kingdom, but there seems to be some confusion regarding historical personages being referred to therein. At times the author has even taken liberties with history, and has created his own stories in order to establish certain traditional beliefs. The Yalpana Vypava Malai which lay forgotten during the early British occupation was discovered and translated into English by C. Brito and first published in English in 1879. This was followed by some reprints in Tamil, the best known was a reprint in Tamil edited by Mudaliyar Kula Sabanathan which appeared in 1953.
Bubares was sent to Macedonia in order to settle a diplomatic conflict with King Alexander I, as Alexander was responsible as crown prince for the murder of several members of a Persian delegation, a few years earlier. The Persians had taken liberties with the Macedonian women of the Palace, and therefore had all been killed with their retinues by Alexander and his men. General Bubares was sent with some troops to investigate the matter. King Alexander diffused the situation by giving a great sum of money and marrying his sister Gygaia to Bubares: The couple had a son named after their maternal grandfather, Amyntas.
Most omit the figure of Utterson, telling the story from Jekyll's and Hyde's viewpoint and often having them played by the same actor, thus eliminating entirely the mystery aspect of the true identity of Hyde, which was the original's twist ending and not the basic premise it is today. Many adaptations also introduce a romantic element which does not exist in the original story. While Hyde is portrayed in the novella as an evil-looking man of diminutive height, many adaptations have taken liberties with the character's physical appearance, sometimes depicting him with bestial or monstrous features. There are over 123 film versions, not including stage and radio, as well as a number of parodies and imitations.
The Musical World (24 February 1855) reported that Madame Lauters had been coached by Gilbert Duprez: Pauline Lauters > Never could singer be under more unfit master for an opera like Der > Freischütz. M. Duprez seems to have considered this masterpiece from the > Castil-Blaze point of view; and as the 'maestro' had taken liberties with > this great composer's text, the 'professore' thought he might, with equal > good grace, embellish and vary the melodies. He set himself to work, and > spared not roulades, shakes, and ricercate, whereof Weber had no idea, and > which, had he heard them, would have driven him mad. Madame Lauters thought > she could not go wrong in following the advice of so great a master of the > art vocal as M. Duprez, and accordingly she repeated, note for note, what he > had taught her.
Furthermore, he would only hear evidence of paupers not getting what they should; evidence of pigs being fed potatoes billed as paupers' rations was irrelevant. Parker repeatedly criticised Westlake for not recording his extras in the form (and on the forms) prescribed by the commission; he also put the responsibility for formulation and prosecution of charges entirely on Westlake; Westlake's supporters therefore engaged a barrister The barrister had been senior to (and more successful than) Parker at the Bar and relations between the two became progressively more strained. After yet another criticism of Westlake's laxity in record-keeping, his barrister retorted that if Westlake had been at fault, then there were others whose duty it was to see that the books of the union were in order; the union's auditors, its guardians, and its supervising assistant commissioner, and it might be that in due course that charges would be brought against them. The prosecution alleged that MacDougal was intimidating witnesses under the nose of Parker; Parker denied this, but it was acknowledged on all sides that workhouse inmates who had testified that MacDougal had 'taken liberties' with them had subsequently been verbally abused and physically assaulted by Mrs MacDougal.

No results under this filter, show 18 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.