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22 Sentences With "jauntier"

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

The difference is that Dufresne is cruder and jauntier than Dufy ever was.
This tale is jauntier: God, we are told, created humans, who immediately created boredom.
At The New Yorker , she sought to restore the newsier, jauntier illustrated weekly invented by Harold Ross.
Returning after a run in 2014, this production transposes Austen into the jauntier key of Dickens (2:30).
Listen to the way he slips subtly from the work's grim opening to the jauntier, waltzing second section.
Usowski was wearing a suit, but Vaart had a jauntier look, with a white turtleneck under an Argyle sweater-vest.
Her rapping accentuates the higher, jauntier qualities in her voice, making her sound even younger than 15, like early Rae Sremmurd.
For one, workers are in a jauntier mood thanks to a tightening labour market, with rising wages, in the past few years.
For audiences who like their sex on the silly side, a longstanding and popular preference in British theater, there are jauntier accounts of erotic mayhem.
A jauntier section, with some wildly squiggling, jazzy wind solos, is eventually weighed down by a trudging undercurrent, a sense of funeral beneath the party.
Transposing Austen into the jauntier key of Dickens, this production reminds us that few theater companies ride narrative momentum as resourcefully or enthusiastically as Bedlam does.
"Bobby" is a gentle standout, its dual harmonies upfront and banjo-picks buried beneath; "Proud" is jauntier with its whistle-along melodies and every bit as country.
Salomone has made a habit of editing "Walk of Life" into the endings of famous movies (and even a couple of television shows), the better to play them out to a jauntier tune.
" It all feels so unnecessarily lugubrious and condescending — not that a jauntier Steinke is always preferable, especially when she's rolling her eyes at saying something "for the zillionth time" and admiring an orca's "badassery.
Shake It Up (1981) is jauntier and more frivolous, abounding with bouncy dance tracks ("Shake It Up"); exquisite exercises in gilded melancholy ("Since You're Gone"); and gushing synth breakdowns that sparkle and fray ("I'm Not the One").
It's much jauntier than we're used to from a man whose lyrical trademarks are late night brooding and getting super fucked up on molly, and Daft Punk's lighter influence is a welcome one, adding a new string to The Weeknd's bow.
Before long, the facts of the gentlemen's shared (or was it?) past are revealed to be as subject to revision as the physical condition of the seemingly depleted Hirst, who reappears after intermission as an entirely refashioned and jauntier version of his earlier self.
When someone at the recording session asked in which key the piece is in, the reply was "Asia Minor". The piece was recorded on a cheap, out-of-tune, piano bought for $50. Wisner had applied shellac to the hammers to achieve a jauntier sound.
The opening theme song was changed to a new one, composed by Ennio Morricone, and the look of the show was changed reflecting a style similar to spaghetti Westerns, which were very popular at the time. The hats worn featured much broader brims and higher crowns. The clothing was also jauntier and more imaginative and mustaches and beards were much in evidence. These changes brought a better ranking (number 18) in the top-30 primetime shows, after the previous year had the show slip out of the top-30 rankings for the first time.
Parallel 9 in its original form was poorly received, and so extensive changes were made. Most of the first series' characters were dropped, and the setting changed from a prison dimension to a space station. The new series was more vibrant than its predecessor, with jauntier opening titles, a brighter set and a new lead character; though this character retained the name Mercator, the character changed to a younger, more manic man with spiky hair, played by Christopher Wild. New characters including Zee, Dr. Kovan and Brian the Dinosaur were introduced, replacing the supporting characters from the previous run.
Ron Onions was one of the leading lights of commercial radio news and current affairs in Britain in the 1970's and helped to create a new approach to broadcasting, in counterpoint to the BBC for which he had once worked. Onions was the brains behind LBC (London Broadcasting Company) and its sister, the national commercial radio news service IRN (Independent Radio News).In place of the BBC's gravitas, he introduced a lighter,jauntier approach to news presentation akin to that of a tabloid newspaper. He was influenced by American broadcasting from his time as the BBC's New York organiser, and introduced the three-minute "snapshot" bulletin in which news was always moving forward, rather than just a summary of recent history.
It was based on condensed sans-serif capitals and had a three-dimensional form making it suitable for use in exhibition display typography.Berry, W.T., Johnson, A.F., and Jaspert, W.P., The Encyclopaedia of Type Faces, London: Blandford Press, 1963 It has been said to bear "a vague resemblance to bunting". The lettering on the Royal Festival Hall and the temporary Festival building on the South Bank was a bold, sloping slab serif letter form, determined by Gray and her colleagues, including Charles Hasler and Gordon Cullen, illustrated in Gray's Lettering on Buildings (1960) and derived in part from typefaces used in the early 19th century. It has been described as a "turn to a jauntier and more decorative visual language" that was "part of a wider move towards the appreciation of vernacular arts and the peculiarities of English culture".

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