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"bristle with" Definitions
  1. to contain a large number of something

56 Sentences With "bristle with"

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

Corporate offices bristle with impenetrable security and armies of guards.
The alleyways of Jerusalem's Old City already bristle with security cameras.
Their pride, dignity and exuberant style burn brightly and bristle with defiance.
The city-state's suburbs bristle with HDB towers, painted calming pastel hues.
All four points of the intersection bristle with fencing and Jersey barriers.
China has built artificial islands that bristle with military installations and missiles.
Yes, they bristle with bar charts, scatterplot diagrams and sometimes eyeball-blistering terminology.
The scenes of dialogue bristle with their own weird sense of artistry and beauty.
In a pile of sand, two slim tree trunks bristle with scores of nails.
They bristle with pimps and drug dealers and all-American hustlers of every variety.
We expect the dance floor to bristle with electricity as their bassy anthems fill The Sidewinder.
He often writes in generalities — but they bristle with clues, with suggestive and, yes, odd language.
Ask them to smile for a family reunion photo, and each mouth would bristle with simple, blunt-tipped cones.
As I wrote in my story, the new community, to be called Quayside, will bristle with sensors, including cameras.
In dropping The Times and The Post, the president came across like all those liberals on Twitter who bristle with cancelitis.
Over the next six hours of real time, simulating four fictional days, these maps will bristle with fires, casualties and barricades.
Of course it's distorted: a welter of writhing, colliding, cranked-up guitars over drums that bristle with treble and a bassline that's nonchalantly implacable.
Their puckers and pleats convey the oceanic sweep of history, and his abstract compositions bristle with attention to trade, slavery, consumerism, and the environment.
Ms. Mehretu, too, has long had an interest in abstracting geography, and her supremely confident paintings on paper bristle with suggestions of bodies in migration.
Declassified files on the Solo operation bristle with fascinating hints of Mr. Seborer's espionage for the Soviets but offer few details, according to the study.
Admiral Davidson described how once-obscure rocks controlled by China now bristle with radar arrays and electronic warfare kit and are studded with aeroplane hangars and bunkers.
The world will bristle with connected sensors, so that people will leave a digital trail wherever they go, even if they are not connected to the internet.
Many stories have been written about Jews during the Holocaust who bristle with their inability to fight back, and The Book Thief's one central Jewish character is no exception.
He's the most senior Chinese official to visit the US since President Donald Trump took office and his two-day trip comes as tensions bristle with North Korea and its neighbors.
Lethality: If NATO forward-based units are to impose costly losses on an aggressor, they must bristle with firepower, including robust anti-armor capabilities, and perhaps even their own artillery and tanks.
With his plays mostly banned, Bulgakov used every freedom inside the covers of ­"Margarita," and its pages bristle with a deeply informed indifference to every dogma, whether historical, religious, political or artistic.
Sandwiched between the Sanborn maps are 21890,2200 pages that bristle with a gripping narrative of the competing agendas that defined the two neighborhoods and reverberated from the 21980th century to the 203th.
From their 2013 debut album to last year's "The Bluest Star," this Philadelphia indie-pop group's songs about adulting, loving and mourning bristle with the quiet intensity of stolen glances in crowded rooms.
American troops, in Mr. Trump's view, should return to American shores, where they can bristle with new weapons — but only engage those who would enter the United States and seek to harm its citizens.
The lyrics bristle with nature imagery: meteor showers, loons among the cattails, fruit bats crying, birds eating worms, silkworms boiled to make thread ("Strange"), frozen pigeons hitting the ground ("Orange"), dogs barking in the distance.
In the past decade, faster DNA sequencing tools have shown that Nowell—Gatenby's old professor, the ­cigarette-smoking pioneer in applying evolutionary thinking to cancer—was prescient: Individual tumors often bristle with rapid-fire genetic changes.
Most of the songs are built around minimal guitars, synth lines, and soft, layered vocals that bristle with fragility whether or not you take into account the fact that it was written in a period of physical restriction.
Unlike some other recent works in which the juxtaposition of Old World culture and New World product succeeds—including Mark-Anthony Turnage's surprising and moving 2011 opera, " Anna Nicole "—"Jerry Springer: The Opera" doesn't bristle with strangeness and energy.
Working in Prague under a repressive political regime in the 1960s, she created photographs of circular forms that look like drains in a giant sink, and made relief paintings that bristle with potentially finger-slicing grids of metal paper fasteners.
Maisel does manage the tightrope walk an astonishing amount of the time, especially in the standup scenes, which bristle with vituperation at a whole industry that would assume men are funnier than women as a way to excuse unfunny men.
