Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"trumpets" Definitions
  1. a showy pitcher plant, Sarracenia flava,

314 Sentences With "trumpets"

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

Trumpets raised above the heads of the crowd, as if to sound an alarm, call to mind the seven trumpets of the Apocalypse.
His surprise at the trumpets and being toothless was hilarious.
Sound the trumpets: there's another royal baby on the way.
His presence unravels the spool of sunny pop, triumphant trumpets.
The magazine trumpets that she's changing the face of feminism.
We were there to pick the trumpets from the trees.
Let flags fly from the rooftops and let the trumpets sound!
Hard to describe really, but some say it sounds like trumpets.
I like oyster mushrooms, especially royal trumpets, a large, meaty type.
It's the same ensemble, plus the string section and four trumpets.
Old brass trumpets, converted to light fixtures, hung over the bar.
Virtually every one of them eagerly trumpets plans for electric vehicles.
A pair of cherubs sat on his shoulders, playing silver trumpets.
Trumpets and saxophones don't age as well as off-key relationship whining.
It trumpets, for example, a deal announced in February with 12 creditors.
"These trumpets are a bit more bling than their predecessors," adds Smith.
" Navi's website trumpets the fact that he's "the world's greatest MJ impersonator.
They go super close to fascist aesthetics with trumpets and people marching.
Chinen's book opens big enough, with a volley of plunger-muted trumpets.
They wore white shorts and skated around the arch while playing trumpets.
Trump frequently trumpets the military pay raise while listing his administration's accomplishments.
The trumpets of doom warned of financial meltdowns, civil wars and nuclear Armageddon.
Toss the black trumpets and leeks with a little olive oil and salt.
If Chapter 13 has an evangelist, it's Ray, who trumpets its attributes unapologetically.
Before each one, a screen trumpets the security clearance required to access them.
"Every painter was doing black men with big lips blowing trumpets," he said.
The movie finished to violent trumpets, The End scrolling in gilded, overblown script.
But the S.E.C. trumpets its role in getting money back to harmed investors.
He grinds into "Stay"'s high trumpets, a cocky grin on his face.
As soon as the trumpets start blaring, you know it's going to be special.
The soundtrack creates a landscape of faint footsteps and trumpets, evoking a royal court.
"Born and brewed in London", trumpets this trailblazer of the UK craft-brewing scene.
Brightside," Jason Derulo's "Trumpets," Taylor Swift's "I Knew You Were Trouble," and MisterWives "Reflections.
Factories in the region now produce thousands of oboes, trumpets and tubas each year.
As the tenor saxophonist Jeremy Powell rose to solo, muted trumpets filled in below.
Its liberal wing, broken, trumpets its sympathy for the left behind, but does nothing.
And even now, he trumpets views -- protectionist on trade, uncaring about debt and deficits, etc.
There, men cheerfully blew trumpets and shot rifles into the air to celebrate the visitors.
He trumpets the virtues of tariffs that Beijing has already defeated through recent currency devaluations.
Last month he released "Dreaming," a drumless song whose droning trumpets nod to cosmic jazz.
Minimalist motors can possess the trumpets, for a few moments, without scrambling the overall narrative.
After a tremendous fanfare of verbal trumpets, a mouse comes out of a hole blinking.
Characters in that episode heard blaring trumpets from nowhere—a herald of the coming apocalypse.
"There was a sense of pomp," Ms. Sisman said of the trumpets in Clarke's march.
" As the cover trumpets, this new edition "includes full-color movie photos and exclusive content!
The cherubs, their cheeks redder than usual, played a few rushed notes on their trumpets.
Some play trumpets and trombones, and two men push a giant antique double-barrel cannon.
Each of the models accessorized his look with instruments ranging from saxophones, trumpets, clarinets and flutes.
Another myth trumpets that Ultra turned German signal traffic into an open book throughout the war.
Sound the royal trumpets: Your first peek at A Christmas Prince: The Royal Wedding is here.
Outside the men's locker room Mr. Nézet-Séguin stopped David Krauss, one of the principal trumpets.
The first was Britain's 2016 vote, fueled by lies, to leave the European Union, trumpets blaring.
