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37 Sentences With "extolls"

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

He extolls despots and dismisses our democratic allies as weak or unimportant.
Gosling really extolls the value of eye contact here, which delights 100% of the studio audience.
The song, "Grow Food", extolls the virtues of urban farming, and the online world agrees: It knocks.
Coral is what's known as a WeedTuber, or a YouTube personality who extolls the virtues of cannabis on YouTube.
Aside from the bumper sticker of "America First," the ends of state policy Mr. Eliot extolls are as unknown as they are unspecified.
Regardless, Quavo's beautiful vocals as he extolls the virtue of this extremely salty flavouring are worth everything, so listen to "Dab of Ranch" below.
It's curious to me that no one ever questions or denounces, or extolls, the news media for photographing the burning of the American flag.
Peterson extolls classic Disney movies like Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs as upholding primordial gender roles, but objects to Frozen for violating those norms.
In "Christmas," the poet extolls, and attempts to repel, his ex-wife's words: All too often now your voice is too bright; I always hear you . . .
The host offers everyone Cognac so old that "Napoleon was still alive when they put [it] in the bottle," while he extolls the chefs' culinary prowess, lavishing them with praise.
The baritone Hadleigh Adams delivered a comic tour de force as General Lansing, who becomes unhinged as he extolls a Trumpian "wall of defense" that is supposed to keep aliens at bay.
" Yet in the same speech, he extolls the need to defend American values as part of a strong counterterrorism policy: "We have to promote the exceptional virtues of our own way of life.
The modern roll call vote has become an odd tradition in American politics — one in which each speaker doesn't just casts votes but extolls what exactly is so great about his or her state.
That's why, as an Army spouse, on Independence Day and with all the self-sufficiency it extolls, I can't help but be reminded of my own irksome designation within the military: I am my husband's dependent.
" In a recording from 1991, which was obtained by the Washington Post, the self-identified publicist John Miller extolls Trump's virtues to a People reporter: "'Actresses,' Miller said in [the call], 'just call to see if they can go out with him and things.
The retro-heavy playlist is dominated by well-worn rock hits of the '70s and '80s, and while "Eye of the Tiger" played to the bar's smattering of patrons, Jeff Dick, a manager and bartender at Heartbreakers, extolls the virtues of the man behind the song.
Pronounced "Nilāveli", "Nilā" extolls the night's moon-shine over the "vèli", a Sri Lankan Tamil language term for land or open-space.
The Rose of Sharon Blooms Again () was a popular South Korean novel by Kim Jin-myung (김진명) written in 1993, and No.1 bestseller for several weeks in 1994 which extolls pan-Korean nationalism.
It was a Pan Arabist nationalist song was composed to celebrate the union of Egypt and Syria into the United Arab Republic. It also extolls the Pan-Arabist vision for a united Arab state.
When Viola is grown, she and Walsingham marry. The novel also extolls the virtues of the Susquehanna River and life in the vicinity of Lake Erie. Portraits of Campbell by Thomas Sully and John Henry Brown are owned by the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
224 They constantly recite the mantra Hari sharanam ("God the Redeemer our Refuge") or sing Vishnu's praises. These hymns and glories of Vishnu serve as their only food. Another son of Brahma, the sage Narada, who is described as their disciple, extolls their virtues in the Padma Purana. Narada says though they appear as five- year-old children, they are the great ancestors of the world.
Hafiz represented to Nietzsche a prime example of Dionysian ecstatic wisdom, which he extolls so extensively in his philosophy. Goethe's admiration for Hafiz and his "Oriental" wisdom, as expressed in the West-östlischer Divan, has been the main source of attracting Nietzsche's interest in this Persian poet. There is even a short poem in Nietzsche's Collected Works, entitled An Hafis. Frage eines Wassertrinkers (To Hafiz: Questions of a Water Drinker).
In another aria he sings again about how much he loves her. This is followed by another comic aria where Krips extolls the virtues of wine over women. The final to the act takes place in the grand ceremonial hall after a tournament has taken place. An unknown knight has won all three contests and is awarded prizes of a sword and golden spurs by the lovely Mechthilde.
