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84 Sentences With "entwining"

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

Entwining femininity and violence, it inverts and reflects upon misogyny and sex.
In the entwining of art, social and material history, few stones are left unturned.
The gallery space is clouded by a red woolen web, entwining found antique wooden chairs.
"See here, two branches have grown into each other, this amazing sort of pythonish entwining?" he said.
The entwining of wars and famine has multiplied the magnitude of deaths among Somalia's farmers and herders.
The fields of sexual health and sexual pleasure are entwining as the adult novelty business continues to grow.
Their vocals, entwining and falling apart, backed by beautifully applied brass, this is absolute magic in the ears.
The entwining of the two families, whose children grew up together in this very backyard, is also overdetermined.
Smaller stages stood to either side, the backlit shadows of naked dancers spinning and entwining on massive canvas screens.
For years, a country may have elected governments that accepted rules entwining it with other economies, reducing its national sovereignty.
We could see the marijuana industry growing alongside and entwining with the alcohol industry in plenty of new and interesting ways.
Washington (CNN)Sally Yates didn't bring a smoking gun to the latest episode of the long-running political melodrama entwining the White House and Russia.
You're not gifting a Google Home; you're gifting a closer entwining with Google Search and all the strange personalized add-ons to Calendar and Maps.
Man fails to keep his promise because the armoire he's sleeping in gets shipped to Britain overnight, entwining his fate with those of migrants across Europe.
The brother and sister furballs adore each other, and according to Huffington Post, they take every opportunity to show off this love through paw-entwining snuggle sessions.
Less eligible men could offer instead to link Uber accounts, thus entwining the couple's reputations: their joint five-star rating would be at risk if either misbehaved.
For instance, using the area of the nunchucks with the most slack to catch that mythical overhead knife strike, entwining it, and throwing a perfect high kick.
Today, he went on, French elites have decided, ignobly, that a new kind of French power can be obtained only by entwining the country within the European Union.
Knowing that someone isn't their type, or that they're unlikely to offer up stimulating conversation, can be crucial info to have before winding up entwining your genitals with theirs.
But a closer look reveals how Mr. Wa Lehulere's art offers allusive, layered references to his own complex personal history and its deep entwining with that of his country, South Africa.
For Mr. Whitten, a black man from the South, these conversations are especially rich, plentiful and unavoidable, involving as they did the entwining of African-American, African and modernist cultures and histories.
According to the documents, Mr. Kushner has filed tax returns separately from his wife, Ivanka Trump — a relatively common practice among wealthy couples who want to avoid entwining their complex personal finances.
Mr. Grey is also the video designer for this production, in which the wall tiles morph into eerie images, from a menagerie of eyes in close-up to dripping blood and entwining vines.
In her 70s at this point, Tawney seemed to reach an apex, ingeniously entwining her spiritual practice with the repetitive work of her hands, ensuring that the visionary could indeed be made visible.
"Verena becomes convinced he has fallen under the spell of a powerful and otherworldly persona trapped in the villa's stone walls, one that seems to be rapidly entwining with her own," the synopsis reads.
And some of what is sold under the poetic street name of Abu Hilalain (Father of the Two Crescent Moons: an allusion to the entwining Cs on each pill) contains little but concentrated caffeine.
With its flat patterns, sinuous lines and entwining forms, "Belladonna" refracts traditional Japanese graphic art through the prism of the Art Nouveau or Vienna Secession, two movements that were in some ways inspired by Japanese woodcuts.
But ultimately the items spiraling up the Guggenheim ramp encircle us with entwining histories of love, loss, power, violence — and the post-colonial anger of belonging to a culture long on the receiving end of history.
But given all we know now, it's safe to assume that none of us have been spared from the consequences of connecting with one another, inextricably entwining our collective lives, as dumb and boring as they may be.
The film — adapted by Mr. Axelsson and Otto Geir Borg from a novel of the same name (subtitled "A Ghost Story" in one edition) by Yrsa Sigurdardottir — tells of the entwining fates of three victims of acute misfortune.
The strange entwining of the symptoms of tuberculosis with women's fashion in the late 18th to mid-19th centuries is explored in Carolyn A. Day's Consumptive Chic: A History of Beauty, Fashion, and Disease, recently released by Bloomsbury Academic.
