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26 Sentences With "have the air of"

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

"He should have the air of a celebrity," he said.
Tokyo (CNN)Akihiko Kondo doesn't have the air of a rebel.
For a league that trades on its unpredictability, far too many games have the air of processions.
Their colours are so bright and inviting and they have the air of being soft-centred and delightful.
If many of these attempts have the air of a hammy "James Bond" film, Marita Lorenz was Castro's femme fatale.
These days, many football matches in Europe have the air of a family picnic, interrupted only sporadically by a chant or applause.
But it does have the air of an older, rich celebrity developing a fondness for luxury cars, with an appropriate tech twist.
Thursday's meeting with the United States might have the air of a tribute to Wayne Rooney, but the paper airplane fad has passed.
But the progress of their relationship is contrived, and the proceedings have the air of a tit-for-tat argument even when the characters aren't yelling.
The Vegas dressing room did not have the air of despair often found elsewhere among struggling teams, something Berkshire suggested was vital to rediscovering their bravado.
Due to Republicans' hiring of Mitchell, a longtime Arizona sex crimes prosecutor, to handle witness questioning, the hearing itself might have the air of a courtroom proceeding.
But the leaks and innuendo so far don't have the air of inevitability that often accompanies Apple rumors yet, so I wouldn't block off your calendar just yet.
The protests against the new citizenship law have the air of a final cry to salvage our dignity before we are made second-class citizens, or worse, noncitizens.
His sober, businesslike instructions for how to proceed unaccompanied through the complex have the air of a recording intended to be played in the event of his untimely death.
Her accounts of going on walks with him in the woods, where he would reveal the underlying mathematical bases of natural forms, have the air of a fairy tale.
If it weren't for the fact that absolutely nobody here should be allowed anywhere near a naked flame, the protest would have the air of a classic British garden party—albeit slightly more obscene.
The teenagers, who change from muddy street clothes to sundry underwear combos as the story line gets more of a "Lord of the Flies" vibe, often have the air of adolescents tearing through a particularly exotic school vacation.
His shots have the air of inevitability, and even after the ball rips through the net, his awesome lingers on the court like a hangover, disrupting an opposing offense that's processing his gut punch with only 24 seconds to figure out how they can slap back.
Or the fact that, no matter if you're wearing it with jeans, a ball skirt, or (as the kids are doing these days) a pair of striped tear-away joggers, you'll still have the air of a Provence babe who just finished having a picnic along the riverbanks with the cheesemonger's son.
Electro, by and large, is for leather-clad lads with straggly long hair who stick to the walls of goth clubs in seaside towns and call themselves Lord DarkPsyche on Facebook and have the air of damp about them, so it's no wonder that it took a bona fide star like Robbie to conjure up some much needed magic.
The now-departed Marianne Williamson and still-in-it Andrew Yang both have the air of a grift about them—the former having hawked a The Secret-style psychic salve to our political problems, the latter pitching a bad version of universal basic income with gimmicks like handing out $116.53,000 a month to 10 people, as if his campaign were the Monster Energy Epic Presidency Raffle.
Inside, it's the English interior designer Rita Konig's Hollywood fantasy: grass cloth on the walls; a Prada-green living room with a fireplace, honor bar and bold upholstery; a secluded little roof bar (open only to guests and their guests) with rattan chairs and cactus in pots; a reception desk that doubles as a wine bar (the clerk pours a complimentary glass during check-in); a bright yellow kitchen; and 23 uniquely designed guest rooms that have the air of an impossibly tasteful best friend's pied-à-terre.
The writers wanted Rowen to have the air of a retired soldier. Since his debut, Rowen ranked on the Tales character popularity polls.
Calvin took a prosaic view, writing to one correspondent: > I, who have the air of being so hostile to celibacy, I am still not married > and do not know whether I will ever be. If I take a wife it will be because, > being better freed from numerous worries, I can devote myself to the Lord. Several candidates were presented to him including one young woman from a noble family. Reluctantly, Calvin agreed to the marriage, on the condition that she would learn French.
An experienced director of Hollywood farce > could perhaps have reshaped the comedian's style to fit the new medium; but > Mr. Ken Hall has made only an amateurish job of things... all the actors > have the air of novices in a suburban repertory show. As for the plot and > the dialogue, one had best relapse into a resigned silence.... Brings in > kangaroos and emus and incredible burlesque aborigines for the mere sake of > showing them. A good deal of American influence comes in, too. For no > discoverable reason Miss Yvonne Banvard goes through her part in exact and > avowed impersonation of Mae West.
Jane Austen uses nearly the same words to describe Charles Bingley and George Wickham: both are likable, charming, cheerful, have easy manners, and above all, have the air of a gentleman. But Wickham, to whom Austen gives more engaging manners if it is possible than to Bingley, only has the appearance of a gentleman – not the behaviour – as Elizabeth will point out bitterly afterward. Bingley is impressionable, weak even, without much knowledge of himself,Reeta Sahney 1990, p. 36 but he is simple and honest, while Wickham is a hypocrite and a true villain who hides his "lack of principles" and his "vicious tendencies" under his likable airs.

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