Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

60 Sentences With "thrums"

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

She grips the violin tight, for it thrums with life.
Try Capibara's "15," where bass thrums give way to treated chanting.
But the Highway of Tears thrums with a sense of powerlessness.
In its camera eye, the neighborhood radiates light and thrums with energy.
The novel thrums with genius, but I was more frequently impressed than entertained.
This tense wire of a novel thrums with suspense, but also unexpectedly poignant moments.
It's been years since then, but motherhood still thrums within me like a pulse.
The novel thrums with oozing tear ducts treated by pilgrimage and broken legs resulting in death.
But perhaps the most impactful update is the refreshed map, which now thrums with life and activity.
Right out of the gate, the book thrums with authority as Baird builds her portrayal of Victoria.
Live music thrums even in the off-season, as at Jetty Bar & Grill, which has bands and DJs.
That Chekhovian sense of time fading even as we inhabit it thrums through both the talk and the silences.
Just below Pilot's trendy new office space in SoHo thrums one of New York City's densest thoroughfares of fiber optic cable.
As percussion thrums through the scene, Madoff talks this anonymous party guest up to a $400 million investment, cool as a cucumber.
Neni, balancing motherhood and her dreams of becoming a pharmacist, is particularly appealing; she thrums on the page, full of complexity and yearning.
While Gaitskill is best known for her fiction, this collection demonstrates her power as an essayist, and thrums with the same sexual energy.
"Endless" functions a little more clearly as a pop song, with a vocal ringing clearly over new agey synth bubbles and orchestral bass thrums.
The sound of sand grains shuffling down hot slopes that can recall the angry buzz of bees or the deep, groaning thrums of a didgeridoo group.
This story about a woman trapped both with her own head and possibly her stalker by an uncaring, profit-hungry medical system thrums with nervous energy.
The best part of Hagan's book about Jann Wenner and the rise and fall of Rolling Stone thrums with the urgency of that pivotal year, too.
Yet there are a few possible explanations for why the has managed to hover quietly near its record high as the Washington drama thrums ever more loudly.
Then the lights (by Scot Gianelli) change, the air thrums with sounds of doom (by Ben Vigus) and, for a moment, we could be watching a horror movie.
Eva Tolkin has the sort of polyethylene-clear voice that most pop singers would kill for, something that conveys intimacy even when she's backed by hyper-synthetic thrums.
Stephen Gill's new book of photographs, The Pillar, thrums with the spirit of birds, and demonstrates that without them, there is no land; without the birds, there are no pictures.
At heart, his often overstuffed plots, with their recurrent focus on questions of fate, responsibility and the impact of trauma, mark them closer to the beats and thrums of melodrama.
Food and Drink • In Sydney, Sri Lankan Cuisine Gets a Thrilling Update: Lankan Filling Station serves exciting sambols alongside cocktails and natural wine in a crowded room that thrums with energy.
The machismo landscape thrums to mariachi music that provides its own counterpart to the famously "merry war" of wordplay and wit between Benedick (Matthew Needham) and Beatrice (Beatriz Romilly), the play's reluctant lovebirds.
Now, as the capital thrums with chaos, it has unleashed a cloud of confusion that makes it hard for experts to discern the facts and easy for non-experts to see whatever they want.
The sounds are collaged over one another in ways that run contrary to their natural state—distant birdsongs are spliced together with crackling fires, and droning cicadas with the sideways thrums of elastic stringed instruments.
Among the movie's strengths are its glaring yet muted color palette, which thrums with pale shades of yellow and blue—a callback to the low-fi Technicolor of vintage horror flicks like Black Narcissus (1947).
Lankan Filling Station takes that representation and amplifies it, putting it into a trendy urban context with all the necessary accouterments: cocktails, natural wine and a narrow, moodily lit, crowded room that thrums with energy.
The music on the dance floor upstairs still thrums through your speakers, but the only people bobbing their heads along are lifeless strings of code and texture going through the same motions whether you're there to see them or not.
A number of these poems involve conflict: conflict of an overtly violent nature, meaning altercations, but also conflict that thrums with a less visible mode of violence as Jackson navigates his way forward as a black man in the landscape of these divided United States.
And the sheer largesse of the songs—their breadth, their depth, and their dimensional, layered quality—mean that from the very earliest guitar thrums of first track, "Zebra," Teen Dream is pervaded by a sense of inevitability, as if its atmosphere was a part of nature.
And when the organ thrums and the drums thump and the guitars wail and the chorus lifts its voices as high as the planes overhead, "The Gospel at Colonus" becomes something elemental, a work of glory and of grace that absorbs us all in its soul-wrenching lesson.
But as I argued earlier this week, its vibrancy, its ferocity, its dominance thrums in Trump's tweets, in the reality show he is running from the Oval Office, in the daily dramas in which he pits himself against everyone from Hillary Clinton to Jay-Z to the FBI.
But on weekends in normal times, the quaint downtown thrums with tourists taking in the two rivers that converge here, the Neuse and the Trent, and the historic architecture, including Tryon Palace, the city's signature building, a recreation of the stately Georgian administrative headquarters from the days of British rule.
