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"carnation" Definitions
  1. a white, pink, red or yellow flower, often worn as a decoration on formal occasions

113 Sentences With "carnation"

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

People in CarNation could buy stocks or bonds in BananaLand, or companies in CarNation could invest in factories in BananaLand, or the government of CarNation could buy assets directly.
By then, the market had been inundated with approximately 21960 copycat products, like Sego, Bal-Cal, and Carnation Instant Slender (which later became Carnation Instant Breakfast).
While Carnation takes a back seat to the actual narrators on "Radio Rental," Lindsey said, Wilson has plans for Carnation to pop up in other projects down the road.
But this does not mean that BananaLand is "losing" to CarNation.
But this does not mean that BananaLand is 'losing' to CarNation.
Carnation member Matt Bennett Laurents will have a solo exhibition throughout November.
She said she had drunk a glass of Carnation milk and vomited.
But if I had a pink carnation, it would be a different thing.
The red carnation was their symbol, and "Bella Ciao" was their song of freedom.
Two Red Carnation hotels are offering travelers a more classical version of the arts.
Residents of BananaLand want cars, so they buy $203 million of them from CarNation.
But keeping that money inside CarNation will push the value of its currency upward.
Residents of BananaLand want cars, so they buy $2 million of them from CarNation.
Like Nestlé, Carnation had a long history that began with milk and then diversified.
PERINO: Peter brings me my Carnation instant breakfast and my English breakfast tea with honey.
Did nobody send Justin Bieber a box of Ferrero Rocher or even a red carnation?
New to this country, they learned the names of the flowers: rose, sunflower, carnation, daisy.
People in CarNation want bananas, so they buy $1 million worth from people in BananaLand.
He is a son of Susan A. McDonell and Daniel J. McDonell of Carnation, Wash.
Founded in 22, Carnation sold condensed milk to prospectors embarking on the Yukon gold rush.
Other guests were given a rose or carnation to put on the railing of the monument.
Patrick Zachmann: My first "real" reportage was in Portugal in 1975, just after the Carnation Revolution.
Some meal replacement brands even market their products as morning food items, such as Carnation Instant Breakfasts.
They quickly set up the striped boxes with hearts on the front, then added the carnation hedges.
The White Carnation was Belmont's signature cocktail for years, until race officials realized it wasn't popular with racegoers.
There are six new carnation styles, as well as other bouquets that have the flower sprinkled in throughout.
He might be flailing as a candidate, with that exclamation point trailing after his name like a wilted carnation.
Remember the days when you gave your secret admirer a single carnation to show that you had a crush?
It's also my artist name, like a way to tap into that next carnation [sic] or that next evolution.
And then there were the War Mothers, who tried to adopt the carnation as their emblem at a convention.
But that means that car producers in CarNation are sitting on an extra $1 million a year in income.
I have bought boxes of the Carnation Half & Half from Amazon many times that were not close to expiring.
I also liked CARNATION as the "pink shade," although it took the C in CAKES to help me get it.
And you can't go wrong when you ice your cake with homemade buttercream frosting topped with CARNATION pink sugar flowers.
His father, Walter P. Bollenbach, worked at the Carnation Milk Company; his mother, the former Betty Mason, was a homemaker.
That difference is the trade deficit: BananaLand has a $1 million trade deficit; CarNation has a $1 million trade surplus.
The other held on to her AP art project, an iPad, and a fuchsia carnation that Jared gave her for Valentine's Day.
After she gave pamphlets to my mother, she placed a red carnation on my grandmother's bed, just inches away from her feet.
A carnation wedged between the wind and my own shadow, death's child and my own, I will be known as a poet.
After graduating in 1964 from the Nyenrode Business University in Breukelen, he became the Belgian sales manager for the food company Carnation.
Born in Mozambique in 1953, he only moved to Portugal when the Carnation Revolution in 1974 led to the collapse of its colonies.
If CarNation doesn't want its currency to rise, it has to take that $1 million trade surplus and plow it back into BananaLand.
In 2200, Mr. Maucher (pronounced MAO-ker) made a $23 billion deal to acquire the Los Angeles-based dairy and foods company Carnation.
Mr. Harvey wore a white sport coat with a pink carnation, and in a nod to the era that united them, shiny penny loafers.
While pledging, we wore khakis, a collared shirt with tie, a blue blazer, and a fresh white carnation during "business hours" and evening meetings.
Lindner's thick black strokes contrast sharply with carnation and coral pinks here, and her expressive figures remind me of fellow graphic journalist Josh Neufeld's.
