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79 Sentences With "breathes life into"

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

Gomez breathes life into Kygo's EDM hit "It Ain't Me."
Scarlett Johansson breathes life into this fantasy in the 2013 Hollywood feature, Her.
Johnson's lyrical prose breathes life into the New York City of 200 years ago.
With simple pinches, swirls, and gaps, he breathes life into the hard, previously unforgiving stone.
For them, Te Urewera is an ancient and ancestral homeland that breathes life into their culture.
Never are they more fascinating than when she dwells on them and breathes life into their travails.
And 29-year-old Swedish textile designer Malin Bobeck is an artist who breathes life into fabric.
He effortlessly (or at least it looks like that) breathes life into tattered, flimsy, and even wistful forms.
" Adding, "The creations and the creators, contrary to fleeting popularity or fame, is what breathes life into art.
A crucial, disturbing aspect of this scandal is that it breathes life into Trump's unsubstantiated accusations against Biden.
Elegy not only stands on its own as a significant work, but breathes life into the rest of the exhibition.
" An unusual glimpse of Smith's private world It is the pulse of Smith's humanity that breathes life into "Tales of Wonder.
It illustrates the #Biblical creation narrative from the Book of #Genesis in which God breathes life into #Adam, the first man.
Around Huaqiangbei, a string of ghost markets, repair shops, and retailers breathes life into the city's unique but increasingly fragile counterfeit ecosystem.
So our way of talking about the cloud versions of Office 365 is that they're connected, that this breathes life into them.
The impossibility of proving a negative is what breathes life into birtherism, and any of a hundred other conspiracy theories every day. 5.
It's like I have these songs, but I'm always looking for the spark of experience that breathes life into the performance later on.
In Call Me by Your Name in particular, director Luca Guadagnino breathes life into the bones of its source novel, written by André Aciman.
In reorienting us in the same way, Compass breathes life into the ashes of history, forcing its readers to see anew the world around them.
Given that culture breathes life into our neighborhoods, making them memorable, there should be a process to assess that value before we tear it apart.
Because even with a few wobbles, Gillespie has choreographed a winning account that breathes life into Harding's tale after 20-some-odd years on ice.
This enjoyable book breathes life into characters better remembered for their namesakes than themselves: Tasman (Tasmania), Louis Antoine de Bougainville (bougainvillea) and Carl Linnaeus (Linnaean classification).
The interracial cuckolding genre breathes life into the truism that some kind of sexual attraction, openly acknowledged or not, is often a component of racial contempt.
"It's never too late to pursue your dreams [and] how music breathes life into all of us and how music can bring different generations together," he said.
With stunning visuals (most of which were not CGI) and captivating choreography, Jonze breathes life into a product that got mixed reviews after its release in February.
It breathes life into the oft-impenetrable world of the internet, social networks, programming, online commerce and video gaming—activities often dismissed today as absurd and dehumanising.
Surprisingly, he's entirely self-taught, with a meticulous drawing technique that breathes life into otherworldly figures and forms, all bridging the gap between the tangible and ethereal.
Verax breathes life into off-camera events by means of illustrated storytelling, but comics' potential to inform the public with well researched journalism goes beyond the narrative realm.
The film breathes life into an opaque intimacy (which is otherwise predominantly seen in photographs of their activism): Sylvia proves to be a total flake, forgetting Marsha's birthday.
She breathes life into the leading characters in her personal history, and tells her mesmerizing tale with an honesty that is at once unsparing and full of love.
Their descriptions may paint vivid pictures, but it's your imagination — and its endless capacity to envision horrors far more terrifying than any filmmaker — that breathes life into the horror.
The gentle movement of the 2,000 suspended stars breathes life into the sculpture, making it seem as corporeal as the characters being brought to life in the RSC today.
With gestural precision and a modulated delivery that breathes life into each word, Redgrave dominates the movie even in her character's absence by filling it with a complicated sense of loss.
