Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

64 Sentences With "inflects"

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

Are there ways in which teaching inflects your own practice?
A similar sense of  uncertainty inflects many of the landscapes.
This Hibernian import inflects familiar staples of contemporary entertainment with an Irish accent.
Poggio inflects all the voices of this book with a fiercely anti-Catholic polemic.
What about the change in Berryhill's palette from painting to painting and how that inflects the mood?
She reads in a low-pitched, deceptively neutral voice that inflects ostensible objectivity with the slightest whisper of lamentation.
It gives us no sense of Marianne or Connell in the future, or how their later adulthood inflects their memories.
Nonetheless, our awareness of Where None*'s presence remains unbroken, for it inflects its site with a clear and unmistakable intention.
The propulsion of modern dance music inflects many if not all contemporary chart hits and makes them excellent candidates for workout remixing.
Yet this "sincerely silly character-driven music," as the notes put it, transfigures the chaos that inflects so many of our daily doings.
In a 1973 poster for an exhibition, The 5th Exhibition of Contemporary Japanese Sculpture, Awazu inflects the natural world and sculptural object with surrealism.
A mercenary, transactional feeling inflects even the most intimate of Catherine's relationships, and this problem seems deeper and more interesting than anything another person can solve.
Museums and the visitor's experience in them have always been shaped by the particular historical context that inflects institutional focus, professional practice, and visitor expectations and behavior.
The scenes often take place at night, and the otherworldly light emanating from the moon or from an unseen source inflects the forms with a mysterious radiance.
Videogames are no longer niche activities; their logic inflects all digital media in one way or another, so even if you aren't playing directly, you're probably still playing somehow.
But the book's lovely darker palette of blues and grays (the colors are by Braden Lamb) hints at the sadness that inflects this story of childhood illness and dislocation.
Ritter inflects his fictional peregrinations with nonfictional prose-flights concerning musical Orientalism, which read like Thomas Bernhard editing Wikipedia, or a Levantine-themed edition of Grove's Dictionary of Music.
But Ms. Parkinson (of AMC's "Humans" and a fabulous Masha in the Royal Court "Seagull" in 2007) inflects Judy's willful domestic blissfulness with a subconscious note of squeaky dissonance.
Oversight: One big risk — so big, in fact, that it could be considered a meta-risk that inflects all the rest — is the lack of existing regulation in this space.
Buddy, 24, both sings and raps — he's strongest when he inflects his singing with some of the shape of his rapping — and on most of this album, he is a contemplative, empathetic narrator.
At its best, and "White Squad I" is among his most exceptional works, Golub's art conveys thorny truths with a sophisticated, stratified sense of nuance that inflects but never tempers his paintings' overwhelming force.
Mr. Méndez brings a fiery sense of an embattled soul to his performance as the conflicted priest, and Ms. Lopez inflects her lines with some wry humor, as Martina waffles between cogency and senility.
Tbilisi, which claims origins as far back as the fifth century and was a stop on the Silk Road, provided Janberidze and Toloraia with an unparalleled set of deep references that inflects their work.
From this first encounter, Meiselas soon befriended the girls, but the push and pull of their adolescent curiosity combined with a slightly menacing undertone remained a marker of their relationship and inflects the images on display.
Philosopher and cognitive scientist Daniel Dennett has said that language "infects and inflects our thought at every level," arguing that a significant portion of our perception of the world is influenced by the words at our disposal.
The heroic rhetoric of class warfare that sometimes inflects these books can mask the truth that the progress in the past decade concerning the crisis of incarceration has in large part been made on classically American reformist terms.
It inflects the display of four sculptures whose visible debts to Robert Gober's surreal conflations of objects and Charles LeDray's miniaturization of the everyday are balanced by the artist's own strange sense of bricolage, scale and mordant allusion.
Smartly grouped and augmented by psychologically perceptive wall texts, the display of political work by such a diverse array of both mainstream and avowedly engaged artists in Artists Respond inflects SAAM's curatorial ambitions with an awareness of contemporary art.
"There's a new wave of critics today who are reappraising Indiana in the context of Pop art, seeing how he inflects it with the darker side of the American dream," Barbara Haskell, the curator of the Whitney retrospective, told the Times.
When Ms. Meier's Klytamnestra bitterly confronts Elektra for stalking around the palace like a hate-spewing maniac, she does not sing her phrases like shrieking accusations; rather, she inflects the lines with subdued fear and genuine distress, which is much more moving.
