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65 Sentences With "glowed with"

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

They exchanged their promises tearfully and glowed with renewed divinity.
His mischievous eyes still glowed with the wonder of life.
My face glowed with cornstarch and beets, but at what cost?
The screens glowed with statistical displays and videos about fighting terrorism.
I mean, she has such beautiful brown eyes, and they glowed with hellfire.
In every one of Tromsø's hotel lobbies, screens glowed with images of the lights.
As Manny and I ordered a second round, my phone glowed with a news alert.
LOS ANGELES — It was Friday night in Cypress Park, and King Taco glowed with neon.
He had a thatch of night-black hair and dark eyes that glowed with mischievous curiosity.
They scattered the bacteria across a test field and then detected those that glowed with a laser.
The flashiest thing on stage were the lecterns, whose front panels subtly glowed with red and blue.
Walking through Chelsea, I glowed with the weight and the beauty of the glimpse he'd offered me.
For a year afterwards, the debris left behind glowed with radiation ranging from X-rays to radio waves.
A bracelet glowed with enormous emeralds held not by workaday metal prongs but by small petal-shaped emeralds.
Trump's Twitter feed glowed with an incandescent rage that only his deep sense of personal victimhood can sustain.
She started life like lots of kids, made wise decisions and wretched ones, glowed with success and suffered humiliating setbacks.
Located beside a pharmacy that glowed with blue lights, the eight-story structure seemed on the verge of physical collapse.
The rear hub of one bicycle glowed with almost the same vivid orange-yellow thermal imprint of the riders' legs.
On the nearby writing desk my laptop glowed with online instructions for how to debone and tie a pork shoulder.
My room glowed with warmth, from the yellow rubber duck in the bathroom to the overhead ductwork, also painted yellow.
The balcony glowed with blinking neon palm trees, an enormous Christ figurine, and illuminated statues of Silvio Berlusconi and Chairman Mao.
It was a job well done: The young warriors panted and glowed with perspiration as they exited the theater of war.
They all glowed with the same colour and intensity they did in the painting room, but out here, something was off.
Jingle Ball doesn't reward subtlety — bad news for Khalid, who sang well and glowed with kindness, to little effect — or reticence.
And the rest of her — her arms, her face, even her neck glowed with what looked like the worst sunburn ever.
The moon was a tender crescent, the nights frosty, and the dawns glowed with the crimson and violet of the fall.
Nearly 400 people showed up in Sydney Australia for a vigil Monday night, as the Sydney Harbor Bridge glowed with rainbow lights.
PIMCO's other holiday party near its Newport Beach headquarters featured women in bedazzled snow-white angel costumes whose wings glowed with LED lights.
The golden light of the sunset illuminated the joshua trees and snow behind me and the landscape glowed with an almost unworldly brightness. 
The comment section below a meme-filled installment on Dungeons and Dragons glowed with praise and unusually articulate feedback for the marketers behind it.
I had expected some expression of remorse or unease, but instead her face glowed with a kind of exaltation as she said the words.
She glowed with post-reading positive vibes, and if she was at all troubled about the news about her love life, it didn't show.
The 43-sided structure, lined with mirrors to capture the sunlight, glowed with an otherworldly beauty as we approached it at a depth of 15 feet.
In Ohio on Tuesday, residents and emergency officials were responding to the destruction that happened overnight, when radars glowed with the telltale signatures of violent storms.
At the back of the room a wall of tarnished old mirrors, hung frame to frame, glowed with the silvered light of old ballrooms and candlelit salons.
In one a somber moment, he played piano and sang alongside a projected film of Prince as the stadium and city glowed with purple lights, paying homage to their native icon.
In one a somber moment, he played piano and sang alongside a projected film of Prince as the stadium and city glowed with purple lights, paying homage to their native icon.
Her balmy voice bounced through an auditorium packed with people whose skin glowed with the depth of different shades of melanin and whose dyed afros in varying textures bobbed along to the music.
The scientists also had inserted fluorescent proteins next to the "scissors" and other components, and the mouse flesh glowed with two colors, maraschino-cherry red and a neon green, under an inverted fluorescence microscope.
For weeks, the night sky may have glowed with eerie blue light while Earth's animals received radiation doses equivalent to roughly one CT scan for every creature living on land or in shallower water.
All in all, Fultz moved well, understood where he was supposed to be (he even made a couple smart off-ball switches on the other end), and glowed with the ball in his hands.
Their lights were off at that hour, and I could just make out their shapes as I drove; up on the ridges, new homes glowed with yard lights and long driveways, their owners indifferent to weather.
CHISHAWASHA, Zimbabwe (Reuters) - Robert Mugabe's face "glowed" with relief when he agreed to step down as Zimbabwe's president last week under pressure from the military and his party after 37 years in power, the priest who mediated his resignation said on Sunday.