Some pro-impeachment Democrats feel certain that if Mueller breathes life into his report through his testimony, public support for impeachment will grow and more House Democrats will back opening an inquiry.
During arts and crafts time, Bonnie breathes life into a spork, a pair of leftover googly eyes, popsicle sticks, and a red pipe cleaner to create a new best friend named Forky (Tony Hale).
Baracoon breathes life into those memories — of the horrors of abduction, of Middle Passage, of slavery, of the Jim Crow South — and makes them so real and so present that they would trouble anyone's sleep.
"The Subway Stops at Bryant Park" (Leapfrog Press) by N. West Moss is a charming anthology that celebrates an oasis for all seasons and breathes life into quotidian characters who might otherwise have gone unnoticed.
A dream memory also breathes life into Erin Diebboll's "Amir's House" (2017), a large architectural drawing, part floor-plan, part elevation, of the home where the artist's father-in-law spent his childhood in Tel Aviv.
Not only does the letter detail how Ralph Angel, alone, is to inherent the land — thus giving him power to confront the ways in which Charley has underestimated him — the letter breathes life into Ralph Angel.
With its sagging, waterlogged analog synths lines and hushed spoken word, this one's pretty unified in sound and spirit, shot through with the wistful discontent that breathes life into so much of the world's best synth instrumentals.
Beginning with the friendship between Johnson, the moralist, and Boswell, his promiscuous future biographer — a connection that was initially forged outside the Club — Damrosch breathes life into "The Friends Who Shaped an Age" (in his subtitle's phrase).
In a confident production directed and choreographed by Keith Andrews, an excellent cast breathes life into fully drawn characters (the book is by Sam Goldstein and Craig Clyde), while Mr. Russell's music varies nicely from wailing guitar to gentle lullaby.
Eric Goldschmidt, a gaffer at the Corning Museum of Glass demonstrates the initial torching of the glass and gently breathes life into the glass tube while it rests inside an ornament mold from Lauscha, one of the oldest glassworks in the world.
In the YouTube ecosystem, where controversy follows vloggers the same way teenagers on Instagram do, the dramatic sigh of the apology video doesn't just indicate that a plea for forgiveness will follow, but it breathes life into a new cycle of click-driven content.
The whole book until this point has been hammering home the message that time is fluid, labyrinthine, and that even if Elio and Oliver never see each other again, their episode together persists in their memories, breathes life into their other loves, and surfaces in all moments in time.
House Democrats hope the public testimony of Marie Yovanovitch on Friday breathes life into their narrative that President TrumpDonald John TrumpFive takeaways from the Democratic debate As Buttigieg rises, Biden is still the target Leading Democrats largely pull punches at debate MORE and his associates carried out a shadow campaign to oust the top U.S. diplomat to Ukraine.
Retrieved April 25, 2017. and Animation Magazine also covered the ads.Milligan, Mercedes (March 17, 2017). "Hornet’s Peter Sluszka Breathes Life into FDA Tobacco Campaign".
"WJT's Ivanov breathes life into Chekhov classic". CBC News, January 30, 2014. He served as artistic director of the Winnipeg Jewish Theatre from 2006 to 2014."It’s lights out at Winnipeg Jewish Theatre".
The fourth show was Welcome to Paradise, a solo show by Polish artist Anka Dabrowska. "Her urban eye is up there with the likes of Stephen Wiltshire, but she homes in on the details rather than the vista, and breathes life into them".
Filled with this > determination, he leaves to become an aviator. Charleston retreats further > into a fantastic world of his own building. The people of this world are > half a dozen of the sixty who were shipwrecked ninety years ago. Believing > that "Mankind's got one future—in the past," Charleston breathes life into > these creatures of his imagination.
Retrieved 2012-12-23. Leonard Klady writing in Variety exclaimed, "This is one film that doesn't stint on thrills and knows how to use them. It has a sympathetic lead, a stunning antagonist, state-of-the-art special effects, top-of-the-line craftsmanship and a taut screenplay that breathes life into familiar territory."Klady, Leonard (8 August 1993).
