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48 Sentences With "unrecognizably"

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

Nobody could be unrecognizably different — so we just pushed everything up a notch.
Fleming's heroic 20th Century discovery unrecognizably transformed that century's medical care in a few short decades.
It has changed unrecognizably in a matter of decades and, in 2018, there is much to celebrate.
Each and every star exudes badassness, from Rihanna in her Rasta get-up to the unrecognizably blonde HBC.
What's onstage at the Kerr is almost unrecognizably different from the version I saw at New York Theater Workshop in 2016.
What is the world going to look like in 30 years, which is unrecognizably different, and that part I'm confident about.
From Twin Peaks to Blue Velvet, he twists American cherry pie suburban images we all know and love into unrecognizably distorted shapes.
The race at the beginning — the leading candidates and the most resonant issue — is often unrecognizably different from the race at the end.
There is a nakedness to her face, as if now that she is unrecognizably unglamorous, we can finally see what she looks like.
It is unrecognizably Qual with the exception of Maybelline's blistering vocals shrouded in indignation and lust—it is his own skewed interpretation of a love song.
Her strengths and failings have been unrecognizably obscured by the hyperventilated dust storm that stretches from Susan Sarandon's sun-drenched pool to David Duke's midnight klavern.
Both performed reasonably well as blue-state Republicans, only to contort themselves unrecognizably in a failed attempt to win right-wing support at the national level.
In 2010, 50 Cent shocked fans with a photo of himself looking unrecognizably skinny for a role as a promising college football player struggling with cancer.
It does not feature people who think that everything will be unrecognizably different tomorrow or the next day because of some restless tinkerer in his garage.
And what is more 2010s than that: the reworking of something you remember into something unrecognizably twisted, weird, annoying, and at least just a little bit funny.
In Jennifer Egan's complex satire "Look at Me," a New York model with an unrecognizably reconstructed face participates in a web-series re-enactment of her life.
In another strand, Anthony uses Google Maps to track random people — their faces unrecognizably blurred by the program's algorithm — walking through Baltimore and caught on camera unawares.
A couple weeks back a "festival" of the new Astor Place, supposedly a multi-million dollar celebration of the arts, occurred in the unrecognizably new Astor Place.
There are no secrets, there are no unknown prospects, and college football resembles pro football in the way smeary old Alec Baldwin resembles unrecognizably skinny young Alec Baldwin.
Abysmally and almost unrecognizably remade in the US as The Uninvited in 2009, this 2003 Korean drama is a tour de force of psychological horror and unreliable narration.
Whether drawing from canned metal songs or jubilant pop music, the Japanese producer has a knack for liquifying all the jagged edges and transforming them into something unrecognizably buoyant.
It's not that she's come to appreciate her own body, mind you – she believes she's got an unrecognizably different body, even though she looks exactly the same to everyone around her.
Moreover, their decisions are unrecognizably utilitarian; they have no emotional conflict in choosing to advocate sacrificing the life of a stranger (or, equally so, a loved one) in order to save five others.
I had to reimagine the fall—the blow, the bleed, the delirium, the coma—and try to understand why such disasters hadn't occurred earlier, as his brain had inched, woozily, inexorably, unrecognizably, toward dementia.
When the police found the son, he was so unrecognizably burnt they didn't realize he was alive, so he ran away before they were able to arrest him for the murder of his father.
The paper-white, easily identified "CARTON OF EGGS," nearly a stand-in for its subject, is pop philosophy, while "DRAWING TABLE," crumpled unrecognizably in the bottom half of its box, is a tart memento mori.
It's about going outside and sitting in a neon inner tube and drinking a Corona while your butt gets wet and your face gets unrecognizably burned and you forget that you've ever spent any time online at all.
The prospect of returning for the first time in years fills him with excitement: spending time with his sister, embracing the friends he's kept in touch with, reconciling the Haiti of his memories with the unrecognizably altered one that he left.
