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22 Sentences With "with hands clasped"

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

On the grounds, however, is a life-size white guru, seated with hands clasped in prayer.
"This season is all about my comeback kids," RuPaul said, descending into the workroom with hands clasped.
She stalks the floor slowly, often with hands clasped behind her back, occasionally glancing at papers with line-ups, scores, and standings on them.
He grew very enthusiastic in his explanation of one of the events of the day, when he fell upon his knees, with hands clasped. Mrs.
The group walked in front of the press, with hands clasped and their heads down low, and stood silently as a bell was rung three times.
They guide one another to the floor, or go down of their own volition, so that bodies accumulate with hands clasped behind their backs as if bound.
As officials participated in a teleconference on the crisis, Trump sat with hands clasped, not using the notebook and pen on the table a few inches away.
Above the bed, tucked into the corner made by the open studio door, we see a full-length work of wraith-like gray nude standing demurely on an abstract field, one leg slightly behind the other, with hands clasped behind her back.
"Print hub designer Andrew Sondern and I tried more than a handful of images — Weinstein in a crowd, Weinstein walking onto a stage framed by a spotlight, Weinstein posed against a dark background with hands clasped, all with a neutral face," Ms. Han said.
Many fine Flemish specimens exist in Belgium, especially at Bruges. Unknown lady, c.1540, alt=A woman in a long gown standing with hands clasped prayer-like in front of her. She wears a gable headdress and veil, a fur-lined gown over a kirtle with a girdle or belt.
There are numerous depictions of the Virgin and Child,Smith (2004), 178 reflecting the Virgin's contemporary popularity as a subject of devotion. The inner panels consisted mainly of donor portraits – often of husbands and their wives – alongside saints or the Virgin and Child. The donor was nearly always shown kneeling in full or half length, with hands clasped in prayer.
Original AIS Logo 1981-2014 Shortly after its inception in 1981, the AIS held a competition for a symbol that would depict the AIS aim of "achieving supremacy in sport". Over 500 designs were submitted. The winner was Rose-Marie Derrico, a design student from Bendigo, Victoria. Her design showed an athlete with hands clasped above the head in recognition of victory.
In an arranged photo commemorating the meeting of the Soviet and American armies, 2nd Lt. William Robertson (U.S. Army) and Lt. Alexander Silvashko (Red Army) stand facing one another with hands clasped and arms around each other's shoulders. In the background are two flags and a poster. Elbe Day, April 25, 1945, is the day Soviet and American troops met at the Elbe River, near Torgau in Germany, marking an important step toward the end of World War II in Europe.
The second part recites the trials and triumphs of the Khalsa and petition. The third salutes the divine name. The first and the third part are set and cannot be changed, while the second part may vary, be shortened and include a supplication such as seeking divine help or blessing in dealing with daily problems, but is usually in agreed form. While it is sung, the audience or the Sikh devotee typically stands, with hands clasped in the folded namaste gesture, many with bowed headed, with some typically saying "Waheguru" after certain sections.
In this capacity his cousin, Sir Richard Graves MacDonnell the 6th Governor of Hong Kong (1866–1872), invited him out to the east to serve as his Aide-de-camp and Adjutant. In 1866, on his way to Hong Kong, Brinkley visited Nagasaki and witnessed a duel between two samurai warriors. Once the victor had slain his opponent he immediately covered him in his haori and "knelt down with hands clasped in prayer". It is said that Brinkley was so impressed by the conduct of the Japanese warrior that this enticed him to live in Japan permanently.
On the day after Tiridates I's arrival, Nero came to the Forum clothed in triumphal vestments and surrounded by dignitaries and soldiers, all resplendent in expensive attire and glittering armor. While Nero sat on the imperial throne, Tiridates I and his retinue advanced between two lines of soldiers. Arriving in front of the dais, Tiridates I knelt, with hands clasped on his breast. After the thundering shouts and acclamations excited by this spectacle had subsided, Tiridates I addressed the emperor: To which Nero replied: Tiridates I then mounted the steps of the platform and knelt, while Nero placed the royal diadem on his head.
The exception occurred at a dual meet in which "a meticulous official ruled that one of the Humes beat the other across the finish line by a couple of inches although they were hand in hand at the wire." Their best time in a "dead heat" mile with hands clasped was 4:14.6 at the Central Collegiate Conference meet in 1944; the time broke a University of Michigan school record of 4:16.4 that had been set by H.L. Carroll 28 years earlier in 1916. The Hume twins were raised in Canonsburg, a small town in Pennsylvania’s soft coal region, not far from Pittsburgh.
The physical position for Western Christian prayer that is thought of as typical today—kneeling, with hands clasped—originates from the commendation ceremony. Before this time, European Christians prayed in the orans, which is the Latin, or "praying" position that people had used in antiquity: standing, with hands outstretched, a gesture still used today in many Christian rituals. Papacy and monarchy: Catholic Marie de' Medici assumes the traditional pose of a vassal in homage at her coronation following Henry IV's assassination, as painted by Peter Paul Rubens. The gesture of homage (though without any feudal significance) survives in the ceremony for conferring degrees at the University of Cambridge.
The Hamilton Spectator described the work as follows: "Famine" (1997) > "The early immigrants are now honoured at the Toronto waterfront park by > five haunting bronze statues created by Irish sculptor Rowan Gillespie. One > figure depicts a man lying on the ground, emaciated; another shows a > pregnant woman clutching her bulging stomach, while behind her a meek child > stands wide-eyed. One frail figure is bent over with hands clasped in > prayer, contrasted by a man whose arms are extended to the sky in > salvation." In lesser known, archived works such as Ambition and Aspiration, which climbs the wall of the Dublin Treasury Building, the artist reveals his sense of humour and somewhat different preoccupations.
The exception occurred at a dual meet in which "a meticulous official ruled that one of the Humes beat the other across the finish line by a couple of inches although they were hand in hand at the wire." Their best time in a “dead heat” mile with hands clasped was 4:14.6 at the Central Collegiate Conference meet in 1944; the time broke a school record of 4:16.4 that had been set by H.L. Carroll 28 years earlier in 1916. The Hume twins were raised in Canonsburg, a small town in Pennsylvania’s soft coal region, not far from Pittsburgh. Robert Hume set the school record for the mile, and Ross set the record in the half mile.
The main altarpiece shows The Virgin with Saint Augustine and Nicholas of Tolentino. The huge Baroque painting is a late work of Agostino Masucci, a successful follower of Carlo Maratta, from around 1750. It replaced a previous painting by Giovanni da San Giovanni depicting the same subject which was mentioned by Giovanni Baglione in his 1642 biography of Italian artists.Giovanni Baglione: Le vite de' pittori scultori et architetti, Rome, Stamperia d'Andrea Fei, 1642, p. 314 (The previous altarpiece was recently identified as a painting in the Church of Sant'Agostino in Anagni.) The young Saint Nicholas of Tolentino is dressed as an Agustinian friar in black habit, kneeling before an altar with hands clasped in prayer.
Shortly after that, Pippali met the Buddha, was struck with devotion when seeing him, and asked to be ordained under him. Thenceforth, he was called Kāśyapa. As he ordained him, the Buddha gave three directives to practice: Kāśyapa should develop a "lively sense of fear and regard" towards his fellow monastics, regardless of their status; Kāśyapa should attentively listen and practice the teachings of the Buddha (; ); and he should live in mindfulness. alt=Monk in Chinese-style robes, bowing in respect with hands clasped and smiling When the two met, (or in some versions, some time later) Mahākāśyapa exchanged his fine and expensive robe with that of the Buddha, a robe made of rags.

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