SiNNERMAN Ensemble mounted the work at the Viaduct Theater in Chicago, to great success in 2009 with direction and adaptation by Sheldon Patinkin. An adaptation by Michael Nathanson, with the setting transported to Winnipeg, Manitoba in the 1950s, was staged by the Winnipeg Jewish Theatre in 2014."WJT's Ivanov breathes life into Chekhov classic". CBC News, January 30, 2014.
Cole, p. 221. Cole then asserts that Cellini goes beyond reviving the work, but raised the dead, in which he means that Cellini's salvation was remelting the bronze.Cole, p. 221 Cellini also invokes Christ and by doing so he breathes life into the sculpture.Cole, p. 222. Casting the Perseus was more than meeting the demand of Cosimo I; Cellini was proving himself to Florence in a newly refurbished medium.
Aengus is the foster-father and protector of Diarmuid Ua Duibhne of the Fianna. He rescues Diarmuid and Gráinne during their pursuit by the Fianna; after Diarmuid's death, Aengus takes his body back to the Brú na Bóinne where he breathes life into it when he wishes to speak with Diarmuid. According to Death Tales of the Tuatha de Danann, Aengus kills his stepfather Elcmar in retaliation for killing Midir.
Phyllis Frelich received the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play in 1980 for Children of a Lesser God, produced by the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles. Linda Bove appeared regularly on the television series Sesame Street. Other actors who have worked with NTD include Colleen Dewhurst, Sir Michael Redgrave, Chita Rivera, Jason Robards, and Meryl Streep.Smith, Helen C. "National theater troupe breathes life into words," The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, January 29, 1988.
" B. V. S. Prakash of The Times of India wrote, "Despite a few narrative lapses, the much-hyped semi-periodic epic lives up to expectations. Unlike his previous action-centric films, director Rajamouli dishes a heart- touching love story in a lavish canvas convincingly. Also kudos for the way he has visualised and presented the film." He added, "After not-so-impressive Chirutha, Ram Charan Tej returns as a valiant soldier and breathes life into the larger-than-life role with ease.
" "Alfred Zwiebel uses the impressionistic technique with all its wealth of light, nuanced play of color, and open palette, and this breathes life into what he paints. ... One could call Zwiebel a belated Pissarro, but with the caveat that he is a Pissarro for contemporary eyes.""Zwiebel-Ausstellung bei Schumacher" ("Zwiebel Exhibition at Schumacher's"), Die Abendzeitung, Munich, Germany, 9 January 1968. p.7. The original German text reads: "Alfred Zwiebel bedient sich der impressionistischen Technik, mit allen Möglichkeiten der Lichtfülle, des nuancierten Farbenspiels und der offenen Palette.
" The Rolling Stone Record Guide wrote that "the title track is a cutting slice of social observation, but the remainder of the album is muddled. For the first time, Browne seems unsure of himself." However, the original 1986 Rolling Stone review by Jimmy Guterman praised the album over-all in part because of Browne's "new-found ability to link the personal to the political," which "breathes life" into the songs and "prevents them from becoming too didactic. Browne's not just writing about the headlines; he's trying to tell the stories of the people they affect.
The Pilgrim's Progress was much more popular than its predecessors. Bunyan's plain style breathes life into the abstractions of the anthropomorphized temptations and abstractions that Christian encounters and with whom he converses on his course to Heaven. Samuel Johnson said that "this is the great merit of the book, that the most cultivated man cannot find anything to praise more highly, and the child knows nothing more amusing." Three years after its publication (1681), it was reprinted in colonial America, and was widely read in the Puritan colonies.