Without a working stovetop, she spooned instant coffee into a cup, and then dissolved the grounds in evaporated milk from an open can of Carnation.
I know another woman who once ate the head of a carnation in an attempt to appear "eccentric" and "sexy" in front of a guitar band.
"Once upon a time, we were the largest carnation grower in the U.S.," said Robert Kitayama, president of the Kitayama Brothers flower farm in Watsonville, Calif.
Instead of shelling out for the individual bottles, she decided to replicate Carnation Instant Breakfast by pouring Nesquik and a whole raw egg into the blender.
I'd been working at Carnation Cruises for 26 years when I met my business partner, Janice Buxton, who talked me into buying this bar she owned.
The film is set in the run up to Portugal's 1974 "Carnation" revolution that ended a four-decade-long dictatorship and led the country to democracy.
If CarNation doesn't want the value of its currency to rise, it has to take that $1 million trade surplus and plow it back into BananaLand.
He was later the central figure in Portuguese politics after Salazar's successor, Marcello Caetano, was deposed in what became known as the Carnation Revolution of 1974.
During the moments following the quake, one patron recorded a video of chandeliers rocking back and forth in Carnation Café, a restaurant on the park's Main Street.
When I was a kid, my mother wanted to make sure that my siblings and me were healthy, so she forced us to drink Carnation Instant Breakfast.
Women's Day on March 225 was a national holiday in communist times, and women would traditionally receive a carnation and a pair of stockings on that day.
Dictator Antonio Oliveira Salazar ruled Portugal from 1932 to 1968, though his regime only crumbled on April 25 1974, in the 'Carnation' revolution that led Portugal to democracy.
A military-civilian uprising in Venezuela could go the way of Portugal's 1974 Carnation Revolution, which ended 41 years of dictatorship, or Nigeria's 1999 coup-initiated transition to democracy.
Some of the mismatches become freestanding sculptures, others are cut to fit precisely into wooden crates that were once used for Carnation milk, Johnnie Walker Scotch, or other products.
He's contributed his percussion to The Poster Children, The For Carnation, 5ive Style, Isotope 217, Tortoise, as well as remixing, producing, and a wide range of side and solo projects.
Semiscripted podcasts open doors for content creators The Tenderfoot writers teamed up with Wilson's team to write the script for Carnation, though Lindsey said Wilson improvised many of his lines.
Mr. Torra deposited a carnation on a set of pictures showing Catalan politicians who have either fled Spain or are in jail, awaiting trial for their involvement in the referendum.
Preston Sharp — Creator of the Flag and Flower challenge, dedicated to honoring deceased veterans at military cemeteries by placing an American flag and a red carnation on their grave sites.
If you haven't touched a carnation since then (we don't blame you), you'll definitely want to now with a new line from The Bouqs Company that's giving carnations a serious upgrade.
As if to demonstrate why that approach was necessary, Nestle stopped working with McCann two years later because the agency acquired Erwin Wasey & Co., whose clients included the Nestle rival Carnation.
Portugal, which spent a large part of the 20th century until the 1974 Carnation revolution ruled by an ultra-conservative fascist regime, has since made strides in liberal reforms upholding human rights.
In the ironically titled 2017 pieces "Landscape with Black Mountains-RFGA," and "Girl with Garden Carnation," the invitation is made more explicit by having the figure's vulva exposed to the viewer's gaze.
They maintain their father's traditions: The flowers still come in six days a week, and any child who walks in is given a free carnation in his or her color of choice.
In 1923, she crashed a confectioner's convention around in Philadelphia, in 1925, she took on the American War Mothers, who were using Mother's Day carnation sales to raise money for the war effort.
There were liposculpting and fillers for your vulva, followed by g-spot injections (which would supposedly improve orgasms), and targeted skin lightening treatments that would change the shade of a vulva to Carnation Pink.
The end of that decade brought the idea of the liquid diet—skimmed milk, supplemented with bananas or other fruit—which, in turn, eventually gave rise to products like Metrecal, Carnation Slender, and SlimFast.
Anna's vision of Mother's Day was one in which children gave personal messages of appreciation to mothers, possibly bought a white carnation for them, and credited their mothers with a nearly sacred domestic role.
Firstly, Douglas makes a convincing comparison between the instability that characterized the aftermath of the Carnation Revolution and the various anarchist acts of the late 19th century, updating characters and spaces from the original novel.
The culmination of Mr. Bloncourt's Portuguese work came in 1974, during the so-called Carnation Revolution, when the country's fascist regime was ousted in a nearly bloodless military coup that soon led to democratic rule.