It's a way of reckoning as transparently as possible with the contours of my own subjectivity, the way it inflects and charges the material I write; so that I can hold myself more accountable — rather than less — to everything that lives beyond my subjectivity.
The result is effective: Chucky inflects the banalities of talking doll-hood with sufficient creepiness from the start, and there's something perversely satisfying in watching his increasingly stringy-haired progress toward full-on serial killer as he stalks and hunts down everyone Andy hates, followed by everyone Andy loves.
The push for a larger state resonates with a politically ambiguous popular memory of the postwar era — a certain nostalgia for the era of big, dynamic industries owned by the British government inflects both a version of the left-wing politics of the Labour Party leader, Jeremy Corbyn, and a version of Brexit sentiment.
Though the comedy is as readily suited to live action, La Cava's animation inflects the film's basic situations with delightful impossibilities, as when a crowd of bibulous patrons 27 suddenly materializes behind, beside, and beneath a broad-shouldered barroom customer; a cantankerous drunkard ties a lamppost into a knot, 28 sending the terrified Rummy scurrying horizontally up a wall; and Harry, under the withering gaze of Rummy's wife, shrinks into his hat.
Inflected prepositions are found in many Semitic languages, including Hebrew, Arabic, Assyrian Neo-Aramaic and Amharic. For example, the Arabic preposition () on inflects as () on me, ) () on you (m.s.), () on him, etc.
The name inflects as ο Ieraks (ο Ιέραξ), tou Ierakos (του Ιέρακος), ton Ieraka (τον Ιέρακα), and in modern Greek Geraka. In the nominative form it is today used as Gerakas (ο Γέρακας) and it is a singular masculine noun.
Sarah Hunter of The Booklist Reader remarked that Ries "inflects the characters and universe of Hyalin with issues and concerns that will resonate with contemporary readers." In 2015, Witchy was nominated for an Ignatz award in the "Outstanding Online Comic" category.
Swedish inflects nouns in singular and plural. The plural of the noun is usually obtained by adding a suffix, according to the noun's declension. The suffixes are as follows: -or in the 1st declension (e.g. flicka – flickor), -ar in the 2nd (e.g.
Pashto inflects nouns into four grammatical cases: direct, oblique I, oblique II and vocative. The oblique I case is used as prepositional case as well as in the past tense as the subject of transitive verbs, and the oblique II case is used as ablative case.
Below is a list of Finnish language exonyms for places in non-Finnish-speaking areas: Note that the Finnish language inflects place names where English use prepositions like in and to. These variants can affect any place name and are inflections, not exonyms. For example Mene Birminghamiin means Go to Birmingham.
While all pro- drop languages are null-subject languages, not all null-subject languages are pro-drop. In null-subject languages that have verb inflection in which the verb inflects for person, the grammatical person of the subject is reflected by the inflection of the verb and likewise for number and gender.
Inflection changes the grammatical properties of a word within its syntactic category. In the example: :I was hoping the cloth wouldn't fade, but it has faded quite a bit. the suffix -ed inflects the root-word fade to indicate past participle. Inflectional suffixes do not change the word class of the word after the inflection.
Most Romance languages (with the notable exception of French) are often categorised as pro-drop too, most of them only in the case of subject pronouns. Unlike in Japanese, however, the missing subject pronoun is not inferred strictly from pragmatics, but partially indicated by the morphology of the verb, which inflects for person and number of the subject.
See . Romance languages inherited from Latin the possibility of an overt expression of the subject (as in Italian vedo Socrate correre). Moreover, the "inflected infinitive" (or "personal infinitive") found in Portuguese and Galician inflects for person and number. These, alongside Sardinian, are the only Indo-European languages that allow infinitives to take person and number endings.
However, in common usage, the name always takes a definite article. Furthermore, it also inflects for case. Thus it is die Kölnischen Höfe in the nominative and accusative, den Kölnischen Höfen in the dative and der Kölnischen Höfe in the genitive. The name is also plural, meaning that the verb must take the third-person plural form if the name is the subject.
The 2019 edition, titled 'Every Step in the Right Direction' (22 November 2019–22 March 2020), was led by Artistic Director Patrick Flores and considered the steps required to 'consider current conditions and the human endeavour for change', while considering the 'spectacularity of Singapore as a Potemkin metropolis in Southeast Asia inflects the intuition of biennial spectacle,' as Flores explained in an interview in Ocula Magazine.
