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"trenchantly" Definitions
  1. in a strong, effective and clear way
"trenchantly" Synonyms
acidly sourly bitterly cuttingly harshly sharply acerbically bitingly caustically hurtfully mordantly pungently tartly acridly stingingly scathingly satirically vitriolically sarcastically keenly ironically mockingly sardonically sneeringly wryly mordaciously derisively cynically scornfully strongly compellingly effectively cogently convincingly clearly coercively persuasively powerfully saliently unmistakably effectually firmly incisively indubitably influentially tellingly assuredly authoritatively strikingly importantly potently significantly devastatingly considerably markedly impressively crucially forcibly conspicuously penetratingly acutely perspicaciously piercingly astutely cleverly insightfully intelligently perceptively shrewdly analytically cannily concisely discerningly percipiently crisply pithily succinctly briefly tersely laconically compactly compendiously epigrammatically summarily aphoristically curtly shortly apothegmatically monosyllabically elliptically sententiously telegraphically bluntly frankly directly candidly straightforwardly forthrightly honestly outspokenly unequivocally explicitly baldly unqualifiedly undisguisedly simply unadornedly starkly barely uncompromisingly matter-of-factly decisively critically finally conclusively momentously majorly pivotally absolutely definitely definitively forcefully chiefly fatefully imperatively imperiously goodly dedicatedly devotedly loyally staunchly dependably faithfully flawlessly inseparably safely stably steadily trustworthily trustily unfailingly unwaveringly closely constantly perceivably cognitively cognizably comprehensibly corporeally discernibly intelligibly knowingly observantly palpably patently perceptibly recognisably(UK) recognizably(US) sensibly sensitively tangibly translucently emphatically vigorously assertively surely energetically earnestly downrightly unconditionally dynamically wholeheartedly aggressively decidedly strenuously vehemently insistently mightily heavily puissantly almightily dominantly sturdily commandingly overpoweringly formidably greatly efficiently capably ably coherently impactfully movingly eloquently pertinently rationally successfully sufficiently interestingly appealingly absorbingly captivatingly curiously engagingly entertainingly fascinatingly intriguingly provocatively stimulatingly affectingly enchantingly engrossingly enthrallingly grippingly rivetingly More

52 Sentences With "trenchantly"

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

Ms. Zittel's show at Andrea Rosen Gallery furthers escapist ideas, but not so trenchantly.
Trenchantly idealistic about literature—is there any other way to be for the artist and critic?
Some students were reluctant to speak publicly, citing fear of government informers; others trenchantly supported the crackdown.
Mr Sessions's heroism, if it can be called that, relates to two things he has trenchantly not done.
The last story, a novella about a professor slowly losing his mind, is trenchantly funny and compelling. —T.
In a portrait of almost forensic detail, Davis delivers one of the most trenchantly observed performances of the year.
Behold the future of art, resistance, and floating data centers in Brendan C. Byrne's beautiful, unsettling, and trenchantly timely story. Enjoy.
A citizens' group which recently protested against these mob lynchings was viciously trolled on social media and trenchantly criticised by ruling-party politicians.
Her part, the pragmatic Christine, had her playing sense to Ms. McTeer's sensibility, and she registered as trenchantly sane, though not without shadows of distress.
The subject was trenchantly explored in Anna Deavere Smith's journalistic drama "Notes From the Field," seen last year in New York at Second Stage Theater.
If Sundance is going to keep showcasing white-families-in-crisis movies, I hope they're all as trenchantly funny and movingly well-observed as this one. —A.
Perhaps more trenchantly, it was also the 15th time this year - still less than a quarter old - that a central bank has eased policy in some form.
David Leege, an emeritus political scientist at Notre Dame, has trenchantly observed that There is more political capital in an issue left festering than in a problem solved.
This, as Olivier Roy has trenchantly argued in his recent book, Jihad and Death, is the unmistakable message of their actions, and it is everywhere emblazoned in jihadi talk.