Even days after the election a surfeit of campaign signs remained visible in front of homes and businesses; in barber shops and cafeterias the memory of the night—"the fruition of a very long trek," as Moten put it, still glowed with an aura of pride.
Either they glowed with color, or they were hueless and dead.
Narada Muni entered one of these immense palaces. Supporting the palace were coral pillars decoratively inlaid with vaidurya gems. Sapphires bedecked the walls, and the floors glowed with perpetual brilliance.
When Christmas light manufacturers first started using LEDs the colors seemed very dull and uninspiring. Even the white lights, which were typically single-chip LEDs, glowed with a faintly yellowish color that made them look cheap and unattractive.
The result was satisfactory: the glass glowed with a blue fluorescence. It was a while before they realized that the color was due to the lead content of the glass. They then tested Edison bulbs, of lead-free glass, of English manufacture, with which they obtained a light green fluorescence. However, despite that, well-wrapped photographic plates at an adequate distance weren’t exposed.
John Hines (1998) The Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Edix Hill (Barrington A), Cambridgeshire. Council for British Archaeology. Symbolism continued to have a hold on the minds of Anglo-Saxon people into the Christian eras. The interiors of churches would have glowed with colour, and the walls of the halls were painted with decorative scenes from the imagination telling stories of monsters and heroes like those in the poem Beowulf.
London called her his "literary mother". Twenty years later, London wrote to Coolbrith to thank her. Coolbrith also mentored young Isadora Duncan who later described Coolbrith as "a very wonderful" woman, with "very beautiful eyes that glowed with burning fire and passion". Magazine writer Samuel Dickson reported that, at a soirée in 1927, an aging Coolbrith told him of the famous lovers she had known, and that she had once dazzled Joseph Duncan, Isadora's father.
Nonetheless, several reports noted some impact of the phenomenon on humans and environment. According to A. Grakov, who observed a glowing yellow ball the size of the moon, the air above the lake in Petrozavodsk glowed with white light after the ball had disappeared. The glow was more intense than that from Petrozavodsk's lights. According to Yuri Linnik, after 20 September 1977 there was increased biological activity in the areas where the phenomenon was observed.
Maricha then assumed the form of a beautiful golden deer, which had silver spots and glowed with many gems like sapphire, moonstone, black jet and amethyst on its body. Maricha began grazing in the vicinity of Rama's ashram so that Sita would catch a glimpse of him. As soon as the animal-eating rakshasa Maricha entered the forest in the form of a deer, the other animals smelt something was wrong and ran away in fear.
He had been wounded severely in the back and > couldn't move his arms; otherwise he would have resisted to his last breath. > The Japanese's mouth glowed with huge gold-crowned teeth, and his captor > wanted them. He put the point of his kabar on the base of a tooth and hit > the handle with the palm of his hand. Because the Japanese was kicking his > feet and thrashing about, the knife point glanced off the tooth and sank > deeply into the victim's mouth.
Serving lamas, two to each heavy copper kettle, moved up and down pouring salt tea. Ibex heads looked down from the ceiling, and there was a banner depicting running deer, yaks and a leopard, partially hidden by dust and cobwebs. Murals illuminating scenes from the life of the Buddha glowed with rich pigments, and multicoloured tsampa and ghi offerings were displayed like exotic wedding cakes. The last rays of the sun glinted off the gold brocade in the altar cloth and off the rows of thankas.
French critic Robert Brussel, who attended one of these events, wrote in 1930: > The composer, young, slim, and uncommunicative, with vague meditative eyes, > and lips set firm in an energetic looking face, was at the piano. But the > moment he began to play, the modest and dimly lit dwelling glowed with a > dazzling radiance. By the end of the first scene, I was conquered: by the > last, I was lost in admiration. The manuscript on the music-rest, scored > over with fine pencillings, revealed a masterpiece.
Of Pear, Ros wrote: "she had a swell staff of sweet-faced helpers swathed in stratagem, whose members and garments glowed with the lust of the loose, sparkled with the tears of the tortured, shone with the sunlight of bribery, dangled with the diamonds of distrust, slashed with sapphires of scandals..." Ros believed that her critics lacked sufficient intellect to appreciate her talent, and was convinced that they conspired against her for revealing the corruption of society's ruling classes, thereby disturbing "the bowels of millions".
That too was unusual, and brought her further attention. In fact, she caused a sensation wherever she went with her loads of horses. A reporter for the Denver Post larded his interview article with effusive praise: “Her face glowed with intelligence, gentle humor and glorious health, such as can only be acquired by outdoor life, and that is the life that is led by Miss Kitty C. Wilkins, the wonderful horse raiser of Bruneau, Idaho.”“The Only One of Her Kind,” Denver Post, Denver, Colorado (September 18, 1902).
