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11 Sentences With "urbanities"

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

He suggested Glovo will have limited resources to fully implement some of the other stuff it's experimenting with (or has plans to) — as it works towards its overarching vision of becoming an 'everything app' for urbanities.
So it's easy to imagine consumer demand growing for in-home devices that can sense and filter pollutants as urbanities try to find ways to balance living in a city with reducing their exposure to the bad stuff.
This comedy of errors exposes the moneyed culture and the hypocrisy of Shanghai urbanities, and ridicules bourgeois materialism and decadence through its portrayal of negative male figures.Ng, K. (2008). The Screenwriter as Cultural Broker: Travels of Zhang Ailing's Comedy of Love. Modern Chinese Literature and Culture, 20(2), 131-184.
In 1935, Schmidt had to approach Reza Shah Pahlavi directly for permission to fly over the country. After he obtained it, he made many flights and did a lot of mapping.Manu P. Sobti and Sahar Hosseini, "Re-examining Persian Civitas: Networked Urbanities and Suburban Hinterlands in Erich Schmidt’s Flights". in Historiography of Persian Architecture, ed.
Architect and urban theorist Rem Koolhaas, who criticized the article as being patronizing towards Singaporeans. The article provoked a strong critical reaction. The Boston Globe characterized it as a "biting piece on the technocratic state in Singapore". It was recommended by postmodern political geographer Edward Soja as "a wonderful tour of the cyberspatial urbanities" of the city-state.
His 2005 book Fluid City documents, analyses and critiques the transformations of Melbourne's urban waterfront during the period 1989-2003. Becoming Places (2010) explores the formation of place identity and develops a theory of place as dynamic assemblage. Urban Design Thinking (2016) is a broad-ranging application of assemblage thinking in urban design. Mapping Urbanities (2017) explores the role of urban mapping in the production of spatial knowledge.
Her work includes video, performance art, telematics, interactive video installations, projects based on databases, and programming. She often assembles specific interfaces for each work and makes use of these devices to discuss a broader project dealing with relationships between life and death, war, violence, the media, eroticism, and the construction of the body in the contemporary metropolis. She often invites other artists, programmers, or electronic engineers to collaborate in her projects.Aneta Glinkowska, "Rachel Rosalen’s Translocal Urbanities at Yokohama Museum of Art" Tokyo Art Beat 2005-10-16 Tokyo Art Beat Accessed.
In Britain, some 3,000 streets called High Street and about 2,300 streets with variations on the name (such as Upper High Street, High Street West) have been identified, giving a grand total of approximately 5,300."High Street", BBC History Magazine, [Digital Content], 15 March 2011, Online: Of these, more than 600 High Streets are located in London's boroughs.Vaughan L., "High Street Diversity" in: Laura Vaughan (ed.), Suburban Urbanities: Suburbs and the Life of the High Street, UCL Press, 2015 p. 204 Main Street is a term also used in smaller towns and villages in Scotland.
Beginning in the 1950s though, the tradition would gain respect among the urbanities in Bangkok, and receive widespread acceptance among the Thai Sangha. Many of the Ajahns were nationally venerated by Thai Buddhists, who regarded them as arahants. Because of their reputations, the Ajahns have become the subject of a cultural fixation on sacralized objects believed among lay followers to offer supernatural protection. This cultural fixation was referred to by social anthropologist Stanley Jeyaraja Tambiah as a cult of amulets, which he described during a field study in the 1970s as "a traditional preoccupation now reaching the pitch of fetishistic obsession".
The Forest tradition is often cited as having an anti-textual stance, as Forest teachers in the lineage prefer edification through ad-hoc application of Buddhist practices rather than through methodology and comprehensive memorization, and likewise state that the true value of Buddhist teachings is in their ability to be applied to reduce or eradicate defilement from the mind. In the tradition's beginning the founders famously neglected to record their teachings, instead wandering the Thai countryside offering individual instruction to dedicated pupils. However, detailed meditation manuals and treatises on Buddhist doctrine emerged in the late 20th century from Ajahn Mun and Ajahn Sao's first-generation students as the Forest tradition's teachings began to propagate among the urbanities in Bangkok and subsequently take root in the West.
H.L. Mencken wrote of this prudish state of affairs in 1917: > The action of the novels of the Howells school goes on within four walls of > painted canvas; they begin to shock once they describe an attack of asthma > or a steak burning below stairs; they never penetrate beneath the flow of > social concealments and urbanities to the passions that actually move men > and women to their acts, and the great forces that circumscribe and > condition personality. So obvious a piece of reporting as Upton Sinclair’s > The Jungle or Robert Herrick’s Together makes a sensation; the appearance of > a Jennie Gerhardt or a Hagar Revelly brings forth a growl of astonishment > and rage.H.L. Mencken, A Book of Prefaces (New York: Knopf, 1917) pp. > 275-276.

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