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61 Sentences With "exulted in"

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

On Wednesday walking down the street he exulted in the sun's return.
Afterward, Foles exulted in a way that spoke for the essence of Eagles fandom.
The plaintiffs exulted in Mr. Johnson's defeat and called it a victory for democracy.
The plaintiffs exulted in Mr. Johnson's defeat and called it a victory for democracy.
Moore, who had been having an off year, took first, and exulted in the win.
It exulted in rhythms, from pumping Beach Boys rock to carnival struts and triple-time beats.
She obviously enjoyed fighting — and writing — the good fight, and exulted in the persona she cultivated.
Sure, Joe DiMaggio made the Italians proud, and Jews exulted in the play of Hank Greenberg and Sandy Koufax.
Punk so clearly exulted in the art of pro wrestling, even if some of the bullshit undoubtedly ground him down.
Ariana Grande's 2018 album, "Sweetener," exulted in a blissful, erotic romance, including a track, "Pete Davidson," named after her boyfriend.
Mr. Trump exulted in rallies during the campaign and seems to be itching to return to the adulation of the crowds.
In some of the cables, American diplomats exulted in the abrupt political transition, even as they noted the rising body count.
It Was Bad City Planning ... Houston exulted in sprawling, free-form growth, but laissez-faire isn't the way to prepare for natural catastrophes.
As Taylor slid across the track, with the 2-1 lead secure in his glove, General Manager Farhan Zaidi exulted in his suite.
While the atmosphere in Brussels was tense, in Berlin Germans and foreigners exulted in the chance to see and hear Mr. Obama live.
Players and fans — and the Cubs' fan base extends across the country and is visible wherever they play — exulted in the historic moment.
Trump exulted in his newly bipartisan approach Thursday, declaring it "a great thing for our country," while Ryan mostly grinned and bore it.
What could have been a colorful, imaginative rendering of a talented artist who exulted in being profoundly extra is instead weirdly hollow and plodding.
Some Jewish leaders exulted in the prospect of him joining a club that was started to serve people rejected by those other social bastions.
When Trump visited Saudi Arabia, his commerce secretary exulted in the absence of hostile demonstrations, an absence ensured by the repressiveness of the regime.
Ho Chi Minh exulted in the victory, calling it "a little Dien Bien Phu," a reference to the famous rout of the French in 1954.
In the kind of potential turnabout rarely if ever seen at this late stage of a presidential race, Donald J. Trump exulted in his good fortune.
Ali had exulted in unpardonable blackness by embracing a black God and displaying unquenchable loyalty to black folk by loving his people unceasingly and without apology.
I exulted in this; it seemed as though I had finally cleared the last hurdle between me and the mundane heterosexual existence I had yearned for.
"There is one more thing, and we've managed to keep it secret," Mr. Jobs exulted in 1999 as he introduced iMacs in colors like blueberry and tangerine.
"I am here to report: We are very much alive!" he exulted in a victory speech, and you could almost see the adrenaline pumping from his pores.
A total eclipse that crossed the sky from Oregon to South Carolina brought out throngs of spectators, who exulted in seeing the midday sky go briefly dark.
The Spiders' style, I'd later understand, was very Clockwork Orange, but for now I exulted in finding an act who were doing precisely what I needed to see.
After the producers exulted in the movie's elevation to cultural sensation in the earlier sequels, though, everything about "Sharknado" feels more perfunctory, including its by-now obligatory cameos.
At a rally in Redding, California, Trump exulted in spotting the lone black person in the crowd, who is "a fan of mine, great fan, great guy," he said.
Mr. Trump exulted in large crowds assembled at cavernous venues throughout his 19953 bid, and spent the first days of his presidency quibbling over how many Americans attended his inauguration.
Its fall reconfigured the Syrian battleground: The Saudis and Turks resigned themselves to Assad's rule, and their rivals exulted in a victory that seemed to justify years of blood and treasure.
While critical of Britain, he said before leaving the museum in 2016 that he still viewed London as a center of tolerance; he exulted in having 28 nationalities represented on the museum's staff.
But while adults have long exulted in the notion that summer's end means their kids are once again out of their dang hair, they've long bemoaned the Back-to-School Shopping Industrial Complex, too.
Progressive organizations that support abortion rights swiftly slid into panic mode, publicly wringing their hands about the future of Roe, while conservative groups that oppose abortion rights exulted in the prospect of rolling it back.
Mr. Spencer has quoted Nazi propaganda and railed against Jews, including at a conference sponsored by the institute in Washington last month where members exulted in Donald J. Trump's presidential victory with Nazi-era salutes.
Her voice moved from airy delicacy to forthright declamation; the traditional sounds in her performance were loops from a computer meshed with electric guitar lines, and the rhythms exulted in ways to subdivide six-beat grooves.
Conservatives in the state exulted in their ability to fulfill their agenda—and to raise the funds to do so—but there was a boomerang effect: they encouraged a diverse group of dissenters to recognize a common cause.
