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"Trilling" Definitions
  1. Lionel,
  2. U.S. critic and author.
"Trilling" Synonyms
warbling singing chirping quavering tweeting cheeping chirruping shrilling twittering peeping sounding piping chittering pipping chattering whistling jargoning squeaking chirring tootling chanting humming carolling(UK) caroling(US) serenading crooning descanting intonating yodelling(UK) yodeling(US) intoning lilting chorusing chorussing trolling vocalising(UK) vocalizing(US) quivering shaking trembling vibrating wavering fluttering oscillating pulsating thrilling faltering flickering fluctuating quaking shuddering rippling flinching noting dripping trickling flowing spilling pouring dribbling dropping cascading splashing drizzling distilling tumbling sprinkling plopping weeping raining falling in drops running oozing seeping buzzing ringing whirring droning whizzing bumbling burring zipping whishing zooming purring murmuring susurrating whispering bombinating throbbing bombilating thrumming gargling gurgling burbling glugging bubbling tinkling sauntering ambling strolling rambling meandering wandering drifting maundering moseying perambulating pottering promenading stravaiging walking hiking roaming streeling tramping tromping bimbling crying screaming shouting screeching yelling shrieking bawling bellowing hollering howling roaring calling yelping baying squealing thundering vociferating whooping exclaiming hailing rolling rumbling echoing reverberating booming drumming growling grumbling lumbering pealing resounding cannonading patterning rattling warble chirp chirrup cheep twitter trill tweet cry call pipe peep chirr birdsong More

138 Sentences With "Trilling"

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

Trilling was wrong about one thing: ten years was not enough.
The loudest sounds seemed to come from the trilling of birds.
Trilling said Starbucks plans to double its food business by 2021.
Diana Trilling told him that the book was "crudely boastful" and humorless.
Yet something about the killer seemed approachable to Trilling—common, drably real.
Instead, the aftertaste is a wavering resonance produced by full-hand trilling.
When Phoebe turned on the machine, she heard a trilling sound like bells.
Helen Trilling, a former colleague from a firm in Washington, D.C. told Law.
" In his piece, Podhoretz called Trilling "the most significant American critic now writing.
Mr. Trilling, 26, got the job and traveled throughout Mexico before opening the restaurant.
A mother rides the long escalator up with her three children, trilling "whee" hopefully.
CARAMANICA A looped vocal sample shuttles back and forth in stereo, chirping and trilling.
Bill Martin, Mike Schiff, Aaron Kaplan, Dana Honor, Wendi Trilling, Peyton Reed What's it about?
Corinne Kingsbury, Bob Kushell, Aaron Kaplan, Dana Honor, Wendi Trilling, Scott Ellis What's it about?
Berman was a philosophy professor in the image of Allen Ginsberg rather than Lionel Trilling.
Lionel Trilling told him that it would take ten years for his reputation to recover.
Trilling can seem an unlikely candidate for remembrance; she's known mostly for remembering things herself.
" Trilling wondered how "this unprepossessing woman" could "create around her such an air of superbness.
This mighty glove box, boldly trilling the people's song, is but one voice in that dialogue.
Three different melodies accompany the trilling birdsong, which can play on the hour or on demand.
Zoë Hellerkicked me down her cellar(a lit'ry penitentiary)for being so "midcentury"(that's Howe, Trilling, Kazin).
You can see why Trilling was not eager for Podhoretz's memoir to see the light of day.
"I think the main challenge is —" she said, stopped short by another phone trilling in the background.
I gave my trilling, cruel, Monopoly-woman laugh, and went to see Peter at the coffee cart.
Jim Reynolds, Max Greenfield, Dana Honor, Wendi Trilling, Cedric the Entertainer, Eric Rhone, James Burrows What's it about?
Jim Reynolds, Aaron Kaplan, Dana Honor, Wendi Trilling, Cedric the Entertainer, Eric Rhone, James Burrows What's it about?
THE trilling of spokes, cyclists rounding the bend in unison: no, this is not the Tour de France.
