Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

85 Sentences With "coheres"

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

More than ever before, Dorrance Dance coheres as a company.
Yet Seberg never quite coheres into anything interesting or meaningful.
Pettibon's work coheres in its constant critique of American sociopolitical issues.
And as the final credits roll on another season, a larger picture coheres.
What we can see coheres as a man stripped of his basic humanity.
"American Audacity" is the rare example of a collection that coheres into a manifesto.
The fonts are clean, the drop shadows are consistent, and everything just coheres really well.
Ah. Everything in The Witness coheres with the central idea, and that is an astounding achievement.
Each of these collaborations between Native American storytellers and comic book artists coheres in surprising ways.
Mr. Trump is only ordinary for possessing an anti-self, around which his personality secretly coheres.
But even though it's sleek, frequently thoughtful, and always cool, Westworld's scattered self never coheres into anything.
It's their outrage, underlined by their politics, that coheres this loud group of leaders and grassroots activists together.
And the novel, like a city, somehow coheres, as Rich never loses control of the riotous raw material.
It coheres as a united whole, with its own unique sonic identity, and musically it's tighter than initially evident.
Furiously unrelenting, even by the standards of the genre (which is focused on harnessing chaotic energy), the collection coheres perfectly.
Like Dougherty I have young children, and I want to give them a story of America that coheres as an inheritance.
But McBride makes sure everything coheres, thanks to hip-huggingly tight swing rhythms and generous coats of grease on the harmonies.
So much of the sequencing is not chronological that it isn't until the very end that the full narrative picture coheres.
IGOR is a masterful work by a polymath, an architect of an entire universe that coheres more clearly with each release.
It's on DS2 that, from start to finish, his miserable croak coheres over beats that together form a whirring, swiveling death machine.
The exhibition coheres by virtue of Wolkoff's eye for texture, light, and form, as well as her instinct for barely subdued drama.
"It's a very embedded phenomenon that doesn't change very quickly, because it's the result of the way the whole society coheres," Leibbrandt said.
You have to know your video games to understand Elon Musk's social-networking analogies, but even then it barely coheres as an idea.
That the story coheres at all is thanks, in large part, to a grounding and utterly transfixing performance by series star Dan Stevens.
She picks up the pieces, playing a drum solo that coheres into a powerful rumble, and sends us back to that joyful melody.
It feels, on first watch, as if it's rambling, though it coheres much better the second time around, once you know where it's going.
The problem with that thinking is that it says that the underlying facts don't matter as long as the bigger-picture argument still coheres.
For viewers standing a few inches away from such a painting, the collar appears as a hieroglyphic jumble; step back a pace, and it coheres.
As eccentric English pretty boys, they're justified in this delusion, and somehow it all coheres anyway, held together by vexingly hummable choruses and brash sex appeal.
Gunesekera artfully renders the unequal relationship between the two boys, and the fractures within their families, but the external world never quite coheres with their interiors.
What Big Little Lies coheres on now is a kind of paradoxical intimacy: a feeling of mutual protectiveness, expressed while keeping careful distances from each other.
Lynch, from the world of film and visual art, gives the series an unusual grandeur, while Frost makes sure it coheres in ways we expect from television.
When you imagine what the effect must have been in a France only recently emerging from the Late Middle Ages, the décor coheres and is deeply satisfying.
Let Ms. Favaretto's cloud stand as the logo for this diffuse biennial, which brings together many of the biggest names in art today but never quite coheres.
Using the presidency to compel private enterprises to ideologically conform to a particularly set of religious customs hardly coheres with commitments either to limited government or personal freedom.
Now that Raqqa is cleared, it is time to reform U.S. strategy in Syria so that it coheres with American strategy toward Iran overall rather than undermining it completely.
It may be candy-colored, and manic in how deftly it bounces from scene to scene — or, rather, from shootout to musical sequence to water ballet — but it coheres.
That all coheres into a loose sort of politics, but someone who spends eight or ten hours a day bathing in it could not by any rights be considered informed.