In short, the Clinton email "scandal" seems to me to be emblematic of so many Clinton "scandals": There's a kernel of impropriety there that in the public mind, thanks to her political enemies' bombast, has ballooned into something unrecognizably malignant.
Objects like Ultima Thule, which is about 10 miles across and 20 miles long, formed very early on in the history of the solar system and should contain ancient ice that has long been unrecognizably altered on planets much closer to the sun.
But in a capital I'm told I would find unrecognizably sleek and affluent, in a system still encumbered by remnants of the security state, I recognize something I came to know well years ago: Politicians buck the popular will at their peril.
On the levonorgestrel IUD, I suffered through bouts of derealization — the external world becoming unrecognizably remastered, colors rendered garish and sounds warping nonsensically, the distortion sometimes trespassing the border of my body; I'd look in the mirror and not recognize who I saw.
And for all the belittling of "bird brains," she shows them to be uniquely impressive machines within their own evolutionary contexts — unrecognizably so to science, at first, because, though they have equally high concentrations of neurons, they're quite differently designed from our primate brains.
Pornography has changed unrecognizably from its so-called golden age—the period, in the sixties and seventies, when adult movies had theatrical releases and seemed in step with the wider moment of sexual liberation, and before V.H.S. drove down production quality, in the eighties.
After serving time in prison, Tray returns in the present day to find that his old neighborhood has become unrecognizably gentrified — and that his former girlfriend, Shay (played by Tiffany Haddish), is living a much-improved life as the mother of two teenage children he didn't know he fathered.
As a consequence, for us, the American public — we who most deserve to understand the peril to which our democracy might have been exposed — the Mueller investigation has been a chaotic Rorschach blot, interpreted from a spectrum of unrecognizably different perspectives and filtered through the worst and wildest partisan and conspiratorial lenses.
The complex has been unrecognizably rebuilt, however, and the painting no longer hangs in a specific place, but moves around according to various exhibition needs.
Herengracht 115, former address of Laurens van der Hem, in 1890 unrecognizably rebuilt after a design by Hendrik Petrus Berlage Laurens van der Hem (1621–1678), was a Dutch lawyer and a collector of maps and landscape prints. He is known today for commissioning his meticulously thorough personal version of the Atlas Maior, itself a major work of cartography and art published by his contemporary and friend Joan Blaeu.
The other form is the auction catalog, where only those specific coins available in the auction are described, with photo plates available for some of the more prominent coins. Coin catalogs are essential when dealing with ancient or foreign coins, where the inscriptions may be obscure and unrecognizably stylized, even for a native speaker. Coin catalogs today are supplemented by Internet sites, some of which have the advantage of being attached to user forums, so that issues such as counterfeiting may be discussed. These sites also provide tools connected to catalogs for tracking collections.
Richard Wagner The German composer Richard Wagner was a controversial figure during his lifetime, and has continued to be so after his death.Millington, Barry (Ed.) (1992). Even today he is associated in the minds of many with Nazism and his operas are often thought to extol the virtues of German nationalism. The writer and Wagner scholar Bryan Magee has written: > I sometimes think there are two Wagners in our culture, almost > unrecognizably different from one another: the Wagner possessed by those who > know his work, and the Wagner imagined by those who know him only by name > and reputation.
Kim Kih-hoon (born 1975) is a South Korean film director and screenwriter. Kim's first theatrical film The Mode of Disappearance (2005), tells the story of a man who one day finds his face has changed unrecognizably. The film debuted at the Busan International Film Festival and was invited to other major short film festivals including the Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival in France where it was highly received. His directorial feature debut The Boy from Ipanema (2010), won the Audience Critic's Award and Movie Collage Award at the 11th Jeonju International Film Festival in 2010.
It has been inferred that one of the bas reliefs in this stretch, the central figure, unrecognizably damaged, could be that of Shiva as an ascetic, similar to the bas relief seen in Angkor Wat temple. The meaning of the crocodile carving seen here has not been ascertained. Near to this location, a boulder has been carved as a frog. The pond, in a rectangular shape, filled with water at all times, has many "Reclining Vishnu" carvings on the walls, and here again, a pair of crocodiles are carved but with their tail held by women.