DJINN PATROL ON THE PURPLE LINEBy Deepa Anappara Perhaps the most trenchantly portrayed boy in India is Apu, the character at the center of Satyajit Ray's famed film trilogy.
"So many MPs were opposed to the prime minister, and so trenchantly, that it is hard to see them coming to a consensus," Hague wrote in pro-Conservative The Telegraph newspaper.
Then it slides into something else: trenchantly rhythmic, improvised music, alive with smeary, interactive connections among the three players: the drummer Mr. Smith, the violist Mat Maneri and the pianist Craig Taborn.
The novel is at its most trenchantly funny when depicting the exhausting nature of virtual social life, and it's in this area, too, that the movie gets its very few knowing laughs.
We live in strange, disorienting times, but without a Rod Serling, the debonair mastermind behind the CBS television series, to set the scene for us as he did so trenchantly more than 50 years ago.
Trenchantly, it pits the competing agendas of the different student factions against one another and also denounces the way the men in the movement recapitulate white dominance over blacks in their dealing with women and self-defined queers.
Adapting (very liberally) the Russian dramatist Nikolai Erdman's Stalin-era play of the same name from 1928, Suhayla El-Bushra has sought to make something trenchantly contemporary out of an archival curio; the result is a stupefying mishmash that saw not a few patrons leave at intermission.
In "Gun Song" — led by Leon Czolgosz, who shot William McKinley — Mr. Sondheim trenchantly outlines the economic principles connecting firearm manufacture and use: "It takes a lot of men to make a gun" in the first verse becomes "A gun kills many men before it's done" in the second.
Notably, the political philosopher he cites to the near exclusion of all others is Edmund Burke, the 18th-century Irish writer and Whig politician who essayed trenchantly against the French Revolution, and whose influence on 21st-century Republican politics you would have to squint very hard to make out.
Pamphleteering, press releases and trenchantly worded radio editorials condemning the bill also formed part of the onslaught in the public arena.Polenberg, at 586.
It trenchantly criticizes the mores of the time, saying of tournaments, for example, that they promote all seven deadly sins and could not exist in a world in which each knight loved his fellow man.
Evidence has been examined by the Tribunal from gardaí based both within the Donegal division and members of varying ranks based elsewhere in the country. The Tribunal compliments many individual gardaí but severely and trenchantly criticises others.
Emerton notes that Dillman and Noth considered the account of the deaths of Er and Onan to "reflect the dying out of two clans of Judah bearing their names, or at least of their failure to maintain a separate existence." However, this view was "trenchantly criticized" by Thomas L. Thompson.
Denney said that Professor Bruce "let me see Jesus" rather than cluttering his lectures with abstruse points. While still a student Denney published his first work, Natural Law in the Spiritual World, by a Brother of the Natural Man. It was a trenchantly critical review of Henry Drummond's Natural Law in the Spiritual World.
A. Emerton, "Judah and Tamar", Vetus Testamentum 29 [1979], 405. Emerton notes that Dillman and Noth considered the account of the deaths of Er and Onan to "reflect the dying out of two clans of Judah bearing their names, or at least of their failure to maintain a separate existence." However, this view was "trenchantly criticized" by Thomas L. Thompson.
Levin, Bernard. "A man burnt to his soul's bones", The Times, 25 January 1972, p. 14, "Music's sublime summit", The Times, 21 December 1987, and "Here at last, Strauss fit for the squeamish", The Times, 2 February 1985, p. 6 He turned less regularly to the visual arts, but when he did his views were clear-cut and trenchantly expressed.
Logical positivism became a major underpinning of analytic philosophy,See "Vienna Circle" in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. and dominated philosophy in the English-speaking world, including philosophy of science, while influencing sciences, but especially social sciences, into the 1960s. Yet the movement failed to resolve its central problems, and its doctrines were increasingly criticized, most trenchantly by Willard Van Orman Quine, Norwood Hanson, Karl Popper, Thomas Kuhn, and Carl Hempel.