The writings of Clement Greenberg and Lionel Trilling set the high-water mark for art and literary criticism.
Speakers hiding in the plants create soothing nature sounds: you'll hear crickets chirping, birds trilling, and frogs croaking.
He traipsed through postwar intellectual vogues—structuralism, semiology—and revelled, finally, in his own trilling peculiarities, an unrepentant aesthete.
He likened its rhythms and wavering stammers to the trilling of birds and the music of forest and fountain.
Trilling liked to hold off until there was, as he says in one letter, "a decisive occasion" for responding.
On the song Beyoncé channels Lauryn Hill, especially her iconic The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill–era trilling, melismatic vocal runs.
If you listen very hard, you can hear the sound of birds trilling above the noise of the electric generators.
There he attached himself to Trilling, whose major book, "The Liberal Imagination," came out in 19603, the year Podhoretz graduated.
As an undergrad at Columbia, he studied with Lionel Trilling before heading to Harvard for a Ph.D in comparative literature.
"We do see lunch as the biggest opportunity," said Sara Trilling, Starbucks' senior vice president of food category and innovation.
A rapidly trilling diagonal path on his heels (ankles crossed) won applause from the audience, seated on all four sides.
The Trilling Shaper smartwatch features a striped black, white, and indigo blue design that will pair perfectly with your workout gear.
That's because despite the raucous celebrations, the clapping and trilling cries, neither marriage is especially joyous, at least for the brides.
Decades ago, the literary critic Lionel Trilling gave us an answer that sounds very old-fashioned to our authentic ears: sincerity.
Scientists have seen gibbons following female leaders, mountain gorillas grunting when they're ready to move and capuchins trilling to each other.
It's a relief, in these letters, when Trilling begins to become renowned and is invited to travel to England and elsewhere.
The reason that people like Jason Epstein and Lionel Trilling argued so strenuously against publishing the book—Diana Trilling reported taking Podhoretz and his wife out to dinner on a trip to Berlin in 1967 to make one final plea—was not, or not only, that they were concerned for the reputation of their friend and protégé.
Ava Trilling, the band's frontwoman, has a humid, effortless voice, the kind that can convey wonder and rapturous disinterest all at once.
By the late 1950s, when he wrote the "Catalogue," the musicalized chattering and trilling of the birds was fundamental to Messiaen's compositions.
Many might even share her nostalgia for the heady days when Alfred Kazin and Lionel Trilling and Irving Howe bestrode the cultural landscape.
Most of these explanations have to do with course- and committee-work at Columbia University, where Trilling taught for most of his career.
"We do see lunch as the biggest opportunity," said spokeswoman Sara Trilling, Starbucks' senior vice president of food category and innovation, in September.
In 1971, Germaine Greer, Jill Johnston, Diana Trilling and Jacqueline Ceballos met at Town Hall to debate women's liberation, with Norman Mailer moderating.
He soon began writing book reviews for National Review — a political affiliation that Trilling suggested might jeopardize his prospects for tenure at Columbia.
The whirling grows stronger, filled with laughing children, rushing waterfalls, before warping to a buzzing temple setting resonating with garbled chanting and alien trilling.
Podhoretz did some travelling while he was on the fellowship, and, after a visit to Israel, he wrote to Trilling to report his impressions.
Lionel Trilling put great faith in imagination, certain that Shakespeare could capture the experience of being a woman, though he was not a woman.
First of all, just because a couple is beaming and trilling at nearly 70 years of marriage doesn't mean it was always that way.
The woman had her windows cracked and when the phone rang the sound passed out into the yard like the trilling of Max's birdsong.
Nothing beat the hot outdoor shower just outside the bathroom side door, where bamboo reeds shielded me from all living creatures except the trilling birds.
" Trilling, once an epoch-defining mind, is now "so reduced as to have become a joke to certain young critics who favor flippancy and lightness.
Invited to join a panel at Smith College with W.H. Auden, Allen Tate and Lionel Trilling, he said no: It would have meant staying overnight.
Instead of searching for our inner selves and then making a concerted effort to express them, Trilling urged us to start with our outer selves.