Generation Wealth (which has an accompanying book) functions best as a retrospective of her work; unfortunately, the narrative about wealth in America that the film tries to fashion never really coheres.
The big picture of the essays coheres slowly but clearly: These culture wars are real, life-and-death matters, whose soldiers (of all genders) suffer lost opportunities, death threats and worse.
" Gradually, his mind coheres enough to begin to hold on to the idea of a leaf, "coaxing it into being with the infinite patience he had built during the eons before.
" Raskin added: "I would be inclined to look at the whole pattern of obstructionism by the White House, and then figure out how it best coheres with the articles of impeachment that are being suggested.
But once you've played it X number of times, often enough to have absorbed its various twists and turns, I swear it all coheres in a flash, upon which you'll be happy to wander its virtual maze.
The gradation of color, from black to indigo to rust and golden-brown, visually coheres the work, while the geometric simplicity of the rectangle and circle are complemented by the almost baroque interlacing of the gossamer seaweed strands.
What makes this music hardcore, a term that has meant many things to many genres, is technical mastery — abrasion that isn't just a mess often suggests that musicians are showing off, because discord that coheres is hardest of all.
By framing the new special around his personal story, and also trimming and refining some weak spots, his act now coheres, taking on a new force and clarity, one that represents his finest, boldest and probably most polarizing work.
Here she goes electro-experimental and expands the music exponentially, so that it coheres sonically even though every track is different—here charming and there disruptive, here droney and there catchy (or maybe both, like the dubwise 1:39 "Addis").
We Wanted a Revolution coheres around significant historical events rather than a standard artist-centric group show design, meaning that the same artist is often represented in different areas throughout the show, dependent on which movements and moments they participated in.
A number of elements echo other Shakespeare plays, including "A Winter's Tale" and "The Tempest," but the story of the Prince of Tyre, who wanders from shore to shore and loses both his wife and daughter before improbable reunions, never really coheres.
And, if Minervudottir's tale never quite coheres, never quite touches the rest of the book, then her very ice-floe remoteness becomes a stark reminder of our society's detachment from a world in which a woman could simply and happily be left alone.
So is "Bohemian Rhapsody" as a song, yet somehow, by dint of shameless alchemy and professional stamina, it coheres; the movie shows poor Roger Taylor doing take after take of the dreaded "Galileo!" shrieks, bravely risking a falsetto-related injury in the cause of art.
To arrange 125-odd years (foregrounded by a further 6,000 years) of countless phenomena and events into something that coheres for the reader, all while remaining faithful to the chaotic rush of sense-impressions that define human consciousness, is a daunting task to say the least.
Painted mainly in yellows, it percolates with horizontal, vertical, zigzag and circular brushstrokes, supplemented by dabs and swirls overlaid with drips and drizzles of red, sea-blue, bright green, and pink, an eruptive and bubbling surface that coheres with the patient viewer's unfolding fluency in the brushwork's measured and predictable patterns.
Extreme close-ups get uncomfortably intimate and keep viewers on edge from the first frame; juxtaposing the sound of stretching leather with a shot of the individual folds of skin on a pair of quivering lips is the stuff of nightmares, made all the more unsettling because it never coheres into sense.
For example, Jesus' teaching in Mark 12:18–27 concerning the resurrection of the dead coheres well with a saying of Jesus in Q on the same subject of the afterlife (reported in Matthew 8:11–12/Luke 13:28–29), as well as other teachings of Jesus on the same subject.
A New York Times reviewer wrote that Wheeldon was "clever in capturing idealized Paris street life" though "the dance never quite coheres." Another New York Times reviewer wrote that the scenes were unmemorable but "well crafted that the overall result is amiable entertainment." Wheeldon later claimed he "never felt entirely happy" with the ballet.
