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"unutterably" Definitions
  1. extremely; used to emphasize how great a particular emotion or quality is

28 Sentences With "unutterably"

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

When the tragedy finally comes it is cataclysmic, and unutterably sad.
Oh, how can everything be so utterly wonderful at the same time that it is so unutterably awful?
Beneath his ominous exterior, Snape proved to be "unutterably honorable," Mr. Rickman said in a 2011 interview with The Times.
"It seems blatantly obvious the Stonehenge landscape is unutterably precious," said David Jacques, an archaeologist at the University of Buckingham.
Deep down it is what it is, and I'm afraid Kickmen is a football game and therefore at some level it's pretty much doomed to be unutterably, intolerably dull.
This iteration from the director Bronagh Lagan doesn't possess much compensatory energy, and it's further hampered by the dreariest set imaginable, from Simon Wells, which makes a Day-Glo decade look unutterably drab.
His family story, his parents' treatment of the woman he knew as Lola, her pain and love for all of them, and his trip to take her ashes home make this story unutterably sad.
It's all over Twitter, both because it's a pretty good joke and because it's a pretty good way of dealing with how unutterably depressing the world has become for so many people over the past couple of years.
With that context, the shallow sex comedy structure of Losing It's plot could take a turn for the unutterably depressing, but Rathbone — who frequently writes Shouts & Murmurs columns for the New Yorker — is too funny to let that happen.
In "The Devil Finds Work," Baldwin recalls his friend's challenge: To stay in the church merely because I was afraid of leaving it was unutterably far beneath me, and too despicable a cowardice for him to support in any friend of his.
They were unutterably lovely, the aliens, when finally we knew them, when at last we understood they had lived and moved among us from the beginning in bodies the image of ours, though smoother, eyes wider, as if the world were a little darker for them, or more wondrous, and we loved them as wildly and deeply and helplessly as our first loves, our dreams, our lost ones, all at once, though we knew they were wilder and deeper than we were, and freer, and loving them only deepened our loneliness.
Maybe some earthly pathogen had worn them, or the weakness of our yellow sun had left them so wan that even their radiant children could not tell them from us when they sat with us, sipping at coffee, a little more patiently now, enduring our sadness, our sad adoration, even our sad relief that life was a little less possible than once we had hoped, and gratefully meeting our eyes, since who else in the universe knew that they were as luminous and unutterably lovely as our first loves, our dreams, our lost ones all at once, so impossible they were beautiful, so beautiful they were true?
One like Samson is clean-handed in what it would be unutterably base for us to do.
Simpson, p. 2 Ravel intended the piece to be played extremely slowly – more slowly than almost any modern interpretation, according to his biographer Benjamin Ivry.Ivry, p. 23 The critic Émile Vuillermoz complained that Ravel's playing of the work was "unutterably slow".
"To bare your soul to the world, I find unutterably boring. I > think part of our profession is to have a quixotic personality.""Laurence > Harvey, Screen Actor, Is Dead at 45: Attained Stardom With Role in 'Room at > the Top' The Screen's Perfect Cad Enigmatic Flamboyance Was Also in > 'Butterfield 8' and 'Manchurian Candidate' An Arrogant Manner Special to The > New York Times". The New York Times, 27 November 1973: 47.
A further famous story about same-sex intercourse can be found in the Kahun Papyri, dating back to the Middle Kingdom. It contains the nearly completely preserved story of the Osiris myth and the legendary fight for the throne of Egypt between Horus and Seth. The chapter in question reports that Seth was unutterably jealous about his young nephew Horus, because Horus was very young and popular. He was quite pampered by the other gods.
Woman—shunned, loathed, and unutterably despised, but still—Woman", foreshadowing the change in status that she will undergo by the end of the play. Ruth, in her Act I description of people who claimed to be trying to help her, describes people who have claimed to be trying to help her before: "There's ladies come odd times. I call to mind one—come in a carriage she did. Same story—poor, miserable, lost one—wretched, abandoned, fellow-creetur, and that.
But I do > know that it was all important and unutterably beautiful, a trance that went > beyond logic but never against it, and that I was at home and everything was > mine, loving and tender, the landscape and houses a living thing. (David > Haughton from a letter to Norman Levine)Norman Levine, 'David Haughton's St > Just', The Painter & Sculptor, Summer 1961, pp.18-24. John Halkes has written, > The excitement of St Just gripped David Haughton back in the late forties.
Geoffrey Macnab from The Independent also rated the documentary five out of five, reviewed it as "brilliant" and "unutterably sad", and stated: "There were many, many contributory factors to Amy Winehouse going off the rails, which are explored in the effect of Amy". According to The Guardian, Amy has been placed at no. 3 out of "The 50 Best Films of 2015 in Australia" at the end of the year and has been placed at no. 6 out of "The 50 Best 2015 Films in the UK".
Amplification involves repeating a word or expression while adding more detail, to emphasise what might otherwise be passed over. This allows one to call attention to and expand a point to ensure the reader realizes its importance or centrality in the discussion. But this revolting boy, of course, Was so unutterably vile, So greedy, foul, and infantile He left a most disgusting taste Inside our mouths… (Roald Dahl, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) Pleonasm involves using more words than necessary to describe an idea. This creates emphasis and can introduce additional elements of meaning.