"The Trilling Wire," a new solo for Ms. Whelan, was an embarrassment, the only outright dud on either program, a tentative rumination that went limp.
What it tends to mean: Happy/content or comforting themselves when they're hurt, sick or anxious The Noise: Trilling (somewhere between a meow and a purr)
This week, the star reporter turned to stylist Victoria Trilling to help put together her chic all-black ensemble for Sunday night's New Orleans Saint vs.
But, just as Trilling recoiled from grandiloquent radical gesture, Robins seems to have renounced the biographer's task to come to some sustained conclusion about her subject.
What if Trilling had a biographer who sought to reclaim her by grappling with—and even contesting—the opinions that established her as an urgent voice?
She was married to the illustrious literary critic Lionel Trilling, and both were members of the loose, largely Jewish group known as the New York Intellectuals.
On Christmas Eve, 1927, Diana went on a blind date with Lionel Trilling, an instructor at Hunter College who had recently received his master's from Columbia.
A somber, trilling violin speaks to the Russian setting, but Harrow mashes up the Motherland with the Big Easy, abruptly inserting jazz-inspired numbers as well.
Mr. Tyner's playing on this track is disciplined and neatly contained, but you can easily spot the signature shadings of his harmonies and his trilling ostinatos.
The essays in this collection that discuss the work of Bellow, Kafka, Trilling, Malamud, are all shrewd and engrossing and eminently capable of seducing the reader's agreement.
When Diana Trilling started reviewing books for The Nation , at the age of thirty-six, she brought a gimlet-eyed assurance that has not always aged well.
He decided on Mexican, a cuisine he has never explored, and contacted Susana Trilling, a food writer who has a cooking school and inn in Oaxaca, Mexico.
Nearly all the letters in "Life in Culture: Selected Letters of Lionel Trilling," edited by Adam Kirsch, begin with apologies and small arias of explanation for delay.
So we barely register the gasping bees, so entranced are we by the fawns and foxes and a crystalline soundscape exploding with trilling, cawing, hooting and howling.
He studied with Kirkland Bradford, who had played with the Jimmie Lunceford big band, and developed a trilling style reminiscent of postwar saxophone stars like Earl Bostic.
Who else could turn stomachs by wearing a dress made out of raw meat at the MTV Awards, and then break hearts by trilling "Edelweiss" at the Oscars?
"What destroys our authenticity is society," Trilling writes, and what is authentic is irreducibly real — realer than the polite sheen of civility that lubricates social and political life.
It turned out that her son, Kaelin Ulrich Trilling, who was born and raised in Oaxaca, was a chef and had even been doing consulting in New York.
He studied under the celebrated critic Lionel Trilling, with whom he collaborated on editing an abridged version of Ernest Jones's three-volume biography of Sigmund Freud in 1961.
This trilling announcement of my arrival was loud enough to cause my entire fifth-grade class to turn toward me as I slid into my wooden desk seat.
Among the other authors and scholars he worked with were Jacques Barzun and Lionel Trilling, his former professors at Columbia; and David Frost, Budd Schulberg and Dylan Thomas.
Dewdrop is a virtuoso coloratura role, with rapid-trilling runs on point, jumps in which one foot is brilliantly flourished in the air, and pirouettes of bewildering complexity.
Dr. Stern, falling into line with family tradition, entered Columbia as a pre-med student, but classes with Jacques Barzun and Lionel Trilling stoked his enthusiasm for the humanities.
" Still, Trilling could spot genius, even in larval form: "Scattered through Miss Hardwick's book are perhaps twenty or thirty pages that would be remarkable from the most mature writer.
" At a 1971 Town Hall event that found Norman Mailer onstage with a panel of feminists that included Diana Trilling, he referred to her as "our foremost lady critic.
On "Firecracker," Terje and crew take the legendary Japanese trio Yellow Magic Orchestra's vintage dance jam and embellish it with an uptempo beat, trilling keyboard line, and choral accompaniment.
Swezey's film illustrates the eclecticism of his early '80s Southern California scene: the trilling art punks Suburban Lawns, the guitar-less Screamers, the savage performance art of Johanna Went.