Brennan Carley, also writing for Spin, complimented Gomez's "impeccable" phrasing and the track's "crisp" production, further noting that the song manifested Gomez's growth as a singer; he wrote she "breathes life" into the song and excels at "stretching the boundaries of what her aerated tones can achieve". Myles Tanzer from The Fader wrote: "Swedish [production] perfection aside, Gomez makes the song. Her vocal performance is equal parts power and fun." Another The Fader writer said Gomez sounded "borderline unrecognizable", adding, "and I'm 100% here for the glo up".
Adam and Eve are the Bible's first man and first woman. Adam's name appears first in Genesis 1 with a collective sense, as "mankind"; subsequently in Genesis 2–3 it carries the definite article ha, equivalent to English "the", indicating that this is "the man". In these chapters God fashions "the man" (ha adam) from earth (adamah), breathes life into his nostrils, and makes him a caretaker over creation. God next creates for the man an ezer kenegdo, a "helper corresponding to him", from his side or rib.
Wexford Plaza is a 2016 Canadian comedy-drama film directed by Joyce Wong and starring Reid Asselstine and Darrel Gamotin."A near-miracle of writing, Wexford Plaza breathes life into a Scarborough strip mall". National Post, December 1, 2017. The film centres on Betty (Reid Asselstine), a lonely young woman who takes a job as a security guard at a strip mall in the Scarborough area of Toronto, and becomes attached to Danny (Darrel Gamotin), a bartender in the mall."Review: Joyce Wong’s promising Wexford Plaza is subtle, clever and sobering".
The film begins, Goddess Parvathi Devi making a mud sculpture of a boy and breathes life into it, makes him as a guard when she goes to the bath. According to her ordinance, he does not let anyone in. At that juncture, Lord Siva arrives, the child stops him when enraged Siva beheads him. Later, realizing the boy as his son, Siva makes him alive with the head of a demon elephant Gajasura his ardent devotee, giving the name Gajanana a man with an elephant face and makes him the lord of the Ganas.
The game's most impressive achievement, as stated by Hansen, was the "thematic cohesion", which was said to revolve around self-imposed isolation. The sound design was lauded to have evoked a Hitchcockian sense of fear. Reviewing Firewatch, Game Informer's Jeff Cork wrote, "I was immediately drawn into the game's world, partly because of the power of its simple text intro, and also because of the novelty of taking part in something so mundane". Cork observed that its interactive dialog, though simple, "breathes life into the game" and called the conversations "natural" and "engaging".
Those who dwell on the Earth are deceived into making an image of the beast as a means to worship his authority. It is the lamb-horned beast who breathes life into the "image of the beast", so that the image becomes alive and is able to speak. It also declares death to anyone who does not worship the authority of the beast. Those who are killed for not conforming to the authority of the beast are blessed through the "first resurrection" that allows them to rule in Christ's presence as priests during the one thousand- year reign.
Naegle's name was partly based on Selman's agent Sue Neagle, and Lindsey was chosen as the first name because Selman thought it sounded "annoying" and "pretentious". Naegle is voiced by Tress MacNeille, who Selman described as a "huge asset" to the series, and stated that she "breathes life" into the character. "They Saved Lisa's Brain" features English theoretical physicist and cosmologist Stephen Hawking as himself. According to executive producer and current showrunner Al Jean, Hawking was asked to guest-star because "we [they] were looking for someone much smarter than all the Mensa members [in Springfield]", and so they "naturally thought of him".
The play is set in the world of Greek mythology, at the time of the very beginning of the human race, when the first woman was not yet created. A personified goddess of Nature, accompanied by Concord and Discord ("For Nature works her will from contraries"), descends to a pastoral Earth inhabited by four shepherds. At their petition, Nature breathes life into a clothed statue of the first woman. Concord seals her soul to her body with an embrace, and the new woman is given the best gifts of the seven planets of traditional astronomy and astrology.
This Fire Drilling process involves an upright wooden piece being twirled rapidly on a flat base. It produces heat through friction, although this seemingly simple instrument requires considerable skill to make anything but smoke. The fire maker blows on an ignited spark to fan it into a vigorous flame, and the breathing (or blowing air) and friction in the chest animate an infant. The Franciscan friars connected this idea of Fire Drilling, namely, the conception of tonalli as breath, to Christianity as the infusion of breath into the body recalls the beginning of Genesis, where God the Father breathes life into Adam.
