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"dry-eyed" Definitions
  1. not crying

31 Sentences With "dry eyed"

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

We emerge from it quiet and dry-eyed, hearing our world differently.
The tears continued as the family walked with a dry-eyed Cohen into an elevator.
Mr. Trump's closest advisers remained dry-eyed, and the evidence is mounting that they had reason.
Everyone appears dry-eyed if not indifferent about the passing, the first sign something is off.
Yes, a crisis did erupt, but quick action and a dry-eyed apology defused the situation.
That all sounds like over-the-top parody, but the dry-eyed brutality of Who Is America?
Perhaps you'll stay dry-eyed until grown-up Saroo — played by Dev Patel — remembers his traumatic childhood experience.
We were dry-eyed as Mr. Biden walked me through the emotional and literary thicket that brought me to him.
But even the most stalwart cynics may have trouble staying dry-eyed during this portrait of heroic hospitality under extraordinary pressure.
But "South Side" does something rare for TV, portraying a poor neighborhood with dry-eyed wit, favoring specificity over polemics or cliché.
It's a psychological thriller, a strangely dry-eyed melodrama, a kinky sex farce and, perhaps most provocatively, a savage comedy of bourgeois manners.
When her daughter dies and the speech that Sally Field gives at the funeral: How could you be dry-eyed at that scene?
Can you remain dry-eyed when learning about this 98-year-old man who walks 6 miles to visit his wife in the hospital?
As Burke summarized Higginbotham's story — his fateful encounter with Roberts, the "ridiculously quick trial" and the lynching itself — his elderly son remained dry-eyed.
" He added: "It's a psychological thriller, a strangely dry-eyed melodrama, a kinky sex farce and, perhaps most provocatively, a savage comedy of bourgeois manners.
Making sure not to send Pep away dry-eyed, Manuel Neuer and crew snuck up on Guardiola to give him a solid dousing in the face.
It was true that I was the one crying at the end of the movie while she sat on the other end of the couch, dry-eyed.
But in contrast to Tuesday, when Ms. Constand cried as she recounted the incident, she remained dry-eyed and outwardly calm Wednesday, answering questions matter-of-factly.
As I wept inconsolably over his death, my young colleague, Jacque Smith, then Jacque Wilson, was dry-eyed and seemed confused by my obvious show of emotion.
So we're left with a serious disconnect in moments like Mufasa's death, where the voice actor's teary panic becomes difficult to reconcile with the dry-eyed, relatively reserved animal we see onscreen.
Michael Storrie, nine-year-old Scot, who arrived alone on Monday in New York in search of refuge, stood dry-eyed yesterday before a special board of inquiry at Ellis Island and heard himself ordered excluded from the United States for lack of proper entry papers.
I have yet to find a show that leaves me in tears as frequently as NBC's new family drama, This Is Us. Whether the show is reminding us about the extent of parental love or just plain killing off beloved characters, there's literally no way you're leaving an episode dry-eyed.
For all its contradictions, the show has something to say about the psychic cost, for women, of achieving power, with plots like Sansa Stark's slow transformation from the worst-off "Bachelor" contestant to dry-eyed warrior queen, smirking as she watches her rapist get his face ripped off by hungry dogs.
But as the dry-eyed queen grows more remote (and the rest of the royals strive and sometimes fail to justify their continued existence), the characters who earn our tears are the ones trying to escape their gilded cages: Princess Margaret (a nuanced, empathetic Helena Bonham Carter), the sensitive young Prince Charles (Josh O'Connor), and his sister Princess Anne (a very droll Erin Doherty).
They are only 9 miles—5 hours— from New Jerusalem. Bob drops all the gold, the blankets, everything except the baby. At last in despair he falls to his knees, caked in alkali from head to toe, and prays, struggling with the words and weeping dry-eyed. Suddenly he sees in the distance the signposts at the poisoned well where they paused after the robbery.
The column was particularly successful during the Second World War, and is associated with London's spirit during the Blitz by many. According to Time: "Once a week Nat Gubbins speaks for the British man-in-the- street better than the British man-in-the-street can speak for himself...Dry- eyed sentimentalist, sly humorist, casual reformer, recorder of mutton-headed remarks, he has become the most widely read of British columnists. He has no U.S. parallel." Nat Gubbins, Time, Monday, 8 March 1943.
Turning, he notices a sign indicating a bus stop in the field off the road; he waits by it, and an empty bus, driven by Walter, soon arrives to pick up this "dead" version of Bodo. The brothers do not speak, and they drive off a short distance before disappearing. The film ends with Bodo's redemption through his acceptance of Sissi, as he is shown at last content and dry-eyed as the couple arrive at the friend's seaside house on the edge of a cliff (the friend from the beginning of the movie).
Ben Brantley, chief theatre critic for The New York Times, wrote "Try, if you must, to resist the gale of good will that blows out of 'Come From Away,' the big bearhug of a musical that opened on Sunday night at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theater. But even the most stalwart cynics may have trouble staying dry-eyed during this portrait of heroic hospitality under extraordinary pressure."Brantley, Ben. "Review: ‘Come From Away,’ a Canadian Embrace on a Grim Day" The New York Times, March 12, 2017 He awarded the show the Critics' Pick designation, given to productions the critic believes have particular merit.
Alberta then sailed out of Cowes, escorted by a flotilla of eight destroyers, and leading the other royal yachts, the Victoria and Albert, HMY Osborne and the German yacht Hohenzollern. As they passed by the anchored warships, their crews fired salutes, bands played funeral marches, the officers saluted and the marine guards presented arms. One of the spectators, Randall Davidson, the Bishop of Winchester, remarked > the calm sea, the slow motion of the vessels, which seemed to glide without > visible propelling power, the little 'Alberta' going first through the broad > avenue of towering battle-ships booming out their salutes, the enormous mass > of perfectly silent black-clothed crowds covering Southsea Common and the > beach. I do not envy the man who could pass through such a scene dry-eyed.
He wrote that Steven Moffat had "performed the fourth remix of the show's mythology in a row, tying up strands that date back to the beginning of Matt Smith's run." He added, "Perfectly, the rebooting of his regeneration cycle was done simply... Who could have guessed the Doctor's renewed regeneration cycle would be dealt with as simply as his best friend just asking nicely?" Mark Snow of IGN gave the episode a score of 8.4, "GREAT", writing that "'The Time of the Doctor' was an exemplary exercise in celebrating the departure of a loved one. If you managed to stay dry-eyed during the Doctor's goodbye to Clara (itself a not-entirely-transparent goodbye from Smith to the role he embodied), then you should probably double check your heart's still working," also lauding Karen Gillan's "rather crowd- pleasing, tear-inducing cameo".
He wrote that Steven Moffat had "performed the fourth remix of the show's mythology in a row, tying up strands that date back to the beginning of Matt Smith's run." He added, "Perfectly, the rebooting of his regeneration cycle was done simply... Who could have guessed the Doctor's renewed regeneration cycle would be dealt with as simply as his best friend just asking nicely?" Mark Snow of IGN gave the episode a score of 8.4, "GREAT", writing that "'The Time of the Doctor' was an exemplary exercise in celebrating the departure of a loved one. If you managed to stay dry-eyed during the Doctor's goodbye to Clara (itself a not-entirely- transparent goodbye from Smith to the role he embodied), then you should probably double check your heart's still working," also lauding Karen Gillan's "rather crowd-pleasing, tear-inducing cameo".

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