Poets sang the praise of the industry. John Gay (1685–1735) in an epistle to Lord Burlington extolls Salisbury: A couplet from the Bath Guide c.1820 runs: While a traditional saying attributes Salisbury’s fame to: The earliest reference to a cutler working in Salisbury was in c1270-80 when "Sebode the Cutiller, held a tenement in Brown Street." Wordsworth C (1903), Cartulary of St. Nicholas Hospital, pg.
Commemorative coin issued by the Central Bank of Armenia devoted to Goddess Anahit 5000 Armenian Dram According to Agathangelos, King Trdat extolls the "great Lady Anahit, the glory of our nation and vivifier ...; mother of all chastity, and issue of the great and valiant Aramazd." The historian Berossus identifies Anahit with Aphrodite, while medieval Armenian scribes identify her with Artemis. According to Strabo, Anahit's worship included rituals of sacred prostitution,Strabo, Geography XI.14.16 but later Christian writers do not mention such custom.
The book extolls the natural sciences and the role played by experience in developing the natural sciences. It denounces mathematics, more specifically it criticizes the kind of mathematics which yields no new knowledge and is "useless". It is critical of "useless experiments" and mathematical assumptions that are contrary to the laws of nature; and the approach of treating mathematics as a game that has nothing to do with nature. Mathematicians like to criticize other thinkers for being metaphysicians, writes Diderot, but increasingly chemists, physicists, and naturalists are directing the same criticism at them.
You're Not Alone is characterized by dramatic rock songs that feature distorted guitars, pianos, synthesizers, and multi-tracked vocals. Though much of the music is fast and energetic, the album also contains slower-paced songs and ballads, exhibiting greater musical dynamism than previous intensively upbeat Andrew W.K. albums. The album also contains three spoken-word tracks, in which Andrew W.K. extolls his personal philosophies toward self-confidence, seeing the good side to the bad moments in life, and thinking positively. Lyrically, the songs on the album generally adhere to these same themes.
Frontispiece of the second edition of volume I, London: William Pearson 1706 Portrait of Purcell engraved by R.White after Closterman, from the second edition of volume I, London: William Pearson 1706 Orpheus Britannicus is a collection of songs by Henry Purcell, published posthumously in London in two volumes, the first in 1698 and the second in 1702. In the preface to the first volume, Henry Playford, the printer of the volume and the son of the famous John Playford, extolls Purcell's skill as setter of English texts.Purcell, 2. Domestic vocal music The portrait on the frontispiece was based on John Closterman's portrait of Purcell, currently in the National Portrait Gallery.
In the storm of media coverage, Emily extolls Kimberly as a mere "victim" of society, and the ensuing press incites Hollywood producers to give Kimberly a bit part on a daytime soap opera. When Brittany visits Kimberly at her house, Kimberly reveals she manipulated Josh into having his father defend Percy as she knew it would cause Brittany to buckle under pressure in court. When Brittany asks why, Kimberly explains that she devised the calculated plot to garner publicity for herself, as well as exact revenge against Brittany for having stolen her ex-boyfriend, Troy. Brittany lambasts her and leaves, vowing never to speak to her again.
The plot of the opera follows six people wrongfully-convicted and eventually exonerated as well as the work of the lawyers and law students working on their cases. The Prosecuting Attorney and the Defense Attorney are both based in part on Mark Godsey, co-founder of the Ohio Innocence Project, at different stages of his career. The prosecutor, representing a younger Godsey (who had been a prosecutor for the Southern District of New York), extolls his role in keeping people safe, while the defense attorney reflect an older Godsey's views on the fallibility of the judicial system. Clarence Elkins was convicted of two rapes and a murder after a "flimsy identification".
Although the content of the album was viewed by some as powerful, other listeners found the material to be at best clichéd and redundant, and at worst utterly nihilistic and extremely disturbing. It is difficult to determine whether the album was intended to be self-parody or mindless exploitation of what was then a hugely profitable subgenre of rap music. Still, Bringing Hell On Earth is now a rare and collectible release from Rap-A-Lot Records' early history, probably best remembered for the misogynistic and extremely violent track, "Take The Pussy", which extolls the virtues of rape and glorifies the sexual abuse of women.