O'Sullivan's first collection of poetry, Kneeling on the Redwood Floor, was released by Lapwing Publications in 2011, a work which the author himself did not rate very highly. In 2014, Alba Publishing released his second collection, Groundwork, followed in 2017 by Courting Katie, published by Salmon Poetry. Reviewing Courting Katie, Dedalus poet Matthew Geden describes O'Sullivan as a "vibrant voice" that offers "timely reminders to look closer at the world around us". Writing in Poetry Ireland Review, Jessica Traynor likens O'Sullivan to a "latter-day Kavanagh" who "breathes life into deserted streets and grey city corners".
It was chosen by BBC radio as a feature “tale of violence, cults, and religious extremists”. It was described by the British Army's official publication, Soldier Magazine, as "Imagine the best of James Bond and The Da Vinci Code rolled into one, and that is what you get with this book". The UK's Catholic Herald newspaper said it "Keeps the tension ratcheted up ... Selwood breathes life into the conspiracy thriller by knowing his history and deploying it well." Counsel Magazine said "No frills … taut and tight … the story moves with the pace and grace of a Hollywood screenplay".
Brian Cohen of Billboard magazine noted that "Clocks" served as a "launching pad" for songs featured in X&Y;, "several of which echo that track either in structure or feel." "Speed of Sound", the first single from Coldplay's third album, X&Y;, is similar to "Clocks", in that the two songs have the same descending chord progression. According to The New York Times, American singer Jordin Sparks's 2008 single "No Air" "breathes life into the overfamiliar piano line" from "Clocks". The song "Should I Go" by American singer Brandy, from her album Afrodisiac, samples the piano riff of "Clocks", as does Mexican singer Alejandro Fernández's 2007 single "Te Voy A Perder".
In Japan, Game Machine listed Die Hard Arcade on their August 15, 1996 issue as being the second most-successful arcade game of the year. Reviewing the arcade version, a Next Generation critic said Die Hard Arcade "breathes life into a dead-end genre", as the fighting moves are effective and far more abundant than in previous beat 'em ups, even discounting the acquirable weapons. He also found the graphics "lively", but criticized that it is often difficult to line up attacks with opponents, and the action is sometimes glitchy or sluggish. It was Sega's most successful US-produced arcade game up to that time.
According to David Steel, curator of European art at the North Carolina Museum of Art, Erin Jones "brought that museum into the modern era", employing "a top-notch curator, John Nolan", and following "best practices in conservation and restoration". The museum now regularly cooperates with other institutions, lending works for outside shows such as a Rembrandt exhibit in 2011. Each Easter season, the university and the Museum & Gallery present the Living Gallery, a series of tableaux vivants recreating noted works of religious art using live models disguised as part of two-dimensional paintings.Greenville News, April 9, 2006; "A dramatic transformation: BJU's 'Living Gallery' breathes life into religious masterworks", Greenville News, March 25, 2008.
McCarthy wrote that the book was "one of those rare jewels which has remained hidden from the English-speaking world for over fifty years" and "an extremely important work for understanding the foundations of Marcuse's own intellectual perspective and his later theoretical developments". In his view, it "recaptures the heart of Hegel's philosophical vision of reality, indirectly shows its importance for social theory, and breathes life into the most difficult of Hegel's writings." Tuttle described the book as "Marcuse's most important and certainly his most fundamental work" and "a philosophical classic", and recommended it "without qualification to advanced undergraduates and graduate students." He considered it less ideological than Marcuse's later writings, but essential for understanding Marcuse's Eros and Civilization (1955) and One-Dimensional Man (1964).