Many Elves accepted while others refused, and still others started for Aman but stopped along the way, including the Elves who later become the Sindar, ruled by the Elf King Thingol and Melian, a Maia. All of the Vanyar and Noldor, and many of the Teleri, reached Aman. In Aman, Fëanor, son of Finwë, King of the Noldor, created the Silmarils, jewels that glowed with the captured light of the Two Trees. Melkor, who had been held in captivity by the Valar, was eventually released after feigning repentance.
In the late 1970s, O'Hara helped run her third husband Charles F. Blair, Jr.'s flying business in Saint Croix in the United States Virgin Islands, and edited a magazine, but later sold them to spend more time in Glengarriff in Ireland. She was married three times, and had one daughter, Bronwyn with her second husband. Her autobiography, 'Tis Herself, was published in 2004 and became a New York Times Bestseller. In November 2014, she was presented with an Honorary Academy Award with the inscription "To Maureen O'Hara, one of Hollywood's brightest stars, whose inspiring performances glowed with passion, warmth and strength".
In his 1970 interview with Rolling Stone, he said "Hey Jude" was worthy of an A-side, "but we could have had both." In 1980, he told Playboy he still disagreed with the decision. Doggett describes "Hey Jude" as a song that "glowed with optimism after a summer that had burned with anxiety and rage within the group and in the troubled world beyond". The single's release coincided with the violent subjugation of Vietnam War protestors at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, and condemnation in the West of the Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslovakia and its crushing of attempts to introduce democratic reforms there.
The phenomenon of electric arc was first described by Vasily V. Petrov in 1802; Sir Humphry Davy demonstrated in the same year the electric arc at the Royal Institution of Great Britain. Since then, discharge light sources have been researched because they create light from electricity considerably more efficiently than incandescent light bulbs. The father of the low-pressure gas discharge tube was German glassblower Heinrich Geissler, who beginning in 1857 constructed colorful artistic cold cathode tubes with different gases in them which glowed with many different colors, called Geissler tubes. It was found that inert gases like the noble gases neon, argon, krypton or xenon, as well as carbon dioxide worked well in tubes.
Von Below had a reputation as a fierce defender of prevailing traditions of political and constitutional historiography: he was more than happy to share with students his own fascination with the precision of the legalistic presentational style habitually involved with constitutional history. In 1904 Kern moved to the Friedrich Wilhelm University (as the Humboldt was known at that time) in Berlin. Here he passed through the school of Karl Zeumer (1849 - 1914), a noted specialist in legal history. Another tutor at Berlin by whom he was particularly strongly influenced was Dietrich Schäfer, an old fashioned German nationalist whose lectures on medieval history positively glowed with enthusiasm as he related the deeds and exploits of the more heroic among the German emperors of the medieval period.
George Brandes, in 1901, compared the works of Chateaubriand to those of Rousseau and others: > The year 1800 was the first to produce a book bearing the imprint of the new > era, a work small in size, but great in significance and mighty in the > impression it made. Atala took the French public by storm in a way which no > book had done since the days of Paul and Virginia. It was a romance of the > plains and mysterious forests of North America, with a strong, strange aroma > of the untilled soil from which it sprang; it glowed with rich foreign > colouring, and with the fiercer glow of consuming passion.George Brandes, > Main Currents in Nineteenth Century Literature, 1:The Emigrant Literature p.
The warm breeze of the desert ruffled his hair. His eyes glowed with the fervor of a pilgrim who has finally reached the Holy City. (TMC, chapter 5) While in Cairo, Amelia hears rumors of a scrap of papyrus which no one will confess to owning, but which has the local antiquities dealers living in fear of the man who is after it. No sooner does the family settle in near their dig than they are paid a visit by a group of American missionaries who have set up shop nearby, then the rival archaeologist who did get permission to dig at Dahshoor, then a German noblewoman with more money than taste...and then a thief who steals one of the objects the Emersons find at Mazghunah, a mummy case.
Appearances in Anna Christie and Ghosts followed, as well as the less than successful musical version of I Remember Mama. This show, composed by Richard Rodgers, experienced numerous revisions during a long preview period, then closed after 108 performances. She also featured in the widely deprecated musical movie remake of Lost Horizon during 1973. In 1977, when she appeared on Broadway at the Imperial Theatre in Eugene O'Neill's Anna Christie, the New York Times said that she "glowed with despair and hope, and was everything one could have wished her to have been" in a performance "not to be missed and never to be forgotten", with her "grace and authority" that was "perhaps more than Garbo...born for Anna Christie:--Or more properly, Anna Christie was born for her." In 1980, Brian De Palma, who directed Carrie, wanted Liv Ullmann to play the role of Kate Miller in the erotic crime thriller Dressed to Kill and offered it to her, but she declined because of the violence.

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