This was infinity's house, house of perpetual motion— froth falling forever, forever self- renewing, is what we thought we were, I was, underneath it all: a metaphor whose issuing-forth would never end, who would not stand like this in seven years' time grown softer and scareder even than the whin, let alone the water it thrums beneath.
Then he sent the files to a bunch of non-African beatmaker-DJ-whatchamacallems unknown to me, although on handle alone I'm loving DJ Reaganomics, the only American identified as such, and Populous, whose eventful and not what I'd call danceable opener orchestrates crowd talk, sanza or balafon, hand drumming, and bass thrums of undetermined origin into a seductive environmental dub that sets a mood that welcomes all beats, including more conventional ones.
A gray-haired suburban thug, he descends into the basement, and the play instantly thrums with tension, becoming the kind of show where it seemed perfectly natural that the young woman next to me started whispering urgent instructions to the characters, as if she were watching them on T.V. Mr. Procaccino's Gerry is a magnificent villain — belligerent, dangerous and so habitually, casually vicious that he chews on a nail as he gives Irene a devastating, off-the-cuff list of reasons he married her.
Outskirts of Castlegar include Robson, Robson West, Brilliant, Raspberry, Pass Creek, Ootischenia, Tarrys, Thrums, and Genelle.
Thrums is a settlement in British Columbia. It is located on the Kootenay River between Castlegar BC and Nelson BC.
Bank House, Penicuik. The property was occupied by Crockett from 1893 to 1906. His contemporary J. M. Barrie had already created a demand for stories in Lowland Scots, with his sketches of Thrums in the late 1880s.
The author William Winthrop Kent believed that the earliest forebears of hooked rugs were the floor mats made in Yorkshire, England, during the early part of the 19th century. Workers in weaving mills were allowed to collect thrums, pieces of yarn that ran 9 inches (23 cm) long. These by-products were useless to the mill, and the weavers took them home and pulled the thrums through a backing. The origins of the word thrum are ancient, as Mr. Kent pointed out a reference in Shakespeare's Merry Wives of Windsor.
He graduated and obtained an M.A. on 21 April 1882. Following a job advertisement found by his sister in The Scotsman, he worked for a year and a half as a staff journalist on the Nottingham Journal. Back in Kirriemuir, he submitted a piece to the St. James's Gazette, a London newspaper, using his mother's stories about the town where she grew up (renamed "Thrums"). The editor "liked that Scotch thing" so well that Barrie ended up writing a series of these stories. They served as the basis for his first novels: Auld Licht Idylls (1888), A Window in Thrums (1890), and The Little Minister (1891).
Lycoris radiata herb (), within the family Amaryllidaceae (), is about 30–70 cm tall, bearing a terminal of four to seven flowers. The petals are extremely wrinkled and rolled backwards. The thrums and styles are long and slender. The pollination period spans about 2 months from August to September annually.
The New York Times, p.A10. as well as Barrie’s Window in Thrums (1896). On his third trip to Great Britain (1897), Johnson took photographs for an illustrated edition of Charles Dicken's Illustrated History of England (1898). He traveled by train, stagecoach, river boat, canal barge, hired horse or even by foot.
In the United States, yarn was not a fiber of choice if one did not have access to thrums. Yarn was too precious, and had to be saved for knitting and weaving. Instead the tradition of using scraps of fabric evolved. Yarns, fabrics, and other materials have always been used for hooked rugs in the Canadian Maritimes.
The downtempo "As Hard as It Is" is a danceable soul song. AllMusic said that, accompanying Gift's soulful vocals, "it's a stunning performance that the rest of the band deftly back with moody synths, insistent beats, a bassline that thrums with its own pain, and the moodiest of brass solos." The cover of "Ever Fallen in Love?" is dancehall-tinged.
Edinburgh: Chambers; p. 716 Writers who have been linked to the Kailyard school included J. M. Barrie, Ian Maclaren, J. J. Bell, George MacDonald, Gabriel Setoun, Robina F. Hardy and, S. R. Crockett. Works such as Barrie's Auld Licht Idylls (1888), A Window in Thrums (1889), and The Little Minister (1891); and Crockett's The Stickit Minister (1893) considered examples of the so called 'school'.
After the battle, he swims to Coney Island to say goodbye to Bessie, who gives him a replacement set of glasses. He then swims off with Ladyfish. In the film's coda, back in 1964, George and the Admiral travel out to sea to contact Limpet about whether he is training the porpoises. The results of their conversation remain unknown, as the movie ends with a question mark, but many thrums are heard.
It is home to Selkirk College, a regional airport, a pulp mill, and several sawmills. The population of 7,259 people includes many Doukhobors, who were largely responsible for much of Castlegar's early development and growth. The area which was to become Castlegar was an important centre for the Sinixt (Lakes) Peoples. Outside the city limits are the small surrounding communities of Ootischenia, Brilliant, Robson, Robson West, Raspberry, Tarrys, Thrums, Glade, Shoreacres, Fairview, Genelle, Pass Creek and Krestova.