By the time the dictatorship fell in the bloodless Carnation Revolution of 21986, Mr. Soares had been jailed 12 times — serving a total of three years — and had lived in exile for almost five years.
A reading area with a selection of the library's holdings emphasizes his presence in Portugal during the Carnation Revolution and his interests in communications research and methodology, international communications, and cultural imperialism, among other topics.
Some carried white carnation flowers and others held banners saying, "Do not shoot, we are HongKonger" - an appeal to police who fired rubber bullets and tear gas at protesters on Wednesday, injuring more than 70 people.
The Tate is to address this soon with a new game that immerses players in a luminescent garden in which two girls play, from the John Singer Sargent oil painting "Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose" (1885-86).
The coup, in which almost no shots were fired, became known as the Carnation Revolution after a restaurant worker and pacifist, Celeste Caeiro, offered carnations to the soldiers as civilians took to the streets to celebrate.
In fact, she flaunts it, flagrantly, in azure blues, carnation pinks, and perhaps most meaningfully, in a stark white in her moving DNC speech, evoking images of the suffragettes marching through the streets in their white dresses.
And now, if you want to get your hands on the actual tube of lipstick she used — which is by Revlon in a color called "Bachelor's Carnation" — there's now an option to bid for it in November.
Holding a red carnation, the symbol of the revolution, Portugal's president Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa told a room in parliament packed with politicians and guests that more must be done to tackle the country's most pressing challenges.
The startup says it's working with 8,000 hotels worldwide, including Loews, Barcelo, Corinthia Hotels, Rocco Forte Hotels, SLS Hotels, One & Only, Denihan, PH Hotels, Leonardo Hotels, citizenM, The Address Hotels + Resorts, Red Carnation, Steigenberger and LUX* Resorts & Hotels‎.
Diogo Freitas do Amaral, a conservative politician who played a leading role in cementing democracy in Portugal after the so-called Carnation Revolution in 21941, and who was later president of the United Nations General Assembly, has died.
But as a carnation sunset bloomed through the window and the courses rolled on—feather-light pouches of pasta filled with cream of asparagus, an earthy duck breast from the Hudson Valley—I found myself setting cynicism aside.
It was next door to the carnation pink clapboard structure where he and his brother were raised by their mother, Odessa, a cook and house cleaner, and their father, Cassius Marcellus Clay Sr., a sign painter and church muralist.
Here, we find slide shows from two of the Judson concerts, #3 and #13, as well as closer looks at individual dances like "Carnation," Robert Rauschenberg's "Pelican" (1963) — yes, Rauschenberg was a Judsonite — and Carolee Schneemann's "Meat Joy" (1964).
Like many other former students, she has a manila folder of certificates from Wilfred and a graduation photograph of her in a long white dress with fake white fur trim, pearls and a red carnation pinned to her chest.
The project is also a reminder of the role flowers have played as symbols of civil resistance throughout history: Cruz cites the Flower Power movement of the 1960s and '70s and Portugal's 1974 Carnation Revolution as inspirational precedents to her gesture.
People like Evaristo started settling in Cova da Moura in the 1960s, but it was only in 1974, when the "Carnation Revolution" ended Portugal's dictatorship, that the neighborhood became a hub for migrants coming from the former colonies in Africa.
Some protesters carried white carnation flowers, while others held banners saying, "Do not shoot, we are HongKonger," as they sought to avoid a repeat of the violence that rocked the financial centre on Wednesday when police fired rubber bullets and tear gas.
It will include everything from a fur coat and fur stoles, to a ladies' platinum-and-diamond cocktail watch and a minaudiere purse with three compartments for powder, Phillip Morris cigarettes and a tube of her used Revlon "Bachelor's Carnation" lipstick from 1947.
The flower became the holiday's symbol: "The carnation does not drop its petals, but hugs them to its heart as it dies, and so, too, mothers hug their children to their hearts, their mother love never dying," Jarvis explained in a 1927 interview.
Mr. Maucher is perhaps best remembered for his 1984 deal to buy Carnation for $3 billion, a merger he almost single-handedly orchestrated by initiating talks with Carnation's leaders, putting together financing and winning support from Nestlé's board, all in just three weeks.
Mr. Maucher is perhaps best remembered for his 1984 deal to buy Carnation for $3 billion, a merger he almost single-handedly orchestrated by initiating talks with Carnation's leaders, putting together financing and winning support from Nestlé's board, all in just three weeks.
So the 24-count box currently includes the following crayon colors: red, yellow, blue, brown, orange, green, violet, black, carnation pink, yellow orange, blue green, red violet, red orange, yellow green, blue violet, white, violet red, dandelion, cerulean, apricot, scarlet, green yellow, indigo and gray.