But the trumpets have been muted, and the back handsprings seem to lack a certain bounce.
T hear the trumpets of "Gonna Fly Now" playing over office speakers every day at 6 p.m.
The colors are vibrant: bright red lipstick, white sailboats slicing through blue water, gleaming saxophones and trumpets.
The biblical Gideonites marched on their foes armed with only trumpets and tambourines and other musical instruments.
When a company trumpets a wage increase, it needs to amount to a real hike in pay.
They aren't technically campaign ads, but billboard after billboard trumpets their accomplishments in all areas of life.
Gonzalez, while usually quiet about about their personal life, often trumpets her husband's many achievements across social media.
"I'm sorry that the Republican presidential candidate trumpets out things like that without any factual basis," Roth said.
Facebook trumpets customer service bots for services like 1-800-Flowers, no phone call to a human required.
Members of the youth orchestra Ghetto Classics play trumpets during their weekly practice at St. John's catholic church.
Lully's sacred music has a distinctly flamboyant, operatic character: the Te Deum is buttressed by trumpets and timpani.
If none are available, just use a mixture of cultivated pale-colored oyster mushrooms or royal trumpets instead.
Stretched along the walkway between Terminals 2 and 3, the protesters chanted, sang, beat drums and blasted trumpets.
That's why Mr. Trump trumpets the bogus threat of Venezuelan-style "socialism" invading America through the Democratic Party.
He picked up the French horn in grade school after discovering the drums and trumpets had been claimed.
Girls dressed in Greco-style costumes with winged hats and fanfare trumpets lined up nervously along the wall.
News Analysis BRUSSELS — Many Britons see their country as a brave galleon, banners waving, cannons firing, trumpets blaring.
The town hall has illuminated giant angels with trumpets above the narrow street that leads to the cathedral.
It's a waltz that escalates from a lone guitar to a full deployment of mariachi strings and trumpets.
Handing the bottle off to Lynn, she let the trumpets carry her into a series of whirling dance moves.
We live in a society that trumpets the benefits of early cancer detection and campaigns to get people tested.
Puglisi tops his nonconformist ode to pizza with earthy black trumpets, mildly sweet leeks, fatty pancetta, and briny Pecorino.
At one point, trumpets are introduced to the mix, with scattered off-stage performers blowing their instruments without warning.
Organs, strings and accordions meld with guitars, pan flutes, trumpets and high-pitched vocals featuring an unmistakably Andean lilt.
The jubilant opening to his Christmas Oratorio, with its excited trumpets and timpani, rang in the exchange of presents.
All this suggests that what the media now trumpets as a looming G.O.P. civil war isn't going to happen.
As he rejects the four princesses presented for his inspection, trumpets herald the arrival of the woman he loves.
While much of the Western world is gloomily turning inward, Canada trumpets the merits of globalisation, multiculturalism and refugee acceptance.
So when the waiters brought out the meat on big platters, I basically heard trumpets blaring loud in the background.
Thailand's ruling junta, which had said it would try to fix the conflict by the end of 2015, trumpets progress.
A particular standout is the mushroom omelette, prepared tableside, in which morels, trumpets, and truffles hustle and cluster with flavor.
Long a feisty counterpart to Salt Lake City, this one-time railroad hub now trumpets its proximity to outdoor recreation.
The government trumpets a plan, called Agenda Patriótica, to encourage private investment in industries such as plastics and lithium batteries.
Without fail, Apple always trumpets customer satisfaction data for its last iPhone(s) when preparing to announce a new one.
All together, summer's trumpets sounded bright and loud Thursday along 290th Street in the Bronx, despite official indifference or bumbling.
Trump regularly trumpets the market rally as a vote of confidence in his policies, and Mnuchin did the same on CNBC.
The title card explodes across the scene, with Richard Strauss' famed trumpets sounding off a revolution in the entire filmmaking industry.
AN EAR-SPLITTING roar of drums and trumpets blasts out of speakers as Bavaria's premier