The song samples the melody from "L-O-V-E" by Nat King Cole and sees Steinfeld singing in a lower range. "Man Up" is a hip hop-influenced pop-rap song that "coheres into a believably messy portrait of love’s aftermath". The closing track and lead single, "Wrong Direction" is an "emotional" tearjerker piano ballad that addresses a past relationship.
In mathematical set theory, a square principle is a combinatorial principle asserting the existence of a cohering sequence of short closed unbounded (club) sets so that no one (long) club set coheres with them all. As such they may be viewed as a kind of incompactness phenomenon. Section 4. They were introduced by Ronald Jensen in his analysis of the fine structure of the constructible universe L.
The weak van der Waals force that coheres multilayer stacks does not always affect the individual layers' electronic properties. That is, while the electronic properties of certain multilayered epitaxial graphenes are identical to that of a single layer, other properties are affected, as they are in bulk graphite. This effect is well understood theoretically and is related to the symmetry of the interlayer interactions. Epitaxial graphene on SiC can be patterned using standard microelectronics methods.
Reviewer Richie Unterberger said of the album that "there are few other albums of the late '60s... on which so much talent is evident, but so little coheres into satisfying results." Richie Unterberger, Review of Kangaroo, Allmusic.com. Retrieved 2 April 2019 The band split up in early 1969. Hall moved on to form the band Orleans before becoming a politician; Smart later formed Mountain with Leslie West; and Keith began a solo career.
A self-adhering bandage or cohesive bandage (coban)Dorland's Dictionary of Medical Acronyms and Abbreviations, 7e is a type of bandage or wrap that coheres to itself but does not adhere well to other surfaces. Coban is commonly used as a wrap on limbs because it will stick to itself and not loosen. Due to its elastic qualities, coban is often used as a compression bandage. It is used both on humans and animals.
By the 1950s, coherence was also included. The criterion of coherence (also called criterion of consistency or criterion of conformity) can be used only when other material has been identified as authentic. This criterion holds that a saying or action attributed to Jesus may be accepted as authentic if it coheres with other sayings and actions already established as authentic. While this criterion cannot be used alone, it can broaden what scholars believe Jesus said and did.
It also covers various kinds of unique cultural elements such as music, dancing, parkour and handicraft booths to display diverse Hong Kong culture. Freespace Fest acts as a main event to arouse people's interest in participating other Arts events and concern local cultures. It also provides an opportunity to Hong Kong people to relax and enjoy the amusement of cultures and arts. Moreover, it can strongly coheres the boundaries of Hong Kongers through sharing and preserving unique culture.
These systems "create coherent text – text that coheres within itself and with the context of situation" They are both structural (involving choices relating to the ordering of elements in the clause), and non-structural (involving choices that create cohesive ties between units that have no structural bond). The relevant grammatical systems include Theme, Given and New,Halliday, M.A.K. and Matthiessen, C.M.I.M. Matthiessen. 2004. An Introduction to Functional Grammar. Arnold as well as the systems of cohesion, such as Reference, Substitution, and Ellipsis.
Beyond College Lane is the Science Education Complex composed of three buildings, each housing classrooms, large lecture halls, and science laboratories. The SEC is also home to the office of the dean of the School of Science and Engineering, the departments of mathematics and biology, and the health sciences program. Specialized facilities include a small collection of stuffed, preserved animals and a greenhouse. The SEC was built in 1997 as part of an aggressive expansion program, with architecture that coheres with the old Ateneo Municipal in Intramuros.
However, those text-based features which provide cohesion in a text do not necessarily help achieve coherence, that is, they do not always contribute to the meaningfulness of a text, be it written or spoken. It has been stated that a text coheres only if the world around is also coherent. Robert De Beaugrande and Wolfgang U. Dressler define coherence as a “continuity of senses” and “the mutual access and relevance within a configuration of concepts and relations”.De Beaugrande, Robert /Dressler, Wolfgang: Introduction to Text Linguistics.