The Sea of Beauty is one of many analogies and similes employed to describe a high vision of reality. Some writers have employed this term upon having arrived at the most mature, the farthest, and the highest stages of the philosophical or mystical search. It is described variously as the Beatific Vision, enlightenment, nirvana, satori, Kensho, Bodhi, awareness, true knowledge, etc. Those who claim to have had such a high and final vision sometimes report that reality is, at its deepest level, utterly unified, like a vast ocean, and that it is unutterably beautiful, or rather, source of all beauty.
It is unutterably depressing, because history can never undo itself, and is with us forever." Come and See appears on many lists of films considered the best. In 2008, Come and See was placed at number 60 on Empire magazine's "The 500 Greatest Movies of All Time" in 2008. It also made Channel 4's list of 50 Films to See Before You Die and was ranked number 24 in Empire magazine's "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema" in 2010. Phil de Semlyen of Empire has described the work as "Elim Klimov’s seriously influential, deeply unsettling Belarusian opus.
Leeds Post: The woman whose figure dominates "Children of the Desolate" ... by C.M. Matheson, is a strange and complex personality. She is blessed - or cursed - with a vivid imagination, she is a creature of impulse, capable of infinite good or unutterably bad things. Brought up without sympathy or understanding, she loses all self-control, she obeys the worst impulses, she marries a man for whom she has no love, nor even respect, for the sake of his money, and she tastes the bitter fruit of a loveless marriage. ... It is a powerful novel, noble in sentiment, and without a shade of priggishness in its profound morality.
As Uncle Matthew, who was modelled on Redesdale, put it in his daughter Nancy's novel The Pursuit of Love: "Frogs are slightly better than Huns or Wops, but abroad is unutterably bloody and foreigners are fiends."Nancy Mitford, The Pursuit of Love, 113 He was initially scornful of the enthusiasm shown by his daughters Diana and Unity for Nazi Germany and Adolf Hitler: Hitler was, after all, a Hun. In November 1938, however, the Redesdales accompanied their daughters to Germany, where they attended the Nuremberg Rally and met Hitler, with whom Unity and Diana were already acquainted. Both the Redesdales were immediately won over by Hitler's superficial charm and his declarations of Anglophilia.
Titanic band, who became a focus for many commemorations of the disaster Titanic has played a prominent role in popular culture ever since her sinking. The disaster has inspired numerous books, plays, films, songs, poems and works of art, and has lent itself to a great variety of interpretations of its significance, meaning and legacy. The immediate aftermath of the sinking saw an outpouring of poetry, though much of it was dismissed by The New York Times as "worthless" and "intolerably bad" and by Current Literature as "unutterably horrible", though Thomas Hardy's "The Convergence of the Twain" (1912) was one of the more significant works to emerge from the disaster. Several survivors wrote books about their experiences and various hack writers cashed in on the tragedy by producing sensationalist "dollar books" culled from the often inaccurate press coverage.
In the meantime David Bowie covered Scott's song "Nite Flights" on his Black Tie White Noise album, which also contained the Walker inspired 'You've Been Around'. Tilt was released in 1995, developing and expanding the working methods explored on Climate of Hunter. Variously described as "an anti-matter collision of rock and modern classical music", as "Samuel Beckett at La Scala" and as "indescribably barren and unutterably bleak... the wind that buffets the gothic cathedrals of everyone's favorite nightmares", it was more consciously avant-garde than its predecessor with Walker now revealed as a fully-fledged modernist composer. Although Walker was backed by a full orchestra again, this time he was also accompanied by alarming percussion and industrial effects; and while album opener "Farmer in the City" was a melodic piece on which Walker exercised his familiar ballad voice, the remaining pieces were harsh and demandingly avant-garde.
Jonathan Lethem, author of Motherless Brooklyn, wrote: "Read Vernon God Little not only for its dangerous relevance, but for the coruscating wit and raw vitality of its voice." The Times wrote: "A satire brimming with opprobium for.. [the] demi- culture of reality television, fast food and speedily delivered death... a bulging burrito of a book." John Carey, Merton professor of English Literature at Oxford University, and chairman of Booker judges in 2003 said: "Reading [Pierre's] book made me think of how the English language was in Shakespeare's day, enormously free and inventive and very idiomatic and full of poetry as well." Theodore Dalrymple wrote that the novel "was a work of unutterably tedious nastiness and vulgarity" that "manifested itself even in its first sentence, and grew worse as the first paragraph progressed"; Dalrymple described the author as "a man with no discernible literary talent whose vulgarity of mind was deep and thoroughgoing".
The Unbearable Lightness of Being. 1999, page 5. imaginable. He professes that the wish for the eternal return of all events would mark the ultimate affirmation of life: > What, if some day or night a demon were to steal after you into your > loneliest loneliness and say to you: 'This life as you now live it and have > lived it, you will have to live once more and innumerable times more; and > there will be nothing new in it, but every pain and every joy and every > thought and sigh and everything unutterably small or great in your life will > have to return to you, all in the same succession and sequence' ... Would > you not throw yourself down and gnash your teeth and curse the demon who > spoke thus? Or have you once experienced a tremendous moment when you would > have answered him: 'You are a god and never have I heard anything more > divine.

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