Looking back on my favorites released in the United States since January, I'm struck by how many bristle with an argumentative energy that seems to match the times, even if a lot of the filmmakers cast their glances back toward earlier modern moments.
" She's been celebrating all week with plenty of throwback pics and behind-the-scenes snaps from set, including this pic of her striking a pose behind a straw hat, masterfully captioning her pic, "The photos of my babies make this mama bristle with pride.
The hit TV shows that he created—first "The Thick of It," in Britain, and then "Veep"—bristle with satirical zeal, but you do wonder, after a while, whether the everyday dysfunctions, enraging as they are, of an essentially functioning democracy are not too easy a bull's-eye for his scorn.
In fact the apartment and everything in it should have > been consumed. [...] I regard it as the most amazing thing I have ever seen. > As I review it, the short hairs on my neck bristle with vague fear. Were I > living in the Middle Ages, I'd mutter something about black magic.
Survivor takes place on a scrolling map consisting of several areas walled off to form separate but closely spaced fortresses. The fortresses are randomly shaped and bristle with guns that fire continually. The fortresses are also surrounded by a protective wall made of blocks, which take several shots to destroy. The player begins in space outside the forts.
Pitchfork Media only award the album a 4.8 out of 10, concluding that "Appropriately enough, many of Aubert's lyrics here bristle with restlessness, fatigue and disappointment-- "I'm still waiting," "I'm already bored," "What am I aiming towards/ A fight that never ends," "Nothing's coming"—all of which serve to make Neck of the Woods a concept album about the feeling you get listening to Neck of the Woods".
The massif of the Schlenkerspitze is a rock wall of main dolomite over two kilometres long. Its north arête drops down to the saddle of Galtseitejoch, its southwest arête links the Große Schlenkerspitze to the Kleine Schlenkerspitze () and then drops into the Hintere Dremelscharte col. The east arête joins it to the Brunnkarspitze. The entire Schlenker massif is brittle and ruptured, the arêtes bristle with innumerable pinnacles because the rock strata are vertical here.
Opera critics can note the effect of a sizeable supernumerary corps: > The stage layout is sensible but compelling--a set of ascending stairs > running deep upstage, sometimes topped by a very impressive squadron of > cavalry in full armor. Crosses, gates and moving side panels delineate > different scenes. De Ana uses his very large chorus, supplemented by > athletic supernumeraries, with precision: They move quickly, creating > striking tableaux that bristle with bellicose energy.Philip Kennicott.
"Weinmann’s poems, ranging from traditional sonnets and blank verse to more radically experimental forms, push language beyond consolation and praise and toward a possibility of atonement with the world of things."—Diane Kistner, Editor, FutureCycle Press "...Weinmann...is a very serious poet, with a matchless command of form. He is learned, even erudite, but never (ever) stuffy or pedantic. His poems are uncommonly fresh; they bristle with intelligence and unexpected insights..."—Young Smith, Eastern Kentucky UniversityYoung Smith. Afterwords.
In the high school, students were permitted to do what they wished with their hair. This was provided that it remained clean and if it touched their collars it would be tied up. This was later restricted to remain within the realms of a natural colour. Further, high school students were permitted tattoos and piercings provided the former were not visible when wearing the uniform and were only worn with a bristle with regards to the latter.
In September 1943, Kennedy took command of PT-59. He chose to stay and fight in the Pacific Theater (PTO) after his second command, was rammed and sunk by the on the early morning of 2 August 1943, though he had the right by Navy custom to be returned to the states. At 74 feet, the PT-59 was three feet shorter than the PT-109, but it would soon bristle with far more and heavier guns and armament, which required a larger crew to operate.
It had a population of 200,000 and could raise a large civil militia, reinforced by thousands of sailors. As the city had recently expanded, its fortifications were the best maintained in the Republic. Their normal armament of three hundred pieces was being enlarged by the militia hauling the reserve ordnance of the Admiralty of Amsterdam upon the ramparts which began to bristle with thousands of cannon. The low-lying surrounding terrain, below sea level, was easily flooded, making a traditional attack via trenches impractical.
BillieDavies "Davies is mostly an autodidact whose natural talent, relentless, explorative spirit and multifaceted experiences have led to an innovative approach to jazz." "With a background in Classical and Jazz and a lifetime of musical experiences in jams, performances, recordings and music production, the listener is treated to jazz inclinations within her ensembles that bristle with cutting-edge freshness." Aged 25 Billie Davies started the transition to become a professional musician. Some of her influences stem from classical, gypsy, manouche, blues, jazz, free jazz and soul/funk.