The AllMusic review by William York states, "the album has a nice element of diversity, yet it still coheres well... They play virtually every piece like it's an encore, but, fortunately, the material is strong enough to sustain such intensity". The Down Beat review by Bill Shoemaker says "Though the set includes three Russell pieces utilizing everything from nimble swing pastiches to full-bore sax blasts, the compositional strengths of Williams, Hunt and newcomer multi-reedist Ken Vandermark preclude the possibility of NRG ever becoming a ghost band."Shoemaker, Bill. Calling All Mothers review.
Here, too, the requisite psycho-linguistic machinery coheres with Lycan's Homuncular Functionalism and, more generally, with the above common threads. Along with Robert Adams, Lycan considers David Kellogg Lewis's notion of possible worlds to be metaphysically extravagant and suggests in its place an actualist interpretation of possible worlds as consistent, maximally complete sets of descriptions or propositions about the world, so that a "possible world" is conceived of as a complete description (i.e. a maximally consistent set of propositions) of a way the world could be – rather than a world which is that way.
In his review for AllMusic, Dave Lynch says that the album "is filled with unpredictable twists and turns that keep the listener guessing, while the music nonetheless coheres through recurring motifs and the bandmembers' intuitive grasp of Laubrock's compositional and improvisational language." The All About Jazz review by John Sharpe states, "Typically the German's charts avoid the obvious. Her convoluted thematic materials arise following an inscrutable inner logic, often juxtaposed with improvised elements, whether solo or group, as they intimate a tangled web of feelings, often within the space of a single number."Sharpe, John.
The "cultural cognition of scientific consensus" thesis advocated by Dan Kahan stands in contrast to the gateway belief model (GBM). The cultural cognition thesis suggests that people will credit or dismiss empirical evidence based on whether it coheres or conflicts with their cultural or political values, a process known as "identity-protective cognition". Because people are committed to the types of beliefs that define their everyday socio-political relations, the cultural cognition thesis predicts that exposing people to consensus information on contested issues will therefore increase attitude polarization. The empirical results of the gateway belief model contradict this prediction.
Alasdair Wilkins of The A.V. Club gave the episode a B-, saying, "As it is, “Adventures In Chinchilla-Sitting” has lots of little moments that work, but its story never coheres into something bigger, and its jokes just aren’t hilarious enough to make that fact not matter. Still, as lowlights go, Bob’s Burgers’ remain pretty damn good." The episode received a 1.0 rating and was watched by a total of 2.24 million people. This made it the fifth most watched show on Fox that night, behind Brooklyn Nine-Nine, Family Guy, The Simpsons, and The Last Man on Earth.
The narrator (ostensibly Strindberg, although his narrative variably coheres with and diverges from historical truth), spends most of the novel in Paris, isolated from his wife (Frida Uhl), children, and friends. He associates with a circle of Parisian artists and writers (including Paul Gauguin and Edvard Munch), but often fears they are ridiculing and persecuting him. In his isolation, Strindberg successfully attempts alchemical experiments that apparently violate the laws of chemistry, and has his work published in prominent journals. He fears, however, that his secrets will be stolen, and his persecution mania worsens, believing that his enemies are attacking him with 'infernal machines.
" Barry Walters of Spin complimented Hilson's "sassiness" on the song which she "wore well." MTV Buzzworthy called the Wayne's verse "the best surprise rap since Lisa 'Left Eye' Lopes' verse in TLC's 'Waterfalls.'" J.K. Glei of Cincinnati Metromix called the track "playful" and said the track was easily the album's standout, commenting that Lil Wayne's cameo "steals the show." Sal Cinquemani of Slant Magazine commended the song, calling it "tight." Jon Caramanica of The New York Times said called the song "slinky" and said, "the busyness coheres, with Ms. Hilson neatly gliding among the song’s many layers.