After a year he enrolled in Columbia University, where he studied literature under Lionel Trilling, Mark Van Doren and Jacques Barzun, and graduated with a bachelor's degree in 1952.
Luckily, Bayardelle brings her own pathos, through line delivery and through song (she sings beautifully, with power and trilling restraint)—enough to trace the outline of a whole, intriguing life.
Her most celebrated literary achievement is her memoir, "The Beginning of the Journey," a work so monumentally complete that any biography of Trilling is forced to bob in its wake.
This is particularly true on their new double album, Requiem, a harmonious riot of trilling acoustic guitars and flutes, multi-layered rhythmic drones, and mystical lyrics intoned by female voices.
And, in one of those curious occurrences that may not be coincidental, there the birds were again, trilling away on the soundtrack at the Off-White show on Wednesday morning.
After the end of World War II, this version of liberalism seemed so triumphant in the United States that the critic Lionel Trilling called it the country's ''sole intellectual tradition.
When the military maneuvers were over, the women put away their guns and formed lines to do a traditional folk dance, their voices sailing over the empty streets in trilling ululations.
Miscalculating, he ends up in the Cretaceous Period, where he meets a snuffling, trilling, many-fanged little creature named Hawking (a scene-stealing puppet, winsomely voiced and operated by Brendan Malafronte).
While the bassoonists, oboists and clarinetists navigated their jaunty, folk-like melodies, the trilling violins played in the background with a metallic sheen, adding a suggestion of bleakly beautiful winter light.
Intellectuals like Lionel Trilling, in "Freud and the Crisis of Our Culture," and Philip Rieff, in " Freud: The Mind of the Moralist ," maintained that Freud taught us about the limits on human perfectibility.
Books of The Times Lionel Trilling (1905-1975), the regal American literary and social critic, was an ardent letter writer — he composed as many as 600 a year — but a slow-moving one.
" The novel reminds us of a time when literature was felt to be urgently political—when the critic Lionel Trilling could speak of "the dark and bloody crossroads where literature and politics meet.
His music also features steel drums, trilling birdsong and pan flutes — touches that hew closer to New Age than the party-ready dubstep or electro-house that built the American E.D.M. audience this decade.
Writers like James Baldwin and Irving Howe would drop by the office, and at Greenwich Village parties he met prominent intellectuals like Lionel Trilling and the Partisan Review editors Philip Rahv and William Phillips.
"'Oumuamua has been full of surprises from day one, so we were eager to see what Spitzer might show," lead author David Trilling, an astronomy professor at Northern Arizona University, said in the NASA statement.
A pile of flour kicks off the baseline, followed by burbling batter, dough balls raising their voices, a choir of croissants linking "arms," cream puffs trilling in a tower and pies showing off their pipes.
Entering the lobby, I was charmed by the brilliantine of Elvis Presley's gold piano, but less so by the clanging and trilling of more than 4,000 slot machines and the unmistakable haze of cigarette smoke.
Those like Lionel Trilling, Susan Sontag and the older Saul Bellow recoiled in fastidious repugnance from its vulgar materialism and anti-intellectualism, turning back to Europe — or rather, upward, to European high culture — for refuge.
Leonard, a bookish youngster, attended Syracuse University for one semester before transferring to Columbia College in New York, where one of his teachers, the literary critic Lionel Trilling, sparked his interest in Freud and psychoanalysis.
The book bristles with recollections of this time — when "the publication of a serious literary novel was an exuberant communal event" — and portraits of its leading figures, among them Saul Bellow, Bernard Malamud and Lionel Trilling.
The fans would be so awed by my taste in thrash metal that they would will me to a trilling victory over Adorable Adrian Adonis, in which I finish him off with a triple Atomic Nutkick.
In the 1994 issue of The American Historical Review that featured Alan Brinkley's "The Problem of American Conservatism," Ribuffo wrote a response contesting Brinkley's contention, now commonplace, that Trilling was right about American conservatism's shallow roots.