Crane exulted in their apartment's grand view of the Brooklyn Bridge, about which he was trying to write a book-length sequence of poems, knowing that one of his apartment's previous inhabitants, Washington Roebling, had helped erect it.
King Princess, who describes herself as genderqueer and gay, placed her sexuality upfront — even more so on the songs that would join "1950" on her 2018 EP, "Made My Bed" — and exulted in the enduring power of desire and love.
Day 346: "I Feel Like Dying" – The Drought Is Over 2 (The Carter 3 Sessions), 2007 For the past several years, rap has exulted in a culture of prescription drug abuse, with hazy anthems to pharmaceuticals like Xanax, Percocet, and codeine cough syrup.
WASHINGTON — President Trump exulted in data on Friday that showed economic growth accelerated in the second quarter, reeling off a list of statistics to make a case, during a midterm election year, that his administration should get the credit for the humming economy.
Gathered in Philadelphia for their annual congressional retreat, less than a week after President Trump's inauguration, lawmakers exulted in the possibilities of total government control, grinning through forums about an aggressive 200-day agenda that began with honoring a central campaign promise: repealing the Affordable Care Act.
The Tamils were particularly delighted by the shock defeat of Mr Sirisena's chauvinistic and autocratic predecessor, Mahinda Rajapaksa, who had exulted in the crushing of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, a Tamil separatist group, in 2009, despite the devastating loss of life and property in Tamil areas.
His film "Sobibor: October 14, 1943" exulted in the escape of Jews from an extermination camp, and two other films celebrated Israel, both its founding and, in "Tsahal", its defence forces, which he saw through a lens of proud joy at their youth, beauty, massed weaponry and reappropriation of violence.
A few blocks away in Sahnaya, a pro-government fighter who uses the nom de guerre Abu Odai exulted in the victory, saying that many young men from Sahnaya had died in the battles and that until now he had been afraid that fighters from Daraya would harm his family.
She would have exulted in making them feel his inexorableness.
Casey, James The Irish Law Officers Round Hall Sweet and Maxwell, Dublin, 1996 Saurin's anti-Catholic bias is also said to have offended Wellesley's second wife, Marianne Patterson, who was a Catholic.Geoghegan, p.225 Daniel O'Connell exulted in "the downfall of our mortal foe".Geoghegan p.
Working the cattle was not just a routine job but also a lifestyle that exulted in the freedom of the wide unsettled outdoors on horseback. Long drives hired one cowboy for about 250 head of cattle.Howard R. Lamar (1977), p. 269 Saloons were ubiquitous (outside Mormondom), but on the trail, the cowboys were forbidden to drink alcohol.
On 22 January 1996, shortly before the story of the unfounded abortion allegation was published, Diana's private secretary Patrick Jephson resigned, as did his assistant Nicole Cockell the next day. Jephson later wrote that Diana had "exulted in accusing Legge-Bourke of having had an abortion".Jephson, Patrick, Shadows of a Princess (London, October 2000), extract published in The Sunday Times newspaper on 24 September 2000.
Looking back at the elder man's change of political sentiments, Hazlitt observed that the lecturer struck a harsh note if he felt it were a triumph to have exulted in the end of all hope for the "future improvement" of the human race; rather it should have been a matter for "lamentation".Hazlitt 1930, vol. 11, p. 100. The two later again crossed paths, when Hazlitt, as a political reporter, attended Mackintosh's "maiden speech" in Parliament, in 1813,Jones 1989, p. 123.
In July 1996, the couple agreed on the terms of their divorce. This followed shortly after the Princess's accusation that the Prince's personal assistant Tiggy Legge-Bourke had aborted the Prince's child, after which Legge-Bourke instructed her attorney Peter Carter-Ruck to demand an apology. Diana's private secretary Patrick Jephson resigned shortly before the story broke, later writing that the Princess had "exulted in accusing Legge-Bourke of having had an abortion". The divorce was finalised on 28 August 1996.
Suddenly, he discovers a grisly occupant. Enthroned on a square boulder of black stone is the large mummified corpse of a man, apparently a great warrior or chieftain from ancient times. Noticing an iron sword which lies across the dead man's knees, Conan steals the weapon and claims it for himself. Exulted in his new-found sense of power, Conan hears the sound of a dry creaking and turns to face the mummy as it begins rising from its throne, having been raised from the dead by Conan's warcry.
Although victorious, the French realized that the city's defences needed significant improvement. Canada exulted in its victory and survival; on 5 November the Te Deum was sung in Québec in the chapel of a new church that would be named Notre Dame de la Victoire, Our Lady of Victory. When news of the expedition reached Versailles, Louis XIV ordered a medal struck bearing the inscription: Kebeca liberata M.DC.XC–Francia in novo orbe victrix, or "Deliverance of Québec 1690–France victorious in the New World." Jacques Le Moyne, who died soon after the battle, was mourned by the whole colony for his courtesy and valour.