If part of the appeal of games for me is the fantasy world into which they let me escape, equally as important to that fictional reality as entwining tendrils of magic or rays of scintillating sunlight is the impression of earnestness.
Karl Lagerfeld was, apparently, not so interested in that multilayered mythology intricately entwining Chanel and the Ritz, when it came to both the staging and designing of his latest Chanel Métiers d'Art show, held yesterday at the grand old hotel.
Turkey has turned from its military role in the rebel-held strip in Syria, that runs along its border between the towns of Afrin and Jarablus, to a longer-term one of stabilization, entwining the area's economy with its own.
It's a scene pulled straight out of Alcott's real-life experience (if Dickinson taught us anything, it's that Alcott loved two things: money and running), further entwining the author's own story with the fictional one she put to paper, released in two parts in 1868 and 1869.
This is a show where charmed wanderings and distributions of assemblages prevail; the artists mix psychic and erotic perspectives and points of view into a general sense of the entwining, entangling, and knotting of hemp cord, hair, strips of leather, gold threads, blades of grass, raffia, rope, and fabric.
"The L.A. mark was crafted with a focus on the horn entwining with L.A., ensuring that the Rams are forever tied to the city of Los Angeles," the team said in a statement, gliding over the franchise's 20-year history in St. Louis, where it won a Super Bowl.
However, when one relates a story about Arabian hunting dogs that suggests "the ultimate fulfillment of a conscious being lay not in solitude but in a shared state so intricate and cooperative it might almost be said to represent the entwining of two selves," Faye draws him out.
The recent narrative entwining Ms. Rapinoe and Mr. Trump began on Tuesday, when the soccer magazine 8 by 8 tweeted a video clip excerpted from a January interview in which she was asked whether she was looking forward to going to the White House, assuming the national team won this summer.
What's more, Mr. Mabey, skilled at entwining human and plant history, would tell the story of one of the heroes of his book, Margaret Mee, the 20th-century botanical artist who sailed up the Rio Negro in Brazil to sketch the annual one-night blooming of the moonflower, a rootless climbing cactus.
Now, the latest episode of the crisis has become a uniquely Lebanese story, entwining bird migration, civil aviation, mysterious gunmen and the long story of Lebanon's struggle to become a functioning state that can at least take care of its trash, more than 25 years after emerging from a long civil war.
On either side was an heraldic dolphin entwining a trident.
The four goats stand facing four directions, looking serene and calm. Four high relief entwining dragons on the shoulders of the square zun. A pair of horns and heads of the dragons respectively extends out of the surface of the square zun.
The singular is the Latin word for 'seaweed' and retains that meaning in English. The etymology is obscure. Although some speculate that it is related to Latin , 'be cold', no reason is known to associate seaweed with temperature. A more likely source is , 'binding, entwining'.
Originally written in Serbian, Pavić's works have been translated into more than thirty languages. Pavić was renowned for his highly imaginative fiction, and his novels diverged from traditional literary notions by means of an open-ended structure and the entwining of the mythic and historical.
The series is successively presented a fifth lower according to the circle of fifths. The texture thickens as a result of increasingly intense uses of “foreign” sounds entwining these pitches, which take on the role of a cantus firmus, with an ever-expanding range of sounds.
Early Work, Ethel Fisher website. Retrieved May 5, 2020. Havana critic Adele Jaume characterizes Fisher's paintings as achieving "mastery in the disposition of planes and in the employment of color"; a 1960 New York Times review compares their entwining, suggestive shapes to the work of Arshile Gorky.
Sri Lankan Tamil Hindus since ancient times have regarded the cobra as a divine being by the passing down of Naga traditions and beliefs. Further, a cobra can be found entwining itself round the neck of the supreme Hindu god Shiva as the serpent-king Vasuki. Cobras can also be found in images of god Vishnu.Godwin Witane . (2003).
It involves interaction sequences between two male snakes and has been recorded in four groups of snakes including colubrids, elapids, viperines and crotalines. During competition, the male snakes will exert pressures through pushing, flipping or entwining, which will result in one physically subduing the other. The dominant male will then proceed to copulate with the females.
Archaeologists discovered a stone dharani pillar decorated with three entwining dragons and engraved with the text of the Uṣṇīṣa Vijaya Dhāraṇī Sūtra in Kyoto's Anshō-ji Temple in 1953. Katsūra 2017 Egaku brought this column back to Japan either in 841 or 842 CE. One can see the column on display at the Kyoto National Museum.