Turkeywork was produced by professional weavers in England from the 16th century. Short lengths or thrums of worsted wool were hand-knotted using the Turkish or Ghiordes knot (also called the symmetrical knot) on a linen or hemp-fibre warp. The colourful wool was shorn to produced a dense, even pile. Designs originally imitated so- called 'Turkey carpets', the general name in Early Modern England for imported carpets of Middle Eastern origin, which became popular for furniture covers (and less often, floor carpets) in the 16th century.
The Little Minister is a 1934 American drama film starring Katharine Hepburn and directed by Richard Wallace. The screenplay by Jane Murfin, Sarah Y. Mason, and Victor Heerman is based on the 1891 novel and subsequent 1897 play of the same title by J.M. Barrie. The picture was the fifth film adaptation of the works, following four silent film versions. The original novel was the third of the three "Thrums" novels (a town based on his home of Kirriemuir), which first brought Barrie to fame.
Enigma is the third album by British progressive metal group Aeon Zen. Reviews were generally positive, with AltSounds calling the musicianship "stunning". The album made some departures from the band's previous sounds, with Fireworks magazine noting that "Divinity and Eternal Snow have bursts of growly vocals on the heavier parts", but in spite of this, PROG Magazine still deemed there to be an "overwhelming sense of cohesion on this record". Metal Hammer seconded this opinion noting the way that "those theoretically disparate stylistic stands combine to create something that thrums with vitality and a laudable devotion to making music that impresses and resonates".
Illustration from A window in Thrums (by J M Barrie) The grave of William Hole RSA, Grange Cemetery, Edinburgh Hole went on to specialise in painting industrial and historical material. Although an Englishman by birth, he devoted much of his energies to Scottish national subjects and purposes. Principal paintings include End of the '45 (1879), A Straggler of the Chevalier's Army, Culloden, Prince Charlie's Parliament (1882), If thou hadst known (1885) and The Canterbury Pilgrims (1889). Other paintings included Medea in the Island of Circe, several based on Arthurian legend, and several depicting the life of fishermen on the west coast of Scotland, exhibited in 1883–84.
He served as Chancellor of the University of Edinburgh from 1930 to 1937. Barrie was the only person to receive the Freedom of Kirriemuir in a ceremony on 7 June 1930 in Kirriemuir Town Hall where he was presented with a silver casket containing the freedom scroll. The casket was made by silversmiths Brook & Son in Edinburgh in 1929 and is decorated with images of sites in Kirriemuir which held significant memories for Barrie: Kirriemuir Townhouse, Strathview, Window in Thrums, the statue of Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens and the Barrie Cricket Pavilion. The casket is on display in the Gateway to the Glens Museum, Kirriemuir.“JM Barrie silver casket on show in Kirriemuir”. Scotsman.
" Despite this, they went on to say: "The arrangements on [Sun on the Square] are somewhat denser and more intricate than on any of the band's previous outings, relying on rich string arrangements, horns, reverberating piano thrums and even a handful of clamorous drum parts." Elizabeth Klisiewicz of The Big Takeover also complimented the "meticulous" arrangements, and described the entire record as "beautiful". London in Stereo called Sun on the Square a "stunning collection of beautifully vulnerable folk songs, ... thanks to typically subtle picking and increasingly orchestrated and gently cinematic accompaniment. Peris’ effortless storytelling once again plays centre stage, weaving through bucolic scenes, touching on love and loss yet always maintaining a blissful hope that ensures the record has the moments of sun its title suggests.
"Elizabeth Taylor, "Half a Life," Chicago Tribune, October 19, 2010. Writer Dani Shapiro, in The New York Times Book Review,Dani Shapiro, "Atonement," The New York Times Book Review, September 10, 2010. found the memoir "elegant, painful, stunningly honest." She continued, "At the center of this memoir thrums a question fundamental to what it means to be human: What do we do with what we’ve been given?" A critical favorite in the UK, Half a Life was called "one of the best books I have ever read" by Ali Catterall on The BBC, as well as "precise, elegantly written, fresh, wise, and very sad ... indicative not only of a very talented writer, but of a proper human being” by Nick Hornby Half a Life was widely excerpted in venues such as GQ, This American Life, United Kingdom papers The Times and Daily Mail.
Set in rural 1840s Scotland, the film explores on labor and class issues while telling the story of Gavin Dishart, a staid cleric who is newly assigned to Thrums' Auld Licht church, and Babbie, a member of the nobility who disguises herself as a gypsy girl in order to interact freely with the local villagers and protect them from her betrothed, Lord Rintoul, who wants to keep them under his control. The townsfolk christen Dishart “The Little Minister” on his arrival because of his youth (this is his first parish) and his short stature. Initially the conservative Dishart is appalled by the feisty girl, but he soon comes to appreciate her inner goodness. Their romantic liaison scandalizes the townspeople, and the minister's position is jeopardized until Dishart's heroism stuns and transforms the hearts of the local villagers.

No results under this filter, show 60 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.