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23 Sentences With "transfixes"

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

Art can be whatever transfixes, fascinates, and entertains an audience.
What transfixes us is primarily the audio, since there's little action.
But the one film that really transfixes Elisa is Hello, Frisco, Hello.
The quality of Hujar's hand-done prints, tending to sumptuous blacks and simmering grays, transfixes.
The three-stringed instrument whose lament transfixes Suteera has only one string that still works.
In the same story, an innocuous bottle of water in turn transfixes, confounds and finally horrifies.
The show exposes and satirizes its formula by proving that it's not the crime that transfixes viewers but the investigation.
In "Josephine the Singer," the eponymous singer transfixes her community when performing but decides, in the end, to remain silent.
But perhaps you can't fault the Met for looking to the same roster of artists that transfixes so many museum curators today.
The question of self-reflection — and what self-acceptance might really look like — is one that transfixes me in many facets of my life.
" Everything Suzanne does or has, however meagre, transfixes Evie: "There was a rack of clothes hanging and more spilling out of a garbage bag—torn denim.
But his shtick can't be laughed off; for the music to truly click requires caring about Drake's feelings, and if you do, the sensual, mysterious calm captured on More Life transfixes.
On Soccer TURIN, Italy — Gonzalo Higuaín had been a Juventus player for only a few hours when he was asked the question, the one that transfixes anyone and everyone connected to the club.
What ultimately transfixes is the subtle transformation of Elizabeth Windsor into Elizabeth Regina, a symbol of something that is more than mortal (or, as the Duke of Windsor puts it, "a strange hybrid creature, like a sphinx").
But it was a dramatic scene, typical of series creator Peter Morgan, who also memorably wrote about a magnificent stag that transfixes a later-in-life imagining of Elizabeth in his 2006 Oscar-winning film The Queen.
And if the maelstrom that surrounds Gaethje whenever he goes to work transfixes you, you could be forgiven if you didn't realize that backflips off the cage are kind of his thing, to the chagrin of the Colorado State Boxing Commission.
Morf is obsessed with Josephina, and swoops in the second it looks like she's available, but she's quickly distracted when her upstairs neighbor dies, and his apartment turns out to be crammed with spectacular art that transfixes everyone who looks at it.
Unsurprisingly, in each of these accounts, there's a deep attraction to music early in life — a moment when the power of a song, an artist or a scene transfixes each artist and they're convinced they must unlock the secret power of sound.
Penthesilea, however, in a characteristically Kleistian misunderstanding of Achilles' intentions, believes that she has been scorned. Mad with fury she transfixes him with an arrow and sets her hunting dogs on him. She then tears his body apart, with hands and teeth. When her calmness returns, she recognizes her mistake, but says that there is little difference between biting and kissing.
The roots of verbs and most nouns in the Semitic languages are characterized as a sequence of consonants or "radicals" (hence the term consonantal root). Such abstract consonantal roots are used in the formation of actual words by adding the vowels and non-root consonants (or "transfixes") which go with a particular morphological category around the root consonants, in an appropriate way, generally following specific patterns. It is a peculiarity of Semitic linguistics that a large majority of these consonantal roots are triliterals (although there are a number of quadriliterals, and in some languages also biliterals).
In 1989, as the Bougainville Civil War rages on in Papua New Guinea, Mr. Watts (Hugh Laurie), the only white man left on the island after a blockade, re-opens the local school. He begins reading the Charles Dickens novel Great Expectations, which transfixes a young girl named Matilda (Xzannjah Matsi). She finds comfort in the story of a Victorian orphan, Pip (Eka Darville), when her own world is falling apart. Matilda writes "Pip" in the sand, and this simple act leads to terrible consequences when the "Redskins", an army sent to destroy the local rebels, suspect Pip to be a rebel leader and demand he be brought before them.
Like the drowning souls in this river of oblivion that have not achieved passage, the jellyfish are dependent on the vagery and drift of ocean currents. Yet it is also clear that the greater accumulative and material accomplishments of the artist are best seen through the inner vision of his paintings, which presents the viewer with feelings of veiled and ephemeral presences that capture fleeting (mutable) experience and temporarily transfixes them. For example, the large Styx (Portrait), whale also indicative of the translucent and the semi-veiled, shows in the spectral presence of a child’s face that seems to emerge out diffuse mist or hypnopompic consciousness. Levan Songulashvili whether he is focussed on video or painting has developed a marked accomplishment that places him in a long tradition of artist’s that reflect on states of meditative consciousness.
For example, : An underscore may be used instead of a period, as in go_out-, when a single word in the source language happens to correspond to a phrase in the glossing language, though a period would still be used for other situations, such as Greek oikíais house. 'to the houses'. However, sometimes finer distinctions may be made. For example, clitics may be separated with a double hyphen (or, for ease of typing, an equal sign) rather than a hyphen: : Affixes which cause discontinuity (infixes, circumfixes, transfixes, etc.) may be set off by angle brackets, and reduplication with tildes, rather than with hyphens: : (See affix for other examples.) Morphemes which cannot be easily separated out, such as umlaut, may be marked with a backslash rather than a period: : A few other conventions which are sometimes seen are illustrated in the Leipzig Glossing Rules.

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