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28 Sentences With "illustrates with"

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

She illustrates with slide projections, and she costumes her actors with assiduous flamboyance.
"Yup" illustrates, with an appearance by the devil himself and a bit of demon-demolishing, how women are tougher than men.
And as Poitras magnificently illustrates with her cinéma vérité-inspired style, history doesn't always unfold in massive protests or under bright lights.
The majority of works stem from to the '60s and '70s, as a timeline illustrates, with the most recent piece dating to 2005.
Or, rather, low: They are both booming basses, equally mighty in a way that illustrates, with only music, how alike these antipodal characters may be.
Enter the Sex Pistols, controversy, success, failure and more success, a trajectory that Ms. Tucker entertainingly illustrates with a rush of talking heads and colorful archival material.
"The End of Ice" illustrates with an almost overwhelming string of statistics that for many of the world's glaciers, coral reefs and ancient forests, the end is already here.
He illustrates with examples of communities where media-fueled public engagement led to regulation of Stingray cellphone intercepts, body cavity searches, the militarization of police arsenals, and stop and frisk.
The German social critic Theodor W. Adorno wrote that "divorce, even between good-natured, amiable, educated people, is apt to stir up a dust-cloud that covers and discolors all it touches," an insight that Baumbach illustrates with vivid precision.
I'm unclear on whether the theory that the Ancient One puts forth (or, rather, illustrates with light in midair), about her reality splitting if the Time Stone gets moved, is in contrast to Endgame's main time-travel theory, or if it's specific to the Time Stone.
She writes openly about sensitive subjects: for example, one of her topics is the boorish behavior of men having affairs. She starts by stating the issue, then illustrates with an example of the issue.
The complex is dedicated to Shiva, and includes a Nandi-mandapa monument. Outside the temples, within the complex, is a carved slab of Saptamatrikas (seven mothers) of the Shaktism tradition. Near the temple, is a large stepwell as a water utility. According to Vinayak Bharne and Krupali Krusche, the main Mallikarjuna temple illustrates with simplicity the core elements of a Hindu temple.
Cooper wrote and illustrated the book simultaneously, saying "I love how words and images play off each other. Like good teammates, who make each other better." He typically illustrates with watercolor pictures, though felt that the subject matter of Big Cat, Little Cat was better-suited to monochrome images. In developing the book, he drew inspiration from Kevin Henkes Caldecott- winning story Kitten's First Full Moon.
According to Madhukar the human being is living in the erroneous belief in a real “I”: “The human being believes to have freedom of action and to live in an objective world. This perception is limited. In reality each living being is pure consciousness, in which the world subjectively illustrates. With the question “Who am I?” the perceived, limited reality can be questioned and pure consciousness (the Self) can be experienced.
Below information is not cited properly. Links listed below are no longer valid, thus the information is too. MSN reports that home prices have dropped by a record amount and illustrates with a chart of historical real estate prices."S&P;/Case & Shiller Housing Price Indices" Real estate property values have trended upward in the range of 2–5% almost every year since World War II, but since 2006 they have declined.
Sweet began her career in book illustration with James Howe’s Pinky and Rex series. She has since illustrated nearly 100 books; several of these she authored and for many more she collaborated with other writers. She illustrated three books for author Jen Bryant including, A River of Words, A Splash of Red, and The Right Word. Sweet conducts extensive research on the subjects of her biographies for children, which she illustrates with watercolor, mixed media, and collage.
Right from his childhood he faced discrimination because he belonged to a 'lower caste'. This is what he writes in the opening paragraph of his autobiography, Dastaan: 'I have endured the ordeal by fire time and again in my life, and it is a miracle that I have been able to emerge unscathed.'Dutt 2012, p.3 What that fire was he illustrates with an example in the next few lines of the same opening paragraph.
The Shintōshū is a book in ten volumes believed to date from the Nanboku-chō period (1336–1392).Iwanami Japanese dictionary, 6th edition (2008), DVD version It illustrates with tales about shrines the honji suijaku theory. The common point of the tales is that, before reincarnating as tutelary kami of an area, a soul has first to be born and suffer there as a human being. The suffering is mostly caused by relationships with relatives, especially wives or husbands.
Ernst Mach was inspired by his work on psychophysics.Pojman, Paul, "Ernst Mach", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2011 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.) William James also admired his work: in 1904, he wrote an admiring introduction to the English translation of Fechner's Büchlein vom Leben nach dem Tode (Little Book of Life After Death). Furthermore, he influenced Sigmund Freud, who refers to Fechner when introducing the concept of psychic locality in his The Interpretation of Dreams that he illustrates with the microscope-metaphor.Sulloway, Frank J. (1979).
They tell us that much of their comic routines were improvised, and Flaminio Scala illustrates with a slapstick version of his early life, in which he demonstrates how he was raised by monks and later thrown onto the street. There, the endless parade of humanity inspires him to create a new kind of theater--masked the Commedia dell'arte. We meet Armanda Ragusa, a dwarf, who is madly in love with the dashing Flaminio. She steals little mementos of her idol--his lost buttons, one of his old stockings, posters, etc.