Leigh and co-workers recently began to explore a strategy in which template ions could also play an active role in promoting the crucial final covalent bond forming reaction that captures the interlocked structure (i.e., the metal has a dual function, acting as a template for entwining the precursors and catalyzing covalent bond formation between the reactants).
The Government contended, however, that "subsequent decisions of this Court compel the holding that what Parke Davis did here by entwining the wholesalers and retailers in a program to promote general compliance with its price maintenance policy went beyond mere customer selection, and created combinations or conspiracies to enforce resale price maintenance in violation of . . . the Sherman Act."362 U.S. at 37-38.
Travertine facing was added in mid or late first century by the banks to resemble a ship's prow and stern, and an obelisk was erected in the middle, symbolizing the vessel's mast. Walls were put around the island, and it came to resemble a Roman ship. Faint vestiges of Aesculapius' rod with an entwining snake are still visible on the "prow".
An unauthorized biography of Australian laywer Mark Leibler. This book shows how Leibler rose to a position of immense influence in Australian public life by skilfully entwining his roles as a Zionist leader and a tax lawyer to some of the country’s richest people. The book has interviews with former Prime Ministers Paul Keating, John Howard, Julia Gillard and Indigenous leader Noel Pearson.
She spent many years in Ireland and showed how artists have read and interpreted James Joyce in her book Joyce in art : visual art inspired by James Joyce.'Review: Entwining Our Arts: A Review Of Christa Maria Lerm-Hayes, "Joyce In Art: Visual Art Inspired By James Joyce", by Christa Maria Lerm-Hayes, Review by: Ruben Borg, Journal of Modern Literature, Vol. 29, No. 4 (Summer, 2006), pp.
Anthony Symondson tells that thereafter his eldest son, Ninian Comper, signed all his painted glass windows with a wild strawberry, the leaves and stems entwining the date of execution. The first window to be so signed was his father's own memorial in St Margaret of Scotland, Aberdeen in 1908. John Comper married Ellen Taylor of Hull in 1853; they had five children. Mrs Ellen Comper died on 10 June 1908.
We Shall Overcome is a 1963 album by Pete Seeger. It was recorded live at his concert at Carnegie Hall, New York City, on June 8, 1963, and was released by Columbia Records. The concert would later be described by Ed Vulliamy of The Observer as "a launch event for the entwining of the music and politics of the 1960s". Ed Vulliamy, The voice of protest sings on, The Observer, 5 April 2009.
After puberty, male elephants tend to form close alliances with other males. While females are the most active members of African elephant groups, both male and female elephants are capable of distinguishing between hundreds of different low frequency infrasonic calls to communicate with and identify each other. Elephants use some vocalisations that are beyond the hearing range of humans, to communicate across large distances. Elephant mating rituals include the gentle entwining of trunks.
The heraldic badge of the Hastings family, with the so-called "Hastings knot" entwining a Hungerford sickle and a Peverell garb The Hungerford or Hastings knot is a heraldic knot used as an heraldic badge in English heraldry by the Hungerford and Hastings families. The binding together of a Hungerford sickle and a Peverell garb (wheatsheaf) with the Hungerford knot commemorates the marriage between the Hungerfords and the Peverells in the early 15th century.
The first verse describes poppies entwining with "cattle trucks lying in wait for the next time", an allusion to the railway vehicles used in The Holocaust. The line "Do you remember me, how we used to be?" originally appeared in the song "Incarceration of a Flower Child", written by Waters in 1968. Neither Pink Floyd nor Waters recorded the song; however, it was recorded by Marianne Faithfull in 1999 for her album Vagabond Ways.
The titi monkeys are most active at dawn and dusk foraging for fruits, leaves and insects, and rest at midday. The males will lead the group while foraging, communicating to the rest of the group with a wide array of vocalizations and visual signals. Titi monkeys are monogamous, with groups consisting of strongly-bonded parents and their offspring. Partners often reinforce the pair bond by perching side-by-side and entwining their tails.
In early Midrashic literature, the Hebrew word "vayilafeth" in Ruth 3:8 is explained as referring to Ruth entwining herself around Boaz like lichen.Thus explained by Rabbi Enoch Zundel ben Joseph, in his commentary Etz Yosef ("Tree of Joseph"), on Sefer Midrash Rabbah, vol. 2, New York 1987, s.v. Ruth Rabba 6:3 The tenth century Arab physician, Al-Tamimi, mentions lichens dissolved in vinegar and rose water being used in his day for the treatment of skin diseases and rashes.