Pierre-Esprit Radisson's birthplace is unclear, but was likely in France's lower Rhône region near the town Avignon. A 1697 affidavit and a 1698 petition selfreport his ages as 61 and 62, respectively, suggesting birth in 1636. Yet a 1681 census in New France, Canada, reported his age as 41, suggesting birth in 1640, which coheres with baptismal records, from Carpentras, a city near Avignon, France, that concern Radisson's father, Pierre-Esprit Radisson Sr. Radisson would trace his family, the Hayet- Radissons, to the town St. Malo, whereas records suggest either Paris or Avignon. According to Radisson, he emigrated from France to Canada on 24 May 1651.
These lines, read in conjunction with the later "i.e. it coheres all right / even if my notes do not cohere", point toward the conclusion that towards the end of his effort, Pound was coming to accept not only his own "errors" and "madness" but the conclusion that it was beyond him, and possibly beyond poetry, to do justice to the coherence of the universe. Images of light saturate this canto, culminating in the closing lines: "A little light, like a rushlight / to lead back to splendour". These lines again echo the Noh of Kakitsubata, the "light that does not lead on to darkness" in Pound's version.
Although both sexes hatch with their cephalothorax range being around 0.5 mm, the female develops into a significantly larger specimen than her male counterpart. The size difference coheres with the divergence of their respective hunting behaviors. While female bolas spiders hang from a horizontal thread waiting to swing her bolas or sticky orb towards her nearby prey (typically moths), the males do not use a bolas but rather implement hunting tactics reminiscent of early- instar spiders. Along with a bolas, the female exploits a unique ability that allows her to aggressively mimic the pheromone composition of moths awaiting to mate to attract male prey.
Another response to the regress problem is coherentism, which is the rejection of the assumption that the regress proceeds according to a pattern of linear justification. To avoid the charge of circularity, coherentists hold that an individual belief is justified circularly by the way it fits together (coheres) with the rest of the belief system of which it is a part. This theory has the advantage of avoiding the infinite regress without claiming special, possibly arbitrary status for some particular class of beliefs. Yet, since a system can be coherent while also being wrong, coherentists face the difficulty of ensuring that the whole system corresponds to reality.
As with great Radiohead records past, such as Kid A, the music – restlessly, freakishly inventive – pushes politics far into the background." Andy Kellman of AllMusic wrote that "despite the fact that it seems more like a bunch of songs on a disc rather than a singular body, its impact is substantial", concluding that the band "have entered a second decade of record-making with a surplus of momentum". In Mojo, Peter Paphides wrote that Hail to the Thief "coheres as well as anything else in their canon". James Oldham of NME saw Hail to the Thief as "a good rather than great record... the impact of the best moments is dulled by the inclusion of some indifferent electronic compositions.
Thus, that which integrates physical reality with conceptuality is founded in the "transcendental imagination," a connection that shields, yet binds humanity to reality. People's emotionality coheres to the structures they encounter in life. Winquist argued there is a life history of striving beyond the passage of actualities; emotional and objective understanding (the conceptional reality of the transcendental imagination), as well as subjective goals, and the primordial nature of God bring interpretive, foundational knowledge. Some have argued Winquist’s work is purely academic, at least regarding his posthumously published, “The Surface of the Deep”. And indeed, Winquist argued that a Christological witness cannot be relocated in "fundamental theology"—the philosophical, anthropological, scientific, and theological study to mediate faith’s meaning in culture—without destroying fundamental theology itself.
Authors: Nick Papadimitriou, Hachette.com.au In 2007, Papadimitriou wrote and designed the "Middlesex County Council" website, a collection of articles intended "not only to explore and present the historic legacy of old Middlesex, but also to examine the way in which the county-region still coheres as a distinct entity at the topographic and imaginative levels". Between 2009 and 2011, Papadimitriou co-hosted, with John Rogers, two series of a radio show on Resonance FM entitled Ventures and Adventures in Topography. The first series examined a number of early-twentieth-century 'rambling' books which explored the suburbs of London through the eyes of forgotten authors such as S. P. B. Mais and Gordon S. Maxwell, while the second series took a more general if still somewhat esoteric approach to walking in the urban fringes of the capital.
