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39 Sentences With "unimaginatively"

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

The new team would, rather unimaginatively, be named Fulham Park Rangers.
Society is ruled by unimaginatively named "MegaCorps," while citizens fret over Thought Crimes.
Details are finally starting to emerge about the PlayStation 5, Sony's unimaginatively named successor to the PlayStation 4.
" Louisiana's Cassidy is, with South Carolina's Lindsey Graham, the senator behind the latest ACA-killing bill—dubbed, somewhat unimaginatively, "Graham-Cassidy.
About half of the funds have gone, unimaginatively, on a constant flow of television and digital ads that savage Mr Rauner as a loser.
Amazon's new "Secret Region" is not to be confused with GovCloud, the unimaginatively named "gated community" for controlled (but unclassified) data launched by Amazon in 2011.
Per Bleeping Computer, malicious spam currently circulating via email, purportedly from the "Internet Revenue Service," contains an attachment infected with a new variant of the unimaginatively named Rapid Ransomware.
The feature, aptly albeit unimaginatively named Pay Less Up Front, lets users pay for a part of their trip upon booking and the rest near the time of check-in.
A much bigger-budget version of the Thunderhill competition is getting underway with the unimaginatively named RoboRace, a racing concept using the same format as the electric-car Formula E series.
It took other tech giants years to catch up: Amazon's Alexa assistant appeared in 2014 as part of the Echo home speaker, and the unimaginatively named Google Assistant appeared only last summer.
For every memorable mission into a temple to steal a sacred mask there are half a dozen others that unimaginatively ask you to go to a place and kill all the things there.
Click here to view original GIFIn 1928, only 7 years after Czech writer Karel Capek first used the word "robot," the United Kingdom built a working automaton of their own, unimaginatively named Eric.
Handsomely photographed (by the Belgian wizard Christophe Beaucarne) and unimaginatively directed by Vincent Perez, this stodgy story of how a long-married German couple became peas beneath the Nazi mattress has a comforting familiarity.
The good folks at the Census Bureau split the Midwest into two distinct — and rather unimaginatively named — sub-regions: the West North Central and East North Central states, which are separated by the Mississippi River.
Her husband, Sandy, started out bad and stayed bad so consistently and unimaginatively that, by the end, we ourselves had grown pinched-faced and sour and were ready to hand him off to the next au pair.
Grafting ideas from the "Saw" franchise onto a "Wait Until Dark"-style premise, the writers, T. J. Cimfel and David K. White, work efficiently if unimaginatively to place the recently bereaved Anna (Beth Riesgraf) at the mercy of three would-be burglars.
The material — called for the time being, a little unimaginatively, Wallace Chan Porcelain — is made of specially chosen ingredients that Mr. Chan treats like the equivalent of a state secret out of fear of industrial espionage (the jewelry world is, apparently, a paranoid place).
And yet the longer I thought about this, the more I realized that what I was feeling was almost exactly what any people of color must feel when members of their own races wander, unimaginatively, into the stories of white people, as happens on every TV network, every day.
Along with his supposed proclivity for fast food binges and Chinese takeaways – in the unimaginatively titled My Autobiography, Alex Ferguson called Bosnich a "terrible professional" on account of his shambolic diet – there was a sense in which the chirpy New South Walian allowed himself to be made into a crude national cliche.
The show, somewhat unimaginatively titled Selena: The Series, will apparently be a coming-of-age story about the pop star, model, actress, designer, and otherwise-hyphenated boss lady's life, chronicling her rise from a no-name singer in her dad's Texas restaurant to the internationally renowned "Queen of Tejano music," all before she was tragically killed in 1995 at just 23.
EPA Administrator Scott PruittEdward (Scott) Scott PruittEnvironmentalists renew bid to overturn EPA policy barring scientists from advisory panels Six states sue EPA over pesticide tied to brain damage Overnight Energy: Trump EPA looks to change air pollution permit process | GOP senators propose easing Obama water rule | Green group sues EPA over lead dust rules MORE has been miraculously quick to address regulatory issues raised by refiners, and unimaginatively creative in finding ways to ease their burden.
A smart redevelopment of the restroom in 2012 by PokerStars led to the name unimaginatively being changed to "The Ocean".
James Marsh of the South China Morning Post gave the film 1.5/5 stars in a negative review in which he wrote that the director "fails to rise above plot's perfunctory soft core trappings in this unimaginatively told story of infatuation and jealousy".
The Los Angeles Times gave a favorable review of The Package, calling it an "uncomplicated guy's guy movie time, the screen version of the starchy passing pleasures of bar food." In contrast, DVD Verdict panned the film, calling it mediocre and saying that Austin's fight scenes were "unimaginatively produced and not much fun".
He noted: "For the saga of the late Capt. Joseph McConnell, which cleaves to the facts about the restless, intrepid airman who became America's first triple jet ace during the Korean unpleasantness, is dramatic only when it is rocketing through the wild blue yonder. It plods unimaginatively every time it is grounded." White, Armand (A.W.).
Designed by Berkeley Dean Wise and directly connected to the station, the unimaginatively named Station Hotel opened in 1898. In addition to the railway-operated hotels, arrangements were made during the 1890s with the independent Olderfleet hotel in Larne and the Antrim Arms and Marine hotels in Ballycastle for the issue of combined railway and hotel tickets.
Building eventually resumed when the puddling forge was opened in 1859 and engines for the rolling mills were bought in 1860. The terraced cottages for the workers were built on a grid plan, unimaginatively called Row A, Row B, Row C, Row D, and Row E. typically indicative of the attitude of the 19th century employers to their workers.
"Melbourne/Sydney Express Cars" Railway Digest November 1986 page 353"20 Years Ago" Railway Digest December 1990 page 454 With declining passenger numbers it was decided to combine the Spirit of Progress and Southern Aurora into one train, the unimaginatively named Sydney/Melbourne Express. The Southern Aurora ran for the last time on 2 August 1986.
