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22 Sentences With "lowliness"

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

What separates "American Honey" from previous cinematic road trips is the lowliness of the travellers' aspirations.
But it was not an entrance characterized by privilege, comfort, public celebration or self-glorification; it was marked instead by lowliness, obscurity, humility, fragility.
But it's in keeping with the presumptive Republican nominee's longstanding habit of using dogs as a touchstone for lowliness and debasement—a habit that reveals a lot about Trump's view of humankind, about the strange campaign he's running, and about the stark choice Americans will be making in November.
The phrase "lowliness of mind". # = . The word "counsel", denoting the divine plan. # = .
Here statesmanship and reverence, wisdom and trust, freedom and acquiescence, dignity and lowliness harmonize and interblend.
The siege "revealed the extent of the despicableness, lowliness and treason of Musharraf and his forces, who don't deserve the honour of defending Pakistan, because Pakistan is a Muslim land, whereas the forces of Musharraf are hunting dogs under Bush's crucifix", Zawahiri said.
Babbs later described meeting Kesey as "a moment of mirth and sadness, highness and lowliness, interchanging of ideas and musical moments." They became friends, maintained a correspondence while Babbs was stationed in the Far East with the Marines, and eventually formed the Merry Pranksters.
Humiliation is the abasement of pride, which creates mortification or leads to a state of being humbled or reduced to lowliness or submission. It can be brought about through bullying, intimidation, physical or mental mistreatment or trickery, or by embarrassment if a person is revealed to have committed a socially or legally unacceptable act.
In contrast, the genre Teresa employs, the libro de consolaciones (book of consolations), was primarily authored by men and addressed a male audience. In order to humble herself strategically before male readers, the author reiterates the weakness of her intellect or "la baxeza e grosería de mi mugeril yngenio" [the lowliness and grossness of my womanly intellect].
The first recitative, "" (What Isaiah prophesied there has happened in Bethlehem.), applies the situation to the individual Christian, who has nothing to offer as a gift but his heart, explained in an arioso ending. The musicologist Julian Mincham notes unexpected harmonies when the stable of Bethlehem is mentioned, as if to illustrate the "lowliness of that birthplace".
The title is drawn from what Robert Whittington in 1520 wrote of More: > More is a man of an angel's wit and singular learning. I know not his > fellow. For where is the man of that gentleness, lowliness and affability? > And, as time requireth, a man of marvelous mirth and pastimes, and sometime > of as sad gravity.
Retrieved on 21 October 2016. Wesley's organisational skills soon established him as the primary leader of the movement. Whitefield was a Calvinist, whereas Wesley was an outspoken opponent of the doctrine of predestination. Wesley argued (against Calvinist doctrine) that Christians could enjoy a second blessing—entire sanctification (Christian perfection) in this life: loving God and their neighbours, meekness and lowliness of heart and abstaining from all appearance of evil.
A review of the exhibition at the Corcoran Gallery of Art noted that Goldberg made reference to other artists and photographers; used photographs, videos, objects, and texts to convey meaning; and "let his viewers feel, in some corner of their psyches, the lure of abject lowliness, the siren call of pain." Although the accompanying book received one mixed review shortly after publication,Woodward, Richard B. Runaways. The New York Times, 15 October 1995. Accessed 30 January 2010.
Problems start arising in her life because of her beauty. Priyam cannot stand that his wife is far more talented and in-demand than him, and with every passing day, his insecurities about Kangana keep growing. He accuses Kangana of having an affair with his own best friend Nivaan and out of his lowliness complex, starts keeping an eye on her to know what she does and whom she meets. His suspicion grows so much that he starts raising his hand on Kangana.
Such a man never seeks his own glory, but seeks the glory > of God. The man who loves himself seeks his own glory, whereas he who loves > God loves the glory of his Creator. It is characteristic of the soul which > consciously senses the Love of God always to seek God's glory in every > Commandment it performs and to be happy in its low estate. For glory befits > God because of His majesty, while lowliness befits man because it unites us > with God.