This idol-smashing Freud is radically different from the Freud of writers like Trilling and Rieff, who saw him as the enduring reminder of the futility of imagining that improving the world can make human beings happier.
At the Schaubühne, they are presenting "The Town Hall Affair," a re-enactment of a notorious 1971 debate on women's liberation moderated by Norman Mailer and featuring the likes of Diana Trilling, Germaine Greer and Jill Johnston.
His love for the city's bustle comes through especially in the complex interlacing of walkers and watchers in "Glass Pieces" (1983), his most important late work, whose trilling minimalist score fills the final gallery of this show.
Heller, the author of "The Dog Stars" and other novels, has an extraordinary facility for describing topography and vegetation; we can feel the sharpness of the rocks and the trilling excitement of the river as it approaches rapids.
But no matter; when the story opens, he is concocting his most ambitious scheme yet: the Trilling Heart School for Girls, led by himself with the help of his daughter, Caroline, and his loyal-as-a-labrador disciple David.
This might not seem the obvious way to recommend a new writer to a magazine published by an organization dedicated to the welfare of Jews, and, in "Making It," Podhoretz leaves out the part about his letter to Trilling.
Standing before a beautful pastel backdrop of a dead forest maiden, Noisey's favorite survivalists led the audience through trilling folk harmonies and bouts of sureal melody, making their status as a main stage act quite clear in the process.
The lilting, soaring women's voices tug me upwards, trilling and wafting, and the bass voices come in like an eruption, and the mixed chorus strides forth like an entire nation picking up its weight to move forward in lockstep.
It's tempting to rate Wood's fiction alongside his criticism and find it wanting or to consider it alongside the fiction of Wilson, Trilling, and Susan Sontag, and conclude that writing fiction tends to be a mug's game for great critics.
Writers, philosophers, characters and celebrities like Arthur Miller, Lillian Ross, Irving Howe, Gore Vidal, Germaine Greer, Christopher Isherwood, Diana Trilling, Norman Podhoretz, Alfred Kazan, Paul Krassner, Ultra Violet and Edmund Wilson were among those who shared in Mailer's big house.
Greif brings to mind a host of critics from William Hazlitt to Lionel Trilling, but most of all he suggests it is possible to write about the culture with a reverence for language and a passion for what has come before.
Statements like those of Trilling and Hartz expressed a short-lived belief that the long sweep of American history was anchored in an elemental centrist political consensus wherein extremes of the Left and Right could only be viewed as deviations from the norm.
On "Tears," the bridge is "yeah," sung over and over by Charli and collaborator Caroline Polachek; on "Backseat" she enlists Carly Rae Jepsen to join her in wistfully trilling "all alone" 40 times, their voices melded into a mournful chorus by effects.
Last year a wren killed a chickadee nestling on my watch, so when I heard the unmistakable trilling of a house wren calling for a mate, I looked reflexively toward the bluebird box where the chickadee was sitting on five speckled eggs.
Pete Townshend of the Who set off countless controlled detonations in his songs — trilling, jabbing rapidly, bending notes, scraping his strings, flinging and windmilling a dozen kinds of power chords — while Roger Daltrey swung his microphone on its cord and flaunted his lung power.
Natalie Robins's new biography, " The Untold Journey: The Life of Diana Trilling " (Columbia), opens with its subject in her nineties, suffering the final stages of lymphoma and lying on a metal hospital bed in the middle of the bedroom she once shared with her husband.
As The Economist went to press Mr Johnson was preparing to demonstrate his loyalty to Mrs May by sitting in the front row for her speech, having proclaimed, poetically, that the cabinet was a "nest of singing birds", as if voters cannot discriminate between trilling nightingales and hissing vipers.
Sensing a gap in the discourse, a group of young, mostly ­Harvard-educated writers started a publication called n+1 in 2004, which attempted to fill the void where Partisan Review and the like had once engaged in "the life of significant contention," as Diana Trilling put it.
There are the glamorous Australian feminist Germaine Greer and her ratty fur stole, onscreen and in person (in the form of the actress Maura Tierney), and the august essayist Diana Trilling, whose face on film looks remarkably like that of the male actor playing her onstage, Greg Mehrten.