The term can also describe a view that history has no relevance or importance in the decision making of modern life. In philosophy, some criticism has arisen because "the dominant school of philosophy in the English speaking world, analytic philosophy... has been trenchantly ahistorical, and indeed anti-historical". However, few view that to be a problem. A more abstract definition of ahistoricism is simply independence from time: removed from history.
Poet Laureate Alfred, Lord Tennyson wrote evocatively about the battle in his poem "The Charge of the Light Brigade". Tennyson's poem, written 2 December and published on 9 December 1854, in The Examiner, praises the brigade ("When can their glory fade? O the wild charge they made!") while trenchantly mourning the appalling futility of the charge ("Not tho' the soldier knew, someone had blunder'd... Charging an army, while all the world wonder'd").
", The Times Higher Educational Supplement, 3 June 1988, p. 14. adopting as he does a line that seems now radical, now trenchantly traditionalist.See especially his "The Shock Of The New Has Lost Its Edge", The Times Higher Educational Supplement, 13 May 1988, p. 16. His decision, in the words of John McLeod, “not to work with the niceties and orthodoxies of postcolonial theory" has on occasions given rise to sharply worded rejoinders.
Later, when progress bogs down on the K-88 project, Rogers is sent to ask him to come back to work. The man refuses to go, and when finally asked directly if he is Lucas Martino, says simply "No": a reply that will later be seen as trenchantly mordant. Budrys tells the story in alternating chapters. Every second chapter relates part of Lucas Martino's life, highlighting his family, his struggle to support a career in physics, and his dalliances in romance.
He recommends that poetry and painting should not be confused, and that they are best practiced and appreciated "as two equitable and friendly neighbors." W. J. T. Mitchell trenchantly observed that "We tend to think that to compare poetry with painting is to make a metaphor, while to differentiate poetry from painting is to state a literal truth."Iconology: Image, Text, Ideology (University of Chicago Press, 1986) page 49 The paragone was another long- running debate, typically rather more competitive, comparing painting and sculpture.
Many were somewhat to the left of centre, though few trenchantly so, but for Gruen one's position on the political spectrum was never a pre-requisite. Indeed, he was a great believer in people having their ideological world view challenged. He hired Bob Gregory, Bruce Chapman, John Quiggin, Steve Dowrick and Cathy Baird, all of whom were exceptionally talented, productive and sensible. The Hawke Government sought informal advice from Gruen from time to time and asked him to participate in several inquiries into economic policy matters.
Some social constructionist theories of ADHD reject the dominant medical opinion that ADHD has a distinct pathophysiology and genetic components. The 'symptoms' of ADHD also happen to be morally questionable attributes, this is why the symptoms are described as 'inappropriate'. Many social constructionists trenchantly question deterministic views of behaviour, such as those views sometimes put forth within behavioural/abnormal psychology and the biological sciences. Currently, the pathophysiology of ADHD is unclear; although research has found evidence of differences in the brain between ADHD and non-ADHD patients.
For example, Pazhwak was an independent thinker and literati, capable of critical reflection about his homeland and the internal political circumstances there. This central aspect appears regularly in his literary work in a subtle and aesthetic manner. He obviously used the politically charged theme of freedom – in the sense of political freedom and the political rights of citizens – in relationship with the conditions in Afghanistan. Trenchantly and elegantly he expressed his worrying thoughts: Today I am reminded of that land, Where the people are prisoners, but the country is free.
He served on the Lords committee on the bill and was often acerbic in debate, much as he had been on earlier reforms. Key to the measure was the enfranchisement of ratepayers. When the Tory peers rallied to the cause of the freemen, a rather flexible class who dominated the electorate in many towns and cities, Hatherton observed caustically that:Hansard 13 August 1835 When a similar measure was proposed for Ireland in 1838, Hatherton defended it trenchantly in the Lords, taking particular exception to attempts to tamper with the franchise.