It is, in short, a mind blower." The Independent stated, "Random Access Memories breathes life into the safe music that dominates today's charts, with its sheer ambition ... It's an exciting journey, and one that, for all its musical twists and turns, has its feet planted on the dancefloor." Melissa Maerz of Entertainment Weekly called it "a headphones album in an age of radio singles; a bravura live performance that stands out against pro forma knob- twiddling; a jazzy disco attack on the basic house beat; a full collaboration at a time when the superstar DJ stands alone." She concluded her review by saying that "if EDM is turning humans into robots, Daft Punk are working hard to make robot pop feel human again.
" Variety found the film not believable, warning viewers to "lower your expectations", and the cinematography "flat"; yet concluded that the director had "deliver[ed] in the inspiration department". The Hollywood Reporter said that McLeod's inexperience as a director resulted in the script feeling "little bald, with thinly rendered characters and a dramatic tempo that rarely gets into high gear", but ultimately finding it to be a "respectable effort overall" for a debut director. Stephen Dalton of The Hollywood Reporter also had this to say of the film: "credit is due to (Richie) Lawrence, who breathes life into the kind of clean-cut, peachy-keen, elder-respecting grandchild archetype not seen onscreen since Hollywood discovered the surly teenager. The 71-year-old Dreyfuss gives a worthy autumnal performance, low on vanity, more actor than star.
His cocky charm breathes life into the character of John > McClane... McTiernan packs his skyscraper adventure with explosions, fights, > and relentless action... along with writers Jeb Stuart and Steve DeSouza... > effectively redefines the action movie as one-man-army. Willis quips his way > through a series of clever setups and payoffs... Superbly acted by Willis as > a guy who really would rather be somewhere else, McClane is a hero for the > 1990s... A true rollercoaster ride of a movie. In 2001, the American Film Institute (AFI) ranked Die Hard number 39 on its 100 Years... 100 Thrills list recognizing the most "heart-pounding" films. In 2008, Empire ranked it number 29 on its list of the 500 Greatest Movies of all Time. In 2014, The Hollywood Reporters entertainment industry-voted ranking named it the eighty-third best film of all time.
The film saw him portray Sekhar, who grows up idolizing the gangster played by Prakash Raj, and Vikram revealed that he approached the film like an actor, even though the film's script was written "for a star". Upon release, the film gained mixed reviews though reviewers praised Vikram's performance, with a critic claiming that "Vikram breathes life into the film", "he looks sensational with his toned body, killer looks unarguably delivers yet another outstanding performance of his career" and to "see the film only for him". Similarly, the review from The Hindu was critical of the excessive violence and mentioned that "as narration gives way after a point, Vikram can only appear helpless". His next release, Kanthaswamy, directed by Susi Ganesan and also featuring Shriya Saran, became the first superhero film in Tamil cinema, with Vikram being featured as a vigilante dressed as an anthropomorphic rooster, Kokorako and a CBI Officer.
The Tetley's opening exhibitions involved a number of artists responding to the history and space of the new building under the general title 'A New Reality'. This included James Clarkson (29 November 2013 to 16 February 2014), Emma Rushton (29 November 2013 to 12 January 2014), Derek Tyman (29 November 2013 to 12 January 2014), Simon Lewandowski (24 January to 28 February 2014), Sam Belinfante (24 January to 28 February 2014), and Rehana Zaman (29 November 2013 to 1 July 2014).'New gallery breathes life into the city’s ‘South Bank' in The Yorkshire Post (UK newspaper), 29 November 2013 In 2015 an exhibition was held, titled 'Painting in Time', looking at contemporary painting and its relationship to other media used by artists, including work by artists such as Yoko Ono, Natasha Kidd, Claire Ashley, Jessica Warboys and Polly Appleborn.'Arts preview: Painting in Time at The Tetley, Leeds' in The Yorkshire Evening Post (UK newspaper), 22 April 2015 An exhibition staged at the Tetley in 2016 recreated a controversial exhibition by the Cypriot artist Stass Paraskos, originally held in Leeds in 1966.

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