He edited "The World of Modern Fiction" (1967); "Art, Politics and Will: Essays in Honor of Lionel Trilling" (1977), with Quentin Anderson and Stephen Donadio; "Medicine and Western Civilization" (1995), with David Rothman and Stephanie Kiceluk; and a series of books called "Psychoanalysis and Culture," with Arnold Cooper.
Directed by Elizabeth LeCompte for the Wooster Group, The Town Hall Affair rehashes one raucous night in April 1971 when the now-defunct Theatre of Ideas staged a panel on Women's Liberation with Mailer serving as an immoderate moderator for a group of distinguished feminist academics including Diane Trilling, Jacqueline Ceballos, Germaine Greer, and the culture critic Jill Johnston.
These failures of basic apprehension underline, in turn, another core paradox of intellectual conservatism: For the conservative elites' self-advertised preoccupation with ideas and the ennobling Western tradition of critical inquiry, the American right has always been, as people as different as Lionel Trilling and Pat Buchanan have recognized, more an affair of the viscera than the head.
Word of the Day : based primarily on surmise rather than adequate evidence _________ The word supposititious has appeared in three New York Times articles in the past 42 years, including on April 21, 1974 in the book review "The Freud/Jung Letters" by Lionel Trilling: But Jung's place in Freud's regard was not determined only by practical considerations.
Ava Trilling is a naturally gifted lead singer who already understands that she doesn't need to push her voice into unnatural territory for it to draw a listener in; Duke Greene and Ben Guterl have a seemingly innate understanding of each other's guitar styles; Noah Schifrin and Zach Lorelli form a subtly experimental rhythm section that never fully allows a song to settle.
American Jewish writers once faced the double comedy of being outsiders to Gentile culture writ large and outsiders to English literature specifically, thus producing the kind of pathos that the critic Lionel Trilling felt so keenly in his life, trying to be a gentleman devoted to Matthew Arnold as a moral tutor while living a mixed-up Jewish life on the Upper West Side.
Before the Black and White Ball, no one had ever imagined, let alone attended, a formal party with a guest list so wildly catholic that it brought into one room the poet Marianne Moore and Frank Sinatra, Gloria Vanderbilt and Lionel Trilling, Lynda Bird Johnson and the Maharani of Jaipur, the Italian princess Luciana Pignatelli (wearing a 60-carat diamond borrowed from Harry Winston) and the documentary filmmaker Albert Maysles.
As he writhes out of his bonds and into a sinuous solo, 10 members of the Phuphuma Love Minus choir, directed by Mr. Mahlangu, begin the traditional, all-male Zulu form of a cappella known as isicathamiya (issi-KAT-ah-mee-ya), a mesmerizing mix of percussive chants, soaring voices and trilling calls, performed as the men ascend and descend the scaffolding stairs with repetitive rhythmic stamping walks, a stick held in the right hand.
Except for a brief period during the last century, from the 1930s through the 1960s or so, when an active intelligentsia (even the word sounds dated) loosely known as the New York Intellectuals formed around a clutch of publications including Partisan Review, The Nation and Commentary, and critics like Lionel Trilling, Dwight Macdonald and Mary McCarthy had a say on matters literary and political, we tend to give short shrift to intellection for its own sake, regarding it as something best corralled off in the academy.
On Wednesday, she pointed to an M5 public bus heading down Fifth Avenue, its decelerating engine emitting a heavy exhale, which Ms. Kowalsky identified as a B on the piano that descended a short way down the scale to a G. Then an ambulance siren's song wailed through the canyon of buildings, a barely noticeable background noise that Ms. Kowalsky regarded like an orchestra conductor, declaring it a glissando, or slide, from F sharp, up an octave, to a higher F sharp, and then trilling between G and B. Ms. Kowalsky, who grew up in Queens and lives in Lower Manhattan, said that when she was 2 she walked over to a neighbor's piano and played a tune she had heard played on it a month earlier, in the same key.

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