Shoshoni is primarily spoken in the Great Basin, in areas of Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, and Idaho. The consonant inventory of Shoshoni is rather small, but a much wider range of surface forms of these phonemes appear in the spoken language. The language has six vowels, distinguished by length. Shoshoni is a strongly suffixing language, and it inflects for nominal number and case and for verbal aspect and tense using suffixes.
In earlier texts, multi-syllable adjectives also receive a final -e in these situations, but this occurs less regularly in later Middle English texts. Otherwise adjectives have no ending, and adjectives already ending in -e etymologically receive no ending as well. Earlier texts sometimes inflect adjectives for case as well. Layamon's Brut inflects adjectives for the masculine accusative, genitive, and dative, the feminine dative, and the plural genitive.
' This still applies in cases where a relatively indeterminate subject is genderized, such as the Spanish todos a una [voz] ('all at once', literally 'all at one [voice]'). It should be rewritten in Portuguese without any cardinal number. For example, todos juntos 'all together'. On the other hand, in Portuguese, cardinal number 'two' inflects with gender (dois if masculine, duas if feminine), while in Spanish dos is used for both.
Chaucer's version can be said to reflect a less cynical and less misogynistic world-view than Boccaccio's, casting Criseyde as fearful and sincere rather than simply fickle and having been led astray by the eloquent and perfidious Pandarus. It also inflects the sorrow of the story with humour. The poem had an important legacy for later writers. Robert Henryson's Scots poem The Testament of Cresseid imagined a tragic fate for Criseyde not given by Chaucer.
Japanese, like many languages with SOV word order, inflects verbs for tense-aspect-mood, as well as other categories such as negation, but shows absolutely no agreement with the subject - it is a strictly dependent-marking language. On the other hand, Basque, Georgian, and some other languages, have polypersonal agreement: the verb agrees with the subject, the direct object, and even the secondary object if present, a greater degree of head-marking than is found in most European languages.
The grammar of the West Frisian language, a West Germanic language spoken mostly in the province of Friesland (Fryslân) in the north of the Netherlands, is similar to other West Germanic languages, most notably Dutch. West Frisian is more analytic than its ancestor language Old Frisian, largely abandoning the latter's case system. It features two genders and inflects nouns in the singular and plural numbers. Verbs inflect for person, number, mood, and tense, though many forms are formed using periphrastic constructions.
Sahaptin has a split ergative syntax, with direct-inverse voicing and several applicative constructions.Rude, 2009. The ergative case inflects third-person nominals only when the direct object is first- or second-person (the examples below are from the Umatilla dialect): ;1) i-q̓ínu-šana yáka paanáy :3nom-see-asp bear 3acc.sg :‘the bear saw him’ ;2) i-q̓ínu-šana=aš yáka-nɨm :3nom-see-asp=1sg bear-erg :‘the bear saw me’ The direct-inverse contrast can be elicited with examples such as the following.
As with the Romance languages mentioned above, the missing pronoun is not inferred strictly from pragmatics, but partially indicated by the morphology of the verb (Вижу, Виждам, Widzę, Vidim, etc...). However, the past tense of both imperfective and perfective in modern East Slavic languages inflects by gender and number rather than the person due to the fact that the present tense conjugations of the copula "to be" (Russian быть, Ukrainian бути, Belorussian быць) have practically fallen out of use. As such, the pronoun is often included in these tenses, especially in writing.
In Semitic linguistics, the elative ( ', literally meaning "noun of preference") is a stage of gradation in Arabic that can be used to express comparatives or superlatives. The Arabic elative has a special inflection similar to that of colour and defect adjectives but differs in the details. To form an elative, the consonants of the adjective's root are placed in the transfix ' (or ' if the second and third root consonants are the same), which generally inflects for case but not for gender or number. Furthermore, elatives belong to the diptote declension. E.g.
Chiquihuitlán Mazatec inflects for four aspects: completive, continuative, incompletive, as well as a neutral or unmarked aspect. Completive aspect is formed by prefixing /ka-/ to the neutral verb form, continuative is formed by prefixing /ti-/. The incompletive aspect has a distinct set of stem forming prefixes as well as distinct tone patterns. In incompletive transitive verbs, only the first-person singular and the third-person prefixes vary from the corresponding neutral forms; the first-person plural and the second-person forms are identical to the corresponding neutral forms.