The city enchanted him as much as ever: in Huebner's words "renewed exposure to Rome's close entwining of Christianity and classical culture energized him for the travails of his career back in Paris". Caroline Carvalho as Juliette, 1867 Gounod's next opera was Mireille (1864), a five-act tragedy in a Provençal peasant setting. Gounod travelled to Provence to absorb the local atmosphere of the various settings of the work and to meet the author of the original story, Frédéric Mistral.
In early 2010, Dutton purchased Headley's debut novel Queen of Kings, which explores "the transcendent powers of love even beyond death, entwining the true story of Antony and Cleopatra and Rome's invasion of Alexandria with a narrative in which the Queen of Egypt sacrifices her soul to save her fallen husband and in return is transformed into an immortal goddess bent on the destruction of the Roman Empire". It was purchased as part of a trilogy deal. The hardcover was released in 2011.
In a five-starred review, Martin Townsend in the Daily Express said it was "easily" the Unthanks' "best and most mature album to date". In a four-starred review, Robin Denselow of The Guardian described the album as the Unthanks' boldest experiment yet. Jeanette Leach, for BBC Music, said that while the album is "often emotionally naked, it is musically restorative. By entwining folk and marching bands, two boldly working-class styles, The Unthanks offer a strong hand of comfort to these tales of ordinary sadness".
The grapevine cross is recognizable by the slight drooping of its horizontal arms. Traditional accounts credit Saint Nino, a Cappadocian woman who preached Christianity in Iberia (corresponding to modern eastern Georgia) early in the 4th century, with this unusual shape of cross. The legend has it that she received the grapevine cross from the Virgin Mary (or, alternatively, she created it herself on the way to Mtskheta) and secured it by entwining with her own hair. Nino came with this cross on her mission to Georgia.
The 2013 album Hit Vibes was very well known around the vaporwave and future funk communities, and is highly praised by critics. This would be Saint Pepsi's last full-length album, before changing his alias to Skylar Spence, after some legal trouble involving the name. However, Spence would use the alias again when releasing Mannequin Challenge in 2019. Hit Vibes has received acclaim from music critics for its seamless edits and catchy grooves alongside cleverly entwining dialogue from Woody Allen's musical comedy Everyone Says I Love You.
The Constrictor's primary weapon is a pair of cybernetically-controlled, electrified, prehensile, wrist-mounted metal coils provided by Justin Hammer. The coils eject and retract from special appliances running from shoulder to wrist. These cables are able to extend to a maximum length of and can be used as whips, capable of rending steel or lesser metals; or as bonds, capable of entwining an object or human being and constricting. The previous sets of coils were made from an adamantium alloy, then from vibranium.
Not long after his death it was decided that a memorial should be erected and, in May 1891, 1,000 people attended the unveiling of the monument in Weaste Cemetery, Weaste, Salford where he was buried. The monument consisted of a polished red granite obelisk rising from a stepped base. On the front was inscribed: Above the inscription was a carved lifebuoy and rope entwining his initials and, above that, an oval bronze plaque inscribed with the portrait head of Addy. On the base was another bronze plaque depicting incidents from his life.
In 2005 McKenna and Stephen Keeling wrote Heidi, entwining the famous children's story and the life of its creator Johanna Spyri, which was first performed in an open-air production in Walenstadt, Switzerland. Heidi II, a sequel, followed in 2007 and 2008. The One True Thing, a prequel, has been commissioned He co-wrote Murder Mystery Musical with Alister Cameron and composer Richard Brown, which was performed at the Edinburgh Festival in 2009. In September 2012 the York Theater in New York premiered a workshop lab production of Last Dance, for which McKenna wrote the book.
Roy and Silo met at the zoo and they began their relationship in 1998, and although staff never saw them in a sexual act, they were observed conducting other mating rituals typical of their species including entwining their necks and mating calls. In 1999 the pair were observed trying to hatch a rock as if it were an egg. They also attempted to steal eggs from other penguin couples. When the zoo staff realized that Roy and Silo were both male, they tested them further by replacing the rock with a dummy egg made of stone and plaster.