Apart from adding various illustrative verses, some…in elegant Persian, Ibn al-Muqaffa evidently inserted Quranic and Biblical quotations, presumably as a concession to Muslims. Be that as it may, his Sasanian text is still Iranocentric: > ...we are the best of Persians, and there is no quality or trait of > excellence or nobility which we hold dearer than the fact that we have ever > showed humility and lowliness…in the service of kings, and have chosen > obedience and loyalty, devotion and fidelity. Through this quality…we came > to be the head and neck of all the climes...
The embolism is not used in the Greek Liturgies of St. Basil and St. John Chrysostom. In the Liturgy of St. James the English translation of the embolism is as follows: > Lord, lead us not into temptation, Lord of Hosts! for thou dost know our > frailty; but deliver us from the wicked one, from all his works, from all > his assaults and craftiness; through thy holy name, which we call upon to > guard us in our lowliness. In the Mozarabic Rite this prayer is recited not only in the Mass, but also after the Our Father at Lauds and Vespers.
Rivers' play "When Last We Flew" was selected for the Sundance Theatre Lab in 2010. The play went on to be produced in the New York International Fringe Festival where it won awards for Outstanding Play and Outstanding Performance (for Rory Lipede). The play was invited to be a part of the Fringe Encore Series. “When Last We Flew” also won the 2011 GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding New York Theatre: Off Off Broadway. The Movement Theatre Company presented Rivers' play Look Upon Our Lowliness, directed by David Mendizábal, at the Harlem School for the Arts Theatre, in April 2013.
If you're susceptible to the likes of Cold Cave, PJ Harvey and classic 4AD moods, this will put you in your place," the writer concluded. According to Pitchfork, as compared to earlier singles and EPs (which were "promising, with an immediately identifiable aesthetic" but "pulled in a few different directions, between structure and atmosphere, or vulnerable longing and stark, theatrical wailing") The Spoils is "a potent mix of layered and otherworldly vocals, muddy electronics, and storefront-church keyboards", full of tension, dynamics and raw emotion. "Spoils is compelling throughout, but the peak comes much later in its runtime, with 'Smirenye'Smirenye (Cмирение) - a Russian word meaning 'humility', 'lowliness', 'mortification'. and especially 'Clay Bodies', argues the reviewer.
At this point, the lowliness of the humble stable is reflected in a chorale: "" (Look, there lies in a dark stable), a setting for four parts of a stanza by Paul Gerhardt, which is sung to the melody of Martin Luther's "Vom Himmel hoch, da komm ich her". This chorale, in the low key of C major, is the central movement of this cantata and thus also the midpoint of the first three parts of the oratorio, performed on the three days of Christmas: Its focus is on the dark stable, expressing amazement that the Almighty, the Virgin's child, rests where a cow had fed. Bach illustrates power over all by a rising scale of more than an octave in the bass line.
Scholars have emphasized how Black-Yellow unity may be found in the shared experience of being subjected to slavery and servitude by European capitalism. Okihiro documents the "coolie" slave trade, in which approximately one-third of Asian enslaved peoples perished en route to the Americas under the forced authority of European and American ship captains, to assert that "the African and Asian coolie were kinsmen and kinswomen in that world created by European masters. For example, over 124,000 Chinese "coolies" were shipped to Cuba to service Cuba's plantation system. Historian Franklin W. Knight writes that the Chinese became "coinheritors with the Negroes of the lowliness of caste, the abuse, the ruthless exploitation.... Chinese labor in Cuba in the nineteenth century was slavery in every social aspect except the name.
Ross Wakefield writes that although Muir would recognize Native Americans as human, he begrudgingly did so and that institutional racism impacted his views, influencing his thought that they could never attain the same level of purity and immaculateness that nature did. Environmental historians, like Carolyn Merchant, also cite Muir as someone who was unwilling to extend his efforts of conservation toward groups of people who were not white. She explains in Shades of Darkness that on his walking journey from Canada (where he took refuge in order to escape being drafted as a soldier in the Civil War) down to the Gulf of Mexico, he often came across groups of African American people and wrote of them with much disdain and lowliness. In his accounts and descriptions of the places he trekked through, he often contrasted the care and reverence that he felt nature deserved with remarks about black people being devilish and incapable of completing tasks as efficiently as white people could.

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