Still, the exhibition design affords the viewer a sense of surprise and delight — one must work hard to see all of the outfits, from tea-stained, gristly gowns worthy of Miss Havisham, to graphic, black-and-white cage crinolines, to a cascade of carnation-pink, latex ruffles.
The massive rally saw some protesters carry white carnation flowers, while others held banners saying, "Do not shoot, we are HongKonger," as they sought to avoid a repeat of the violence that rocked the financial centre on Wednesday when police fired rubber bullets and tear gas.
The ceremony, in which the remains were handed to families in simple wooden boxes covered by a red velvet cloth and topped with a white carnation and a photo of the deceased, was a solemn event that also helped draw a line under years of uncertainty.
Brudnizki has instead created a rainbow to rival that of Loulou's (the two are, in fact, in fervid competition): The Rose Room is carnation and chalky green with a gold-leafed coffered ceiling; a ladies' powder room is a tented pink-on-pink chandeliered jewel box.
True, Jared Leto got minor renegade points by wearing a Gucci suit whose lapel and trousers were outlined in contrast red piping — accessorized not only with a silk carnation pin and evening pumps embroidered with silver serpents, but also with Alessandro Michele, Gucci's creative director, on his arm.
When Salazar's dictatorship was finally overturned by a relatively bloodless military coup, the so-called Carnation Revolution, on April 25, 1974, Portugal was a country characterised by incredible social and political backwardness, mired in an imperial power struggle in its attempt to cope with large colonial holdings in southern Africa.
After his discharge he returned to Carnation and had several other jobs before the Secret Service accepted him as an agent in 1959 in its field office in Syracuse, N.Y. He was assigned to the White House detail in 1961 and remained with the agency for the next 20 years.
Malaysians also know it as a teh C peng special: "teh" for tea, brewed with a touch of sugar and poured back and forth between pots from a great height, to make it froth; C for Carnation, the brand once synonymous with evaporated milk, the white at the middle; and "peng" for ice.
While the concept of the color pink shows up as early as 800 BCE, when Homer described the sunrise as "the rosy-fingered dawn" in the Odyssey, the actual usage of the word "pink" didn't appear until the 17th century, when the blushing ruffled edges of Carnation-family flower were named "Pinks" by Greek botanist Theophrastus.
The spring '17 runways saw the color worn in every shade, from fuchsia and rose to peach and magenta: Balenciaga paired ruched raspberry with lavender, while Valentino opted for a block color-clash against red; Chloé served its signature dusty hue, and Rihanna's Fenty x Puma collaboration showed just how nicely carnation and amaranth suits silky sportswear.
The colors and luminosity of John Cimon Warburg's "Peggy in the Garden," a photo taken in 1909 at the family's villa on the French Riviera, bear an extraordinary, even if perhaps serendipitous, resemblance to John Singer Sargent's painting "Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose," which had been a popular hit at the Royal Academy in 1887 and is shown here along with Warburg's autochrome image.
Their fall entry into this admittedly crowded category is a brand called Leret Leret, which offers a dozen or so limited-edition crew necks (with more styles to come) in slightly baggy unisex silhouettes, made all the more cozy by their natural colors (wine red, sky blue, carnation pink) and nostalgic motifs, from wide stripes to oversize clouds to one particularly charming whooshing paper plane.
In 2015, the American artist Jen Monroe, 29, began hosting monochromatic meals in Brooklyn, inspired by the all-black party in the French writer Joris-Karl Huysmans's 1884 novel of debauchery, "À Rebours," and the Italian poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti's 1932 "The Futurist Cookbook," in which the recipes include instructions for diners to take bites while simultaneously stroking sandpaper and being sprayed with carnation perfume.
It also embraced humor and a Dadaist sense of the absurd, as evidenced by Lucinda Childs's "Carnation" (1964), in which the artist placed a colander on her head and a stack of fanned dishwashing sponges in her mouth, or David Gordon's singing of "Second Hand Rose" and "Get Married, Shirley" during the first performance of his finger-wiggling "Mannequin Dance" (21973), which he conceived of while in his bathtub.
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I endeavored to suggest the journey by a recitation accompanied by eight perfumes, of decided contrast, which I used in the following succession: White Rose to suggest the departure from New York, large bunches of roses brought to the steamer to the departing tourists; Violet told of a sojourn on the Rhine, Almond of Southern France, Bergamot of Italy, Cinnamon of the Orient, Cedarwood of India and Carnation of the arrival in Japan.

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