John Fordham from The Guardian observes a transition in Davis's playing from a "whispering electric sound to some of the most trenchantly responsive straight-horn improvising he ever put on disc". According to Fordham: Jack Johnson and Davis' other electric-period albums influenced rock musician Iggy Pop's early music with the Stooges. Around 1985, he purchased copies of Davis' Sketches of Spain (1960) and Jack Johnson in a no frills used record shop for less than $5. "They have been my inspiring companions ever since", he told The Quietus in 2010.
Nevertheless, the distance was too great for daily university attendance, and he missed many lectures. A particular influence during his time at Cologne was the left-wing economic historian Bruno Kuske who did not shy away from a positive assessment of Soviet economic performance since the October revolution. He was also impressed by Johannes Ziekursch, a specialist on the history of Silesia, who delighted Markov with his trenchantly critical evaluation of the iconic Prussian king, Frederick the Great. Markov's was able to indulge his enthusiasm for travel with several lengthy cycle trips into the Belgian countryside.
Simon Burns MP in 2010 In 2007, Burns persuaded the House of Commons Administration Committee, then being a member, that parliamentarians should have "priority access" to services within the Parliamentary Estate. In practice, this meant that MPs and Peers could avoid queues for shops, restaurants, bars, computers, photocopiers and even toilets by "pushing in" ahead of visitors or staff. The so-called "queue jumping rule" provoked cross-party opposition from Commons staff and other MPs but Burns trenchantly defended the proposal. On 3 April 2008, Burns was involved in a collision with a cyclist as he drove his 4x4 out of the Palace of Westminster gates into Parliament Square.
A 2009 poll conducted by the Uranium Information Centre found that Australians in the 40 to 55 years age group are the "most trenchantly opposed to nuclear power". This generation was raised during the Cold War, experienced the anti-nuclear movement of the 1970s, witnessed the 1979 partial meltdown of the Three Mile Island reactor in the US, and the 1986 Chernobyl disaster. It was the generation which was also subject to cultural influences including feature films such as the "nuclear industry conspiracies" The China Syndrome and Silkwood and the apocalyptic Dr Strangelove. Younger people are "less resistant" to the idea of nuclear power in Australia.
Quoted in Kennedy Smith 2018a She was an enthusiast for the equality of the sexes, devoting much time to her work for the suffrage movement. She had clear-cut opinions on many subjects, which she could express trenchantly, especially on the suffering of human and animal life. From 1890 until its dissolution in 1914 she was a member of the Ladies Dining Society, an exclusive women's activist discussion group that had been established by Kathleen Lyttelton and Louise Creighton, both of whom were also wives of Cambridge academics. She continued her association with Newnham College after her marriage, becoming a member of the college council from 1890.
Dev also became known as a filmmaker of trenchantly topical themes. The same year, he starred with Mumtaz in Tere Mere Sapne, an adaptation of A. J. Cronin's novel, The Citadel. The film was directed by Dev's brother, Vijay and was also successful. In 1971 he paired again with Zaheeda in Gambler which went on to become a success. In the 1970s, Raj Kapoor started playing roles of fathers in films such as Kal Aaj Aur Kal in 1971 and Dharam Karam in 1974 and had put on a lot of weight and films with Dilip Kumar as lead hero like Dastaan and Bairaag were failures at the box office.
" Fitzgerald said that the playwright "makes lyrical irony out of our inability to make sense of our universe". Calling Churchill "not only one of the most radically inventive dramatists of the modern era but also one of the most trenchantly observant", Charles McNulty of Los Angeles Times said that "she appears to concur with her dramatic forebears from 21/2 millenniums ago that knowledge must be irradiated by emotion to become wisdom. Churchill lays bare the frenetic zeitgeist with surgical precision, but she allows mystery and poetry to hold sway." Jesse Green of Vulture wrote that some scenelets "are not developed enough to build much internal drama, and the sequencing of them builds none.