The revival meetings continued throughout the fall with similar and escalating response among the people. Minister and Logan County predecessor, Dr. Thomas Craighead, when the meetings were held at The Ridge, a Tennessee congregation where over fifty were converted, including two of Craighead’s children. Attendance at the various meetings continued to grow, with five thousand reported at Hodge’s Shiloh congregation in Tennessee in September. The pace became demanding as McGready criss-crossed Kentucky and Tennessee, rushing from one sacrament to the other before the onset of winter. McGready exulted in the revival at one community, a hundred miles from Logan County at the Red Banks of the Ohio River (Henderson, Kentucky) where “professed Deists” became “warm and lively Christians.
The content of Williswinde was: Voorrede (Preface), Weemoed (Melancholy), Viviane, Williswinde, Ginevra, Semiramis, Fragmenten uit Johannes' Apocalyps (Fragments from the Book of Revelation of John) and Verantwoording (Accountability). Williswinde door Louis Couperus - retrieved 1 March 2013 The verses were written in iambs. In a review in the Algemeen Handelsblad a critic wrote: it is a pity that Couperus begins most of his verses with "wandered", "exercised", "since" and "exulted". In the poems Couperus let's himself be intoxicated with the splendor of his words while the content is rather poor. 'Nieuwe uitgaven', in Algemeen Handelsblad, 21 November 1895 - retrieved 1 March 2013 The Soerabaijasch Handelsblad wrote in April 1896: The title "Williswinde" sounds like a soft birdsong.
Bust of Mark Antony Initial news in Rome claimed that the Senate's forces had suffered a defeat at Forum Gallorum, arousing concern and fears among the Republican faction. Only on 18 April did they receive Aulus Hirtius' letter and a report detailing the events of the battle. The victory at Forum Gallorum, wrongly considered decisive, was greeted with enthusiasm; Antony was roundly denounced and his sympathizers forced into hiding. In the Senate on 21 April 43 BC, Cicero emphatically pronounced the Fourteenth and final Philippic, in which he exulted in the victory at Forum Gallorum, proposed forty days of public thanksgiving, and particularly praised the legionaries who had fallen and the two consuls Aulus Hirtius and Vibius Pansa.
Despite the defeat on Malvern Hill, the Seven Days Battles accomplished the original Confederate goal of removing any direct threat to Richmond from the Union Army. The three newspapers in Richmond exulted in this strategic victory and lionized Robert E. Lee as a national hero: "No captain that ever lived," opined the Richmond Dispatch, "could have planned or executed a better plan." Similarly, Confederate Navy Secretary Stephen Mallory said, "the Great McClelland [sic] the young Napoleon now like a whipped cur lies on the banks of the James River crouched under his Gun Boats." Throughout Richmond and the once-beleaguered South, there was a triumphant mood, and scant attention was paid to the flaws in Lee's tactics or execution.
A second passage (I Maccabees 7) states that Alcimus succeeded in persuading Demetrius, the newly elected king of Syria, to appoint him high priest instead of Judas Maccabeus. Whereupon it is said: They were mistaken, however, since Alcimus later caused sixty of them to be put to death. In the parallel passage of II Maccabees, on the other hand, Alcimus describes the political situation of the Jews to Demetrius as follows: "Those of the Jews that be called Hasideans, whose captain is Judas Maccabeus, nourish war, and are seditious, and will not let the realm be in peace."II Maccabees 14:6 describes many hasidim being slaughtered near Jerusalem by Israel's enemies, while depicts the hasidim as powerful warriors who exulted in inflicting "vengeance" on the enemies.
His nature poetry is founded on his delight in nature, > and he exulted in revealing the loveliness of heaven and earth and his > interest in the creatures of the countryside. As does a child, a pagan or a > mystic, he glorified nature and never ceased to regard it with eyes of > wonder".Hockey, L. (1971), W. H. Davies, University of Wales Press (on > behalf of the Welsh Arts Council), p. 89. For his honorary degree in 1926, Davies was introduced to the assembly at the University of Wales by Professor W. D. Thomas with a citation that may still serve as a summary of Davies' themes, style and tone: > "A Welshman, a poet of distinction, and a man in whose work much of the > peculiarly Welsh attitude to life is expressed with singular grace and > sincerity.
Till then, we fear that we shall never be able to subscribe to the belief in a Trinity of living poets, of whom Mr. S. is represented as entitled to the foremost honours."Madden 1972 qtd. p. 137 John Foster wrote a review for the April 1811 Eclectic Review which said, "We must repeat then, in the first place, our censure of the adoption or creation of so absurd a fable" and "The next chief point of censure would be, that this absurdity is also paganism; but this has been noticed so pointedly and repeatedly in our analysis, that a very few words here will suffice."Madden 1972 qtd. pp. 138, 142 In an analysis of other aspects, Foster argued, "The general diction of the work is admirably strong, and various, and free; and, in going through it, we have repeatedly exulted in the capabilities of the English language.

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