Engaged in May 1904, they married in October 1904, and had two children together (one of whom died as an infant). Jeffries left the stage in 1906, and continued to live a quiet, very happy life, devoted to her family and her beautifully designed gardens, on their family property, "Bowylie", at Gundaroo, NSW, until her death, at 76 years, of cancer. An audience favourite wherever she went,"Miss Maud Jeffries, that talented young American lady whose supreme merit is gradually entwining itself around the hearts of English playgoers" (Theatre Royal, The Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser, (Tuesday, 3 October 1893), p.5).
Known as the Raaja, they vary in size, from microscopic bacteria to those entwining the planet. A young boy named Chris appears before Juna and offers to save her life if she will help the planet. She reluctantly agrees and is resurrected. Supported by Chris, Tokio and SEED, an international organization that monitors the environment and confronts the Raaja, Juna must use her new powers to stop the Raaja from destroying Earth through humankind's destruction of the environmental systems of the planet, and Chris can only hope that she can fully awaken her powers in time to save the world.
But as the sun comes up, they discover that they have been led to the base of a giant wall made of entwining trees. They decide to search within, sure that the hooded man will be there. On the other side, they find a city made from entwined tress. They are approached by the hooded man, who reveals himself to be Dr. Richard Fludd (Charles Dance), the royal alchemist for Queen Elizabeth I. He leads them back to his laboratory, and explains that he discovered a planet which exists, paradoxically, at the edges and center of the universe simultaneously.
Paralleling this philosophical progression against classical liberalism were major socio-economic transformations based on industrialization, and the result was the rise of mass societies characterized by consumer capitalism in the twentieth century. Clear demarcations between public and private and between state and society became blurred. The bourgeois public sphere was transformed by the increasing re-integration and entwining of state and society that resulted in the modern social welfare state. This shift, according to Habermas, can be seen as part of a larger dialectic in which political changes were made in an attempt to save the liberal constitutional order, but had the ultimate effect of destroying the bourgeois public sphere.
Japanese striped snake Green Anaconda Garter snake In the species Japanese striped snake (Elaphe quadrivirgata), competition involves males maintaining body contact with their opponent and exerting pressure by pushing, topping, or entwining in order to subdue him. Male snakes employ a variety of strategies to help them entice the female into mating. The red-sided garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis) population in Alberta, Canada hibernates for the majority of the year, emerging in early May to copulate and feed. The communal dens have been observed to reach populations of thousands, with females often dispersing from the den rapidly to try to avoid being attacked by a flurry of males.
During the archaeological excavations at the Small Castle in Navahrudak in the period from 1955 to 1962, conducted by the Leningrad Department of the Institute of Archaeology of the USSR Academy of Sciences, an artifact was found, called "glass carved glass", belonging to a group of glass carved glasses, known in medieval studies under the General name "Hedwig glass".А. В. Рощин. НЕМОГРАДАС — Летописный Новогородок The "Cup of Saint Jadwiga" found in Navahrudak (under this name the vessel is listed in the collection of the Hermitage Museum, this Cup was not returned to Belarus, despite requests from the Belarusian side), carved images of a lion, a Griffin and a stylized tree of life in the form of two snakes entwining the Cup of life.К. Кузьмич.
For example, one eyewitness, Charles Gee, has emerged. He rescued de Hory from his first suicide attempt in Washington, D.C., and confirmed his long-standing friendship with Hungarian actress-celebrity Zsa Zsa Gabor (an association she allegedly denied according to Clifford Irving) and de Hory's story about his New York encounter with Salvador Dalí, among others. Despite many newfound facts, the repository of information entwining fiction, fantastic-but-true reality, and the spaciousness of uncertainty continues to aid the legend de Hory constructed around his life. There is no denying his lifetime of friendships with actors, writers, artists, and the rich and famous people who gravitated to him; here is where we find clues and better understanding of who de Hory was.
The Garden was inaugurated on 5 June 2014 in a city that experienced the two totalitarian regimes of the 20th century, Nazism and Communism. The date was not chosen by chance: it was decided to open the Garden the day after the 25th anniversary of the first semi-free elections in Poland, June 4, 1989, which then led to the fall of communism. The idea of entwining the globe with a network of Gardens of the Righteous, created to honour attitudes of people who protected dignity and life of men in totalitarian systems or at times of mass crimes, originated at the Italian Gariwo Foundation, and the Garden of Monte Stella in Milan, Italy, however, it is not devoted only to those who helped Jews during the war.