Operants are often thought of as species of responses, where the individuals differ but the class coheres in its function-shared consequences with operants and reproductive success with species. This is a clear distinction between Skinner's theory and S–R theory. Skinner's empirical work expanded on earlier research on trial-and-error learning by researchers such as Thorndike and Guthrie with both conceptual reformulations—Thorndike's notion of a stimulus–response "association" or "connection" was abandoned; and methodological ones—the use of the "free operant", so called because the animal was now permitted to respond at its own rate rather than in a series of trials determined by the experimenter procedures. With this method, Skinner carried out substantial experimental work on the effects of different schedules and rates of reinforcement on the rates of operant responses made by rats and pigeons.
During the Age of Enlightenment, occultism increasingly came to be seen as intrinsically incompatible with the concept of science. From that point on, use of "occult science(s)" implied a conscious polemic against mainstream science. Nevertheless, the philosopher and card game historian Michael Dummett, whose analysis of the historical evidence suggested that fortune-telling and occult interpretations using cards were unknown before the 18th century, said that the term occult science was not misplaced because "people who believe in the possibility of unveiling the future or of exercising supernormal powers do so because the efficacy of the methods they employ coheres with some systematic conception which they hold of the way the universe functions...however flimsy its empirical basis." In his 1871 book Primitive Culture, the anthropologist Edward Tylor used the term "occult science" as a synonym for magic.
200 Aviezer Tucker, previously an advocate of applying Bayesian techniques to history, expressed some sympathy for Carrier's view of the gospels, stating: "The problem with the Synoptic Gospels as evidence for a historical Jesus from a Bayesian perspective is that the evidence that coheres does not seem to be independent, whereas the evidence that is independent does not seem to cohere." However, Tucker argues that historians have been able to use theories about the transmission and preservation of information to identify reliable parts of the gospels. He says that "Carrier is too dismissive of such methods because he is focused on hypotheses about the historical Jesus rather than on the best explanations of the evidence." New Testament scholar Bart Ehrman writes that Carrier is one of only two scholars with relevant graduate credentials who argues against the historicity of Jesus.
Opinions vary as to whether the work succeeds. Hugh Kenner calls it "Beckett’s most difficult work" and yet maintains that the piece "coheres to perfection,"Kenner, H., Samuel Beckett: A Critical Study (London: John Calder, 1962), p 174 John Pilling disagrees, remarking that Embers "is the first of Beckett’s dramatic works that seems to lack a real centre,"Pilling, J., Samuel Beckett (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1976), p 98 whereas Richard N. Coe considers the play "not only minor, but one of [Beckett’s] very few failures."Coe, R. N., Beckett (London: Oliver & Boyd, 1964), p 102 Anthony Cronin records in his biography of Beckett that "Embers met with a mixed reception [but tempers this comment by noting that] the general tone of English criticism was somewhat hostile to Beckett"Cronin, A., Samuel Beckett The Last Modernist (London: Flamingo, 1997), p 490 at the time. The author's own view was that it was a "rather ragged" text.
Wolfang Müller-Lauter, in Experiences with Nietzsche, quotes Drews: > One finds in Nietzsche neither national sympathy nor social awareness, > [Drews claimed]. Nietzsche is, on the contrary, and particularly after his > break with Richard Wagner, an enemy of everything German; he supports the > creation of a “good European,” and goes so far as to accord the Jews a > leading role in the dissolution of all nations. Finally, he is an > individualist, with no notion of “the National Socialist credo: ‘collective > over individual utility’...After all this, it must seem unbelievable that > Nietzsche has been honored as the Philosopher of National Socialism, … for > he preaches in all things the opposite of National Socialism”, setting aside > a few scattered utterances. The fact that such honors have repeatedly been > bestowed on him has as its main reason, that most people who talk about > Nietzsche tend only to pick the ‘raisins' from the cake of his philosophy > and, because of his aphoristic style, lack any clear understanding of the > way his entire thought coheres.

No results under this filter, show 85 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.