Being a mistress was typically an occupation for a younger woman who, if she were fortunate, might go on to marry her lover or another man of rank. The ballad "The Three Ravens" (published in 1611, but possibly older) extolls the loyal mistress of a slain knight, who buries her dead lover and then dies of the exertion, as she was in an advanced stage of pregnancy. The ballad-maker assigned this role to the knight's mistress ("leman" was the term common at the time) rather than to his wife. In the courts of Europe, particularly Versailles and Whitehall in the 17th and 18th centuries, a mistress often wielded great power and influence.
The initial verses of the Rama purva tapaniya, says Lamb, extolls Rama and Sita with other major characters in the Ramkatha (the epic story of Rama). The Upanishad then defines the formula for erecting the Ram Yantra, the mystical mantra, with directions to inscribe beej mantra and other mantras. In the concluding section the text asserts that Rama worship leads one to the highest place and the attainment of liberation. The Uttara portion of the Rama tapaniya text, states Lamb, asserts that Shiva repeated the Rama mantra for thousands of ages, and Rama then gave him the boon whereby if Shiva would whisper the Rama taraka mantra in a dying man's ear, he would be liberated.
Many of her articles and speeches on pacifism, feminism, technology and teaching are collected in The Ursula Franklin Reader published in 2006. Franklin is also the author of The Real World of Technology which is based on her 1989 Massey Lectures broadcast on CBC Radio. In a piece of writing entitled "Letter to a Graduate Student," Franklin encouraged the physics career of a student "Marcia," who is devoted to feminism yet interested in physics and unsure of how to integrate the two. In the letter Franklin extolls the merits of colleague Maggie Benston, whose contributions to feminist thought and pedagogy, Franklin stated, issued from her integrated way of being and philosophical foundation in science.
"Michael Raven, A Guide to Staffordshire and the Black Country, 2004, , pp.252-3 According to William White in his 1851 History, Gazetteer and Directory of Staffordshire: :"Ranton, or Ronton, is a small scattered village, five miles (8 km) W of Stafford, comprising within its parish the scattered hamlets of Extolls, Long Compton, Park Nook, and including 320 inhabitants, and about 2670 acres of land, belonging chiefly to the Earl of Lichfield, and Francis Eld, Esq, and the former is lord of the manor, which, at the time of the Norman Conquest, was held by Goderick, a Saxon nobleman, and afterwards by the Noels and Harcourts. Swynfen Jones, Esq, and a few smaller owners have estates in the parish. :About a mile W of the village is Ranton Abbey, an extra parochial liberty of 700 acres belonging to the Earl of Lichfield.
Some of her poetic verses are part of a mural by artist Ife Nii Owoo at the Logan Branch of the Free Library of Philadelphia. The author has collaborated with jazz guitarist Monette Sudler on the Sisters in Music project since 2000. They have multiple recordings, including two recent poetry and jazz pieces, "Scat" and "How we got through". In their spoken and sung word and music collaboration, Mayson extolls her female viewers to "Keep climbing" as "You can only go up from here." and to "Fly, girl, fly." despite their struggles against various oppressions, while Sudler encourages them to "Step up to the plate." in a softball-themed metaphor for life. Mayson taught at the Art Sanctuary for 8 years, along with serving as an artist in residence at Art Sanctuary’s after- school teen arts program, and Painted Bride Art Center’s ArtLAB Youth Poetry Series. Her experience as an immigrant and a social worker has directly informed her writing, where she focuses on social issues such as immigration and mental illness, often with a perspective on gender and race, using a first-person, “everyday voice” that sometimes utilizes Liberian English.
The Priestly source serves largely as a tool of promoting God's overall influence in the event, inserting a narrative where God speaks directly to Noah and extolls his virtues, before vowing to establish a covenant with him and providing strict instructions as to the structure of the Ark. He then commands Noah to take with him the more famous two of every animal onto the Ark, although because the Priestly source's urtext never actually described Noah doing this, it is immediately followed by the Jahwist's contradictory claim of Noah bringing sevens for most and two for some. The Priestly source then describes the Flood as lasting for 150 days, without making mention of how the waters rose as the Yahwist had — although it then explains that God shut the windows of the firmament and the abyss in order to abate the waters, which would imply they were likewise its origin as well. The end of the Priesty source's Deluge is far more gradual than the Yahwist's, instead of taking seven days, it now takes a full year, and Noah sends out a raven at the end of the tenth month, as opposed to a dove after only 40 days of rain.

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