The society started as a gentleman's club that met in the Haarlem City Hall to discuss science topics and promote the study of the arts and sciences. They pooled resources to purchase books and specimens for study, which were kept in the town hall until they purchased a building on the Grote Houtstraat (nr. 51, since unrecognizably rebuilt), where the curator of the collection lived. Under the direction of Martin van Marum a proper museum was established with zoological specimens located there on display for the public, as a forerunner of the modern Naturalis in Leiden.
Count Ladislaus de Almásy is the titular character who comes under Hana's care in Italy after being burned unrecognizably in Africa. Although Hungarian by birth, because he has lived without government identification or many verifiable long-term interactions, his accent prompts the authorities around him to perceive an English affiliation and to refer to him as the English Patient. Almásy serves as a blank canvas onto which the other characters project their experience during this time in Italy. For example, Hana treats him tenderly to redeem herself for not being by the side of her father when he was engulfed in flames and died.
The Piney Creek West Site is a prehistoric rock art site located north of Piney Creek in Piney Creek Ravine State Natural Area in Randolph County, Illinois. The site consists of four petroglyphs painted on the inside of a rock shelter and a pictograph painted on the outside. The interior petroglyphs include an abstract shape, two curved lines, and a serpentine line with a pit at one end; two of the petroglyphs are filled in with ochre pigment, representing the only intact example of this painting technique in Illinois. The pictograph, which has deteriorated badly, depicts a human left hand; nearby flecks of paint from an unrecognizably faded figure likely indicate the site of the right hand.
In production before America entered World War II, the film was completed several weeks after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, having gone through frantic last minute updates to ensure it meeting its February 1942 release date. Joris Ivens anticipated that editing might take a week, but stated that Hollywood "fiddled with it for two months and unrecognizably altered the original version." Walter Huston narrates a World War II documentary intended to bolster United States support for the USSR's war efforts. Created using front line footage taken by Russian battlefield cameramen, and archive footage of Averell Harriman, Joseph Stalin, and Semyon Timoshenko, the film was edited in the US. Upon release, the film screened for more than 20 hours a day and broke all previous box office records at the Rialto Theater in Times Square.
This is because confrontations between different families or rank challenges can have a wider impact on the whole troop than an internal conflict in a family or a baboon reinforcing its dominance. Baboon social dynamics can also vary; Robert Sapolsky reported on a troop, known as the Forest Troop, during the 1980s, which experienced significantly less aggressive social dynamics after its most aggressive males died off during a tuberculosis outbreak, leaving a skewed gender ration of majority females and a minority of low-aggression males. This relatively low-aggression culture persisted into the 1990s and extended to new males coming into the troop, though Sapolsky observed that while unique, the troop was a not an "unrecognizably different utopia"; there was still a dominance hierarchy and aggressive intrasexual competition amongst males. Furthermore, no new behaviours were created amongst the baboons, rather the difference was the frequency and context of existing baboon behaviour.
Isichei, A History of Christianity in Africa (1995) at 38: "This [the circumcellions] was clearly a Peasant's Revolt; they lived in community near the tombs of rural martyrs, carrying clubs called Israel, attacking their propertied opponents with the war cry Deo Laudes."Tilley, The Bible in Christian North Africa (1997) at 94.Brent D. Shaw, in his "Who were the Circumcellions?" at 227–258, in Vandals, Romans and Berbers (2004), edited by A. H. Merrills, seeks to show that how the meaning of the movement became abstracted by the Church at large, enough to become unrecognizably pejorative. "The image of the circumcellions that has now emerged is one that lives on in an odd world of its own, with no reference to any reality that had ever existed in the African countryside... ." Shaw (2004) at 248. The Donatist schism also became later linked to two revolts led by the Berber half-brothers, Firmus (372–375), and then Gildo (395–398).Abun-Nasr, A History of the Maghrib (1971) at 41–43.Tilley, The Bible in Christian North Africa (1997) at 132–136.

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