In a barrack room at a Battle Training Ground in England, a platoon of conscripts are complaining about blisters and are impatient to get into action with the enemy. Sergeant Jack Watson tells them that they need a little bit extra to be successful in combat, which he illustrates with a story from his experience in the Western Desert Campaign. His story is then shown in flashback. Lieutenant Crawford, Sergeant Watson and the seven men under their command are travelling through the Libyan desert in an Allied convoy, when their lorry becomes stuck in the sand and the convoy moves on without them.
Notable philosophers include Planudes who characterized the interest in Science and Mathematics at the time. Astronomy was also a field of interest, as Nicephorus Gregoras illustrates with his proposal to modify the calendar before changes were put in place by the Gregorian reform. Moreover, some prominent personalities also proposed the change of the Imperial title to 'Emperor of the Hellenes', instead of Romans. This enthusiasm for the glorious past, contained elements that were also present in the movement that led to the creation of the modern Greek state, in 1830, after four centuries of Ottoman rule.
Encolpius, Giton and Eumolpus get to shore safely (as apparently does Corax), but Lichas is washed ashore drowned (115). The companions learn they are in the neighbourhood of Crotona, and that the inhabitants are notorious legacy- hunters (116). Eumolpus proposes taking advantage of this, and it is agreed that he will pose as a childless, sickly man of wealth, and the others as his slaves (117). As they travel to the city, Eumolpus lectures on the need for elevated content in poetry (118), which he illustrates with a poem of almost 300 lines on the Civil War between Julius Caesar and Pompey (119–124).
The depth and direction of the channels is thus determined by a combination of genetic makeup and the epigenetic feedback loops by which genes are regulated.Waddington, pp 34–37 While Waddington does assert that the process of development is genetically driven, he makes no attempt to explain how this works and even offers evidence to the contrary.Waddington, p 37 He observes, for instance, that genes ordinarily determine peripheral traits, such as eye color, rather than "focal" traits, such as the structure of the eye itself. Moreover, when genetic mutation influences basic structures, the result tends to be the complete transformation of a structure into another rather than piecemeal change, which Waddington illustrates with the developmental ball rolling out of one creode into another.
In the Preface, Rescher identifies the work as an attempt to "synthesize and systematize an aporetic procedure for dealing with information overload (of 'cognitive dissonance', as it is sometimes called)" (ix). The text is also useful in that it provides a more precise (although specialized) definition of the concept: "any cognitive situation in which the threat of inconsistency confronts us" (1). Rescher further introduces his specific study of the apory by qualifying the term as "a group of individually plausible but collectively incompatible theses", a designation he illustrates with the following syllogism or "cluster of contentions": The aporia, or "apory" of this syllogism lies in the fact that, while each of these assertions is individually conceivable, together they are inconsistent or impossible (i.e. they constitute a paradox).
In Lillo's world of trade, Millwood's commodity is her body; however, she refuses to be "victimized as a woman and a whore." Therefore, Millwood is a more compelling candidate to wear the title of The London Merchant, than even Thorowgood, the ostensibly eponymous merchant. This is reinforced with the opening scene in the play where Millwood entices George Barnwell, and Lucy, is standing nearby as an apprentice, quietly watching her master and learning the trade. Lucy also serves in much the manner of Trueman, to give the audience the character of the life that this successful merchant leads, filled with "fine linens and furniture", further solidifying her role as the merchant and the subversion of the economic order of the day that Lillo illustrates with her character.
According to Zimmermann, the Plankinton mansion was exceptional in that "almost the entire project is designed and drawn by an architect [which] shows in the way all of the components of a given room are compatibly related to the whole." The amount of money spent was reflected in the craftsmanship, which he illustrates with a first-floor fireplace: The HABS report notes that a skylight was removed in 1976 and sold, but that it was in size and had a mosaic design of 25,000 parts of zinc-framed stained glass pieces lined with copper. In line with John Plankinton's philosophy and to prove the capabilities of local workers, he ensured that "every part of it was made and prepared in Milwaukee by Milwaukee men," as was reported in John's 1891 obituary in the Milwaukee Sentinel.
Prior to the late 1890s color photography was strictly the domain of a very few intrepid experimenters willing to build their own equipment, do their own color- sensitizing of photographic emulsions, make and test their own color filters and otherwise devote a large amount of time and effort to their pursuits. There were many opportunities for something to go wrong during the series of operations required and problem-free results were rare. Most photographers still regarded the whole idea of color photography as a pipe dream, something only madmen and swindlers would claim to have accomplished. In 1898, however, it was possible to buy the required equipment and supplies ready-made. Two adequately red-sensitive photographic platesAbney, W: "Orthochromatic photography", Journal of the Society of Arts, May 22, 1896 44:587–597 describes and illustrates (with spectrum photographs and curves) the characteristics of the Lumière Panchromatic and Cadett Spectrum plates as of 1896.

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