According to Edwards, this constituted "a shocking suppression of serious and credible dissident views", which he said were "soon to be entirely vindicated".Cromwell and Edwards wrote in The Guardian in December 2004 about the limited media references to Denis Halliday and Hans von Sponeck, both of whom resigned from the UN over the sanctions they had administered in Iraq. See Eddie Girdner agreed with Media Lens and cited it as one of the few who had drawn this conclusion before the war began. According to Richard Alexander, writing in 2010 about the Iraq war, Edwards and Cromwell "trenchantly dissected the servant role the British media played in bolstering the lies to the British public purveyed by the UK government".
The OSA group's leading theorists were members of the CIAM from 1928 until 1933, with Ginzburg and Nikolai Kolli members of its secretariat, CIRPAC. A small CIAM meeting with the OSA group was held in Moscow in 1932, with Sigfried Giedion and Cornelius van Eesteren in attendance. Sergei Eisenstein's The General Line featured specially built buildings by OSA's Andrey Burov. The utopian projects of Ivan Leonidov were first published in SA, and their technologically advanced, fantastic nature led to harsh criticisms from the VOPRA group of Arkady Mordvinov and Karo Alabian, coining the phrase 'Leonidovism' to attack this 'Western' group: in a 1929 editorial SA trenchantly defended Leonidov, but this was a sign of what was to come, with Mikhail Barsch being targeted in an 'anti-bourgeois' campaign at VKhUTEMAS/VKhUTEIN.
759 In it he argued (incidentally) for the firm conceptual separation of art and psychopathology. 'Glover put this view most trenchantly: "Whatever its original unconscious aim, the work of art represents a forward urge of the libido seeking to maintain its hold on the world of objects...not the result of a pathological breakdown".Maynard Solomon, Beethoven Essays (London 1988) p. 148 In the 1960s, Glover aroused the ire of Lacan by way of his attack on Franz Alexander's concept of the corrective emotional experience: 'When I read in the Psychoanalytic Quarterly an article like the one by Mr Edward Glover, entitled Freudian or Neo-Freudian, directed entirely against the constructions of Mr Alexander, I sense a sordid smell of stuffiness,...Alexander being counter-attacked in the name of obsolete criteria'.
Progressive trend and completely independent, employs approximately 100 people, of which about 45 are in the newsroom. El Periódico de Aragón is the head of Grupo Zeta in Aragon, which was a newspaper sports equipment, closed in 2008, other projects, as a leading Internet company called Dicom Media, whose portal is RedAragon and production company, Zeta Audiovisual, whose single biggest customer is the regional television Aragon, Aragon TV. Reading the newspaper is fun and fast, and often risking their information. It is a pioneer in daily proximity information, neighborhood character, with a section dedicated to the Barrios de Zaragoza. Their most popular columnists include writer John Bolea, songwriter Joaquin Carbonell, and Deputy Director of the medium, ex-director of the Heraldo de Aragon, Jose Luis Trasobares, whose column "The Independent" trenchantly analyzes the current social and political.
His judgments show a willingness to innovate in common law areas (for example in, tort and contract law cases), but a strong reluctance to depart from the original intent of the Constitution. In constitutional cases Callinan expressed a clear preference for a restrained interpretation of the Constitution and for significant developments to be by way of referendum rather than judicial decision. That view was most trenchantly expressed in his lengthy dissent in New South Wales v Commonwealth, a case concerned with the constitutional validity of the Howard Government's WorkChoices legislation.. Callinan's judgment in that case is the longest in the history of the High Court, containing approximately 55,000 words and running for 165 pages. Consistent with his restrained approach to constitutional interpretation and preference for democratic participation in constitutional alteration, Callinan expressed dissatisfaction with the High Court's implied rights jurisprudence and, in particular, the Court's decision in Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation [1997] HCA 25,.

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