Bill Gibron, writing for DVD Verdict, said, "amid all its gory, blood-soaked brazenness, there's a message about personal and public perspective that is awfully hard to miss". Scott Weinberg, of DVD Talk, said, "Highly recommended to anyone who's old enough to remember and appreciate this type of low-budget, down & dirty, occasionally terrible but entirely watchable genre fare." A TV Guide review said, "Unimaginatively directed and too bloody for words".
As Figaro, Samuel Ramey was "ideal" - "vigorous, dynamic and youthful sounding, characterizing the role with the right combination of cunning and defiance". The best of the remainder of the cast was Giorgio Tadeo, "solid" as the gardener, Antonio. Kurt Moll's Bartolo was sung with "remarkable sonority" but unimaginatively, and Robert Tear's rather nasal voice, while good at conveying Basilio's oiliness, was not very pleasant to listen to. Solti's conducting was on balance disappointing.
Ambition is the first novel by Julie Burchill published in 1989 hardback and 1990 paperback, . It tells the story of the ambitious if unimaginatively named Susan Street and her efforts to become a newspaper editor. To achieve her goal she is set a number of tasks by a press magnate. These involve her flying around the world to have sex with a large number of men and women while he looks on.
They are comfortable that council housing was generally typified by unimaginatively designed houses with generously sized rooms. They could cope with aggravating estate rules that could forbid tenants "personalising" their houses, though this exercised journalists on the right-wing papers. The system favours those who have already secured tenancy, even when they are no longer in dire need. The combination of security of tenure and subsidized rent gives little incentive to tenants to downsize from family accommodation after their children have moved out.
In particular disfavor were operettas set in bygone eras, musical comedies which were unimaginatively filmed Broadway stage productions, and plotless "revues" such as King of Jazz. Second, although the ripple effects from the stock market crash in October 1929 had not yet produced the full-blown depression which would soon be painfully obvious, people were already spending less freely and the effects were starting to be felt at the box office. During its national release, King of Jazz cleared less than $900,000. Around Hollywood, the movie came to be called "Universal's Rhapsody in the Red".
Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, gave the film a 18% rating, with the site's consensus being, "Neither intelligent enough to work as thought-provoking sci-fi nor trashy enough to provide B-movie thrills, The Last Days on Mars proves as cinematically barren as the titular planet." Metacritic rated it 46/100 based on 21 reviews. Justin Chang of Variety called it a "murkily derivative sci-fi- horror entry that basically amounts to Red Planet of the Dead." Stephen Holden of The New York Times called it "good on atmospherics but unimaginatively plotted".
Although he could have remained in Britain, he chose to return to France the day he arrived because his family was still there. Bloch felt that the French Army lacked the esprit de corps or "fervent fraternity" of the French Army in the First World War. He saw the French generals of 1940 as behaving as unimaginatively as Joseph Joffre had in the first war. He did not, however, believe that the earlier war was an indication of how the next would progress: "no two successive wars", he wrote in 1940, "are ever the same war".
While the new oval was built on Crown Land, the new clubrooms were established on adjacent freehold title land to the North. The new oval and clubhouse complex was unimaginatively named 'Northern Oval Number 1' with a secondary training oval (Northern Oval Number 2) established nearby. Between 1990 and 2015 the No 1 oval and social club were subsequently expanded and developed in line with the club's inclusion into the VFL. In 2009 the ground adopted the name Eureka Stadium and by that time had capacity for several thousand around its perimeter with limited seating to the front of the social club.
Early buildings built to conform to the new setback codes did so unimaginatively—the Heckscher Building in Midtown (completed 1921) set back evenly like a stack of boxes as it rose—but more novel interpretations of the law would follow. A major influence on the resulting skyscrapers was Finn Eliel Saarinen's second- place entry for Chicago's Tribune Tower, considered a liberating alternative for a skyscraper style unbeholden to either Gothic or Classical architecture. Also influential were architect and illustrator Hugh Ferriss' series of speculative architectural illustrations exploring how to make buildings that met the zoning requirements. Ferriss' illustrations envisioned buildings as sculptural forms rather than simple boxes.
The Black Path Game (also known by various other names, such as Brick) is a two-player board game described and analysed in Winning Ways for your Mathematical Plays. It was invented by Larry Black in 1960.. It has also been reported that a game known as "Black" or "Black's Game" was invented in 1960 by William L. Black. This "William L. Black" (possibly known as "Larry") was at that time an undergraduate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, investigating Hex and Bridg-it, two games based on the challenge to create a connected “chain” of counters that link opposite sides of a game board. The creative outcome of Black’s research was a new topological game that his friends (perhaps unimaginatively) called Black.
The origin of the ham and cheese sandwich has been debated for a number of years by culinary intellectuals. The leading theory as to who first started to produce a ham, cheese and bread dish is mentioned in The Larousse Gastronomique 1961. Here it notes that Patrick Connolly, an 18th-century Irish immigrant to England, sold a bread dish which: "combined the remains of pig, cured and sliced with a topping of Leicester cheese and a kiss of egg yolk sauce (a form of mayonnaise) in a round bread roll. The dish was rather unimaginatively known as a Connolly and is still sometimes referred to as this in some parts of the Midlands in the UK." In the UK, a common addition to a ham and cheese sandwich is pickle (a sweet, vinegary chutney originally by Branston); the snack is then known as a ham, cheese and pickle sandwich.

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