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31 Sentences With "unforgivingly"

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

It's unforgivingly hot, but the gathering crowd has a visible energy.
This chamber, equipped with 36 DSLR cameras, produces an unforgivingly exact reproduction of one's head.
Softer, larger wheels helped him maintain grip on the unforgivingly slick run-up and landing.
It's a blazingly, unforgivingly neurotic performance that exists at extremes of loud and soft, fast and slow.
Yankee Stadium, with its unforgivingly short right-field fence and alley, would provide a test for Montero.
Unforgivingly hot in the day, but freezing during the night, the Sahara is renowned for its extreme temperatures.
Pelen hovers mysteriously in the air while his hands balance a floating chair over an unforgivingly rugged rocky gorge in Southern France.
"Trump judges women by their appearances and scrutinizes their bodies just as hard and as unforgivingly as I scrutinize mine," Alice says.
And so the subversives dubbed "hülyegyerek-frizurás"—which translates, unforgivingly, to "the boys with the retarded haircuts"—were banished to bootleg land.
Her mouth was pooling with blood that gusheed from no visible point of exit, but unforgivingly dripped all over her hands and legs.
Fonny grew up there, too, with his alcoholic father (Michael Beach), unforgivingly pietistic mother (Aunjanue Ellis), and judgmental sisters (Ebony Obsidian and Dominique Thorne).
The Closed are unforgivingly precise in their presentation, giving you the cold, hard facts of your music without ever threatening to flatter or sweeten it.
That would mean not measuring it so unforgivingly against the New York of my youth, not holding it to the impossibly high standards of my nostalgia.
When she was growing up, her mother used the French or English terms for the food she cooked, as if the Slovenian would make them unforgivingly ordinary.
Despite its seemingly serene reputation, there have been many victims to yoga's unforgivingly intense style and etiquette—from Siddhartha Guatama himself (probably), to Canadian rocker Matt Mays (confirmed).
They did it in 33-degree Celsius weather too, in a very unforgivingly hot, small space in front of a bunch of their fans, friends, fellow musicians and of course, the internet.
The four hills are large enough to have names, three of which suggest unforgivingly steep gradients — Flagpole, Parachute, Nursery and Surekill, which doesn't sound like the sort of hill that any runner wants to confront.
Having a dozen or so — alongside cisgender gay men — means Pose's first season explores a wider range of experiences, all grouped under the larger theme of finding companionship and a sense of self-worth in a sometimes unforgivingly cruel city.
All photos by Cara Robbins It's been an hour since LA indie rock quartet Harriet arrived at the Los Angeles Zoo on a crowded, unforgivingly hot President's Day afternoon, and nary a lackadaisical sea otter has yet to rear its head.
I then bought a new fresh shower curtain and liner along with a few candles so that, when her request comes up again, we wouldn't be doing it in a space that's as unforgivingly lit as a one dollar pizza joint at 3 am.
If any of your guests object, or if you have a squash with a bitter or leathery skin, you can cut it off after roasting — which is a whole lot easier than trying to peel it before cooking, when the flesh of the squash is unforgivingly hard.
Beginning with lickety-quick handclaps and a brooding bass line, her song "S P A C E" keeps the instrumentation and beats unforgivingly spare so that the 22-year-old's vocals—layered and looped and swirled like a strands of hair round a fidgety finger—are the central focus.
According to The Washington Post, which obtained an advance copy of the book, Ms. Brazile also writes unforgivingly of her frustrations with the Clinton campaign, especially after finding a document that she says showed that the Clinton team held an unusual level of control over D.N.C. operations even before she was nominated.
But, when we allow this picture of academia to be painted — unrelentingly, and unforgivingly liberal, a place where conservatives must lurk in the shadows for fear of persecution — we allow the sharp edges of our social critiques to be dulled, our social commentary made more palatable, in order to prove this assumption of a liberal bias incorrect.
The problem is, Lord Vere is unforgivingly stupid. So she sets her sights on Lord Vere's brother, Freddie. Lord Vere poses as one of society's most bumbling bachelors as his disguise. The need to play that role in front of the niece chafes at first, until he sees her as a conniving gold digger determined to entrap his brother in marriage.
", as well as Asser's screenplay, "Asser captures life in the system with enormous clarity." And notes the depth in its execution, "Shakespearean in its levels of violence and manipulation". Anton Bitel of Eye for Film stated, "McKenzie's [film comes with] high ambition in the pecking order of the prison flick - a subgenre known to be overcrowded, hierarchically organised and unforgivingly hostile to any weaker new entries." Adding, "Clichés are avoided by the complicated characterisation of both Neville and Oliver.
Some disagreed as to whether the game's challenge was appropriate and never malicious, or often unbalanced and frustrating compared to its rewards. The randomness of each basecamp's power-up offerings also contributed to uneven difficulty between playthroughs. Metro contended that though TumbleSeed was marketed as a roguelike, apart from its procedurally generated levels, it was closer in genre to traditional arcade games. Though like roguelikes, player mistakes are costly and unforgivingly punished by returning the player to the beginning of the game.
A month after release, the developers worked to make the game less difficult, in response to criticism from reviewers. In a postmortem released alongside a set of updates, TumbleSeed designer Greg Wohlwend credited the game's slow sales to the title's tepid critical reception and stigma of high difficulty. Critics, he wrote, considered the game unfair and unforgivingly hard, as reflected in lukewarm scores from major gaming websites. Players were expected to withstand an overwhelming amount of simultaneous elements and as such, few reached the end of the game.
In painting Jerónima, Velázquez was heavily influenced by his father-in-law and mentor Francisco Pacheco. The painting is noted for its "tight brushstrokes" and "Caravaggiesque use of chiaroscuro with powerful characterizations and a crude light that unforgivingly emphasizes the irregularities of her face and hands", which reflects his preference for realism prior to his relocation to Madrid. The painting creates a "sacred image" that is "filled with truth while creating an exemplary model of sainthood". Velázquez also based his painting on several local depictions of Franciscan saints and other notable figures including Elizabeth of Portugal and Clare of Assisi, plus some of Pacheco's own paintings.
A positive review in Dagger says "you could call this stuff desert noir and probably get away with it," and compares the vocals on Dorado to Nick Cave and Bob Dylan. The review ends with "the bottom line here is that these folks are excellent songwriters and with the backing band (and their own musical talents) Dorado is the kind of Grade A music that doesn't come along very often so soak it all in when it does. This record is a keeper. Adam McKinney of Weekly Volcano says Dorado "feels like a document of two artists who feed off the arid sun and unforgivingly cold nights of the Mojave Desert.
Conference on "Communism and Totalitarism", Stéphane Courtois, Institut d'histoire sociale, 22 October 2009, . Courtois accuses Jean-Jacques Marie for apologising for Lenin for whom 1922, on the contrary, was "the year of transition to paranoia". This showed itself on the one hand, by the note from Lenin to the Politburo on 19 March 1922 in which he wanted to use the Soviet famine of 1921–1922 to destroy the Orthodox Church: "It is precisely now when the famine-struck regions eat human flesh, and thousands of corpses litter the roads, that we need to enforce the confiscation of church property with savage energy and most unforgivingly, and crush any hint of resistance, with such brutality that it will be talked about for decades".Lenin 19 March 1922 quoted in Major manipulations of modern times, Barnard Raquin, Trajectories, Paris, 2005, p.

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