Mr. Spottiswoode granted the request and undertook to revise his work. The subject had, however, been so extensively developed in the interim that it proved necessary not merely to revise it but entirely to rewrite the work, which became a memoir of 116 pages. To this, the first elementary treatise on determinants, much of the rapid development of the subject is due. The effect of the study on Mr. Spottiswoodes own methods was most pronounced; there is scarcely a page of his mathematical writings that does not bristle with determinants.
Publishers Weekly, in a review of A Starlit Somersault Downhill, wrote "Willard's typically sophisticated language gains meaning through repeated readings, and her sonorous rhyming couplets impart liveliness to nature's sleeping season. Lavishly detailed, full-spread watercolors afford views of untidy woods and tousled fur--they bristle with energy even as they suggest the restlessness youngsters may experience in the deep of night, wide awake and alone." A Starlit Somersault Downhill has also been reviewed by Booklist, and Kirkus Reviews The Horn Book Magazine, School Library Journal, and the Cooperative Children's Book Center.
" "What is so powerful about the recordings, besides the arrangements, is that they bristle with authenticity and capture the genuineness and zest of the subjects." "Lost Songs of Anatolia is not only a brilliant musical documentary (the rich visuals and dynamic editing support the technical aspects), but it also transforms itself into one of the most important visual archives of the last decade. Never before has such a systematic and creative audiovisual study of Anatolian music of such scope reached the public -- one which actually has a chance of getting the attention of the people and encouraging the notion of protecting cultural heritage.
Doug Lucie is a key figure in contemporary writing for the British stage. Lucie had an especially influential run of works in the 1980s and early 1990s. His plays have been produced at the National Theatre, the Royal Shakespeare Company’s Other Place and the Royal Court. Lucie's work has been hailed by critics for his singular voice and his acid pen. His most influential plays often bristle with sudden and unexpected violence, making him a key transitional figure between the overtly political British drama of the 1970s and the “in-yer-face” school of the 1990s.
This was to prove financially impossible and the case was not pursued. However, Marais gained a measure of renown as the aggrieved party and as an Afrikaner researcher who had opened himself up to plagiarism because he published in Afrikaans out of nationalistic loyalty. Marais brooded at the time of the scandal: "I wonder whether Maeterlinck blushes when he reads such things [critical acclaim], and whether he gives a thought to the injustice he does to the unknown Boer worker?" Maeterlinck's own words in The Life of Termites indicate that the possible discovery or accusation of plagiarism worried him: > It would have been easy, in regard to every statement, to allow the text to > bristle with footnotes and references.
Stephen Thomas Erlewine of the website Allmusic chose "Put It in a Love Song" as one of the three best songs on The Element of Freedom and commented, "On The Element of Freedom, that elegance is so easy it borders on the sleepy, with Keys' understatement undercutting livelier numbers -- chief among them the bubbly Beyoncé duet 'Put It in a Love Song' -- so they play as ballads." Mikael Wood of Spin also chose the song as a highlight on the whole album. Gary Graff of Billboard magazine described the song as a "girl-power anthem". A writer of The New York Times felt that the song gives the album "bristle with a less regal impulse: flirting".
It was recorded at Broadcast Studios and at Thunderwolf Studios, both in Adelaide, which was produced by the group, while Bett co-engineered with Evan James. Sonic Abuses reviewer felt, "[it's] music that is well honed but with a strongly defined identity that has come from the years of touring and recording together, and the twelve tracks on offer bristle with blues-infused energy and the hedonistic spirit of rock 'n' roll." Hannah May Kilroy of Louder observed, "[they] bring together this blend of styles by specialising in big, hard rock riffs paired with powerful, catchy choruses and raw, gritty vocals, with a strong influence of blues throughout." Leigh left early in 2012 and was temporarily replaced on bass guitar by Pat Saracino.
The pages > of the College Minutes during his incumbency bristle with protests against, > and reasons of dissent from, the decision of the majority.Note by Mr P J > Anderson, Secretary to the New Spalding Club, in 'Scottish Notes and Queries > for June 1889', cited in DC MacDonald's Biographical Notes, in Ogilvie 1997. A contemporary printed paper titled 'Outlines of a Plan for Uniting the King’s and Marischal Universities of Aberdeen, With a View to Render the System of Education More Complete' is believed to have been authored by Ogilvie.WR Humphries, 'William Ogilvie and the projected union of the colleges, 1786–1787', 1940, cited by Ritchie in ODNB, 2004. Its reform proposals were rejected by his own College, with seven out of Ogilvie’s ten Professor colleagues opposing it—the "seven wise Masters" as they became known.

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