Thirdly, it is a remarkably preserved example of Architectural thinking of the mid-twentieth century, which can be experienced as well as examined. Finally it is a testament to the pioneering spirit and perseverance of David Yencken, Robin Boyd, and Graeme Gunn who have spent so much of their professional lives pursuing their belief in the value that Architecture can bring to the family home . . . Baronda is an essay in the artistic entwining of a place to live with the landscape that it occupies, and in so doing offers a remarkable experience of its setting, and it legacy lies in its ability to illustrate the power of the Australian setting on the Architecture that responsibly addresses its challenges.'Shannon, 2013 Richard Silink (heritage architect): 'Baronda is worthy of listing on the SHR as a seminal residential work of RAIA Gold Medal recipient Graham Gunn.
Jones' suppleness sands down Armstrong's ragged voice, he gives her grit while she lends him grace, and these qualities are evident throughout this lovely little gem of an album." Marah Eakin of The A.V. Club gave the album a B, saying "As it is, Foreverly is a smart, lovely tribute LP. It might seem initially unlikely that Armstrong and Jones have as much rootsy connection to the music (and to the state of Kentucky) that Don and Phil Everly do, yet after listening to Foreverly, it’s not hard to believe that maybe somewhere deep down they could." Phil Mongredien of The Observer gave the album three out of five stars, saying "While hardly a move into brave new musical pastures, it's not without charm and the use of a female voice puts just enough distance between this and the original, the entwining harmonies recalling Gram Parsons's duets with Emmylou Harris. The highlight comes when Jones takes the lead on Rockin' Alone.
The album was recorded during the tour to promote their Doremi Fasol Latido album, which comprises the bulk of this set. In addition there are new tracks ("Born To Go", "Upside Down" and "Orgone Accumulator") and the songs are interspersed by electronic and spoken pieces, making this one continuous performance. Their recent hit single "Silver Machine" was excluded from the set, and only "Master of the Universe" remains from their first two albums. The Space Ritual show attempted to create a full audio-visual experience, representing themes developed by Barney Bubbles and Robert Calvert entwining the fantasy of starfarers in suspended animation traveling through time and space with the concept of the music of the spheres.Melody Maker, 28 October 1972 - Watch This Space The performance featured dancers Stacia, Miss Renee, Jonathan Carney (later of the V8 Intercepters) and Tony Carrera, stage set by Bubbles,Music Scene, 1 December 1972 - Hawkwind Musicnauts lightshow by Liquid Len and poetry recitations by Calvert.
" Joshua Kosman of the San Francisco Chronicle later described Polaris as "an extravagantly beautiful and concise new orchestral score" and said it "left a listener enchanted by the work's eloquence and formal clarity, as well as its combination of historical echoes and utter novelty." The work was also praised by Georgia Rowe of the San Francisco Classical Voice, who called it "a major triumph" for Adès and said, "Despite its compact running time, the score, subtitled 'Voyage for Orchestra,' conjures an unmistakable sense of vastness." Reviewing a performance by Alan Gilbert the New York Philharmonic, Anthony Tommasini of The New York Times observed, "Running through the score, like a loosely connecting thread, is an elusive melodic line that is presented in a series of canons with various instruments, including brass players stationed around the hall in the upper balconies." He added, "What came through in this hearing of the piece, played with vibrant colors and urgency, is the backdrop for the entwining melodic lines, which rustle along in churning, spiraling figures: a blur of busyness.
His last act as a human being was amusing himself while looking at Shizuku creating deformed aberrations, before turning his own self into data and entwining it with the monster Shizuku would later become. : Zeus was only seen or mentioned in flashbacks during the course of the story until the end, where he presented himself and declared his will to use Shizuku, a never-ending supply of creatures defying the laws of nature, to build up his own army of beastmen warriors and other fantasy-like beings and with them plunder the world into chaos, an endless game of survival for his own amusement. To do so, and knowing that Shizuku would wake up her sister from her induced slumber, he tampered with the other survivors' minds, forcing them to unconsciously not run away after waking up, and especially protect Kasumi's life, which was necessary to coerce Shizuku in doing his biddings. : His material body reduced to a rotting corpse, Zeus manifested himself through membranes expelled by Shizuku's tail, and later took direct control of her, declaring the act to be "the birth of a god".

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