There are no structural features that are completely unique to Bilinarra and linguists would consider all three languages to be dialects of a single language, but speakers of these languages consider them to be different. Elements of their tongue were first recorded by a police constable W. H. Willshire in 1896. By 2013, only one person was alive who spoke it as their primary language though it inflects the variety of Kriol spoken by Bilinarra children. Bilinarra is native to the Victoria River District of the Northern Territory of Australia.
Czech grammar, like that of other Slavic languages, is fusional; its nouns, verbs, and adjectives are inflected by phonological processes to modify their meanings and grammatical functions, and the easily separable affixes characteristic of agglutinative languages are limited. Czech inflects for case, gender and number in nouns and tense, aspect, mood, person and subject number and gender in verbs. Parts of speech include adjectives, adverbs, numbers, interrogative words, prepositions, conjunctions and interjections. Adverbs are primarily formed from adjectives by taking the final ý or í of the base form and replacing it with e, ě, or o.
As described by Stephen Holden in the New York Times, "The band's austere style inflects the astringent twang of the Velvet Underground with the drone of R.E.M. and adds countryish echoes that recall Gram Parsons."Stephen Holden, New York Times, March 14, 1990, "Pop Life: Silos to the Majors" Salas-Humara has also recorded four solo records, numerous live albums and several one-offs with other songwriters, and has produced albums for other artists. He is of Cuban-American extraction and known for his occasional use of Spanish-language lyrics. He also works as a painter and visual artist.
This word could surface as either a noun or verb. The first tree shows that when the element before is a D "una", the root will be an N and the following morphology will inflect -ata which is the correct full orthography for the noun "walk" in Italian. The tree on the right shows a similar process but in the environment where the root follows a tense element, and the morphology inflects -o as a suffix, which makes the verb surface not only as a verb, but as discussed before in person agreement, also shows that this is the first person present form of the verb ("I walk").
German has sein (with inflected forms like seine) for masculine and ihr (with inflected forms like ihre) for feminine possessors; in German, the "hat" sentences above would be Er hat seinen Hut verloren (He lost his hat) and Sie hat ihren Hut verloren (She lost her hat) respectively. Brabantian also inflects zijn (his) and haar (her) according to the grammatical gender and number of the thing(s) owned. Some languages have no distinctive possessive determiners and express possession by declining personal pronouns in the genitive or possessive case, or by using possessive suffixes or particles. In Japanese, for example, boku no (a word for I coupled with the genitive particle no), is used for my or mine.
The morphosyntactic alignment of Mixe is ergative and it also has an obviative system which serves to distinguish between verb participants in reference to its direct–inverse system. The Mixe verb is complex and inflects for many categories and also shows a lot of derivational morphology. One of the parameters of verb inflection is whether a verb occurs in an independent or dependent clause; this distinction is marked by both differential affixation and stem ablaut. Unlike Sayultec MixeKroeger 2005: 286 (spoken in the neighboring state of Veracruz), Mixe languages of Oaxaca only mark one argument on the verb: either the object or the subject of the verb depending on whether the verb is in the direct or inverse form.
ASL has a rich system of verbal inflection, which involves both grammatical aspect: how the action of verbs flows in time—and agreement marking. Aspect can be marked by changing the manner of movement of the verb; for example, continuous aspect is marked by incorporating rhythmic, circular movement, while punctual aspect is achieved by modifying the sign so that it has a stationary hand position. Verbs may agree with both the subject and the object, and are marked for number and reciprocity. Reciprocity is indicated by using two one-handed signs; for example, the sign SHOOT, made with an L-shaped handshape with inward movement of the thumb, inflects to SHOOT[reciprocal], articulated by having two L-shaped hands "shooting" at each other.
Chelsea & Battersea, 1746. The bridge would be built on the meander in the river, a short distance west of the ferry crossing shown Chelsea (Old English Cealchyð, chalk wharf), about west of Westminster on the north bank of the River Thames, has existed as a settlement since at least Anglo-Saxon times. The Thames at this point inflects through a sharp angle from a south–north to an east–west flow, and the slow-moving and relatively easily fordable river here is popularly believed to be the site of Julius Caesar's crossing of the Thames during the 54 BC invasion of Britain. Chelsea enjoyed good road and river connections to the seat of government at Westminster and the commercial centre of the City of London since at least the 14th century. It was a centre of the British porcelain industry, and a major producer of baked goods – at peak periods almost 250,000 Chelsea buns per day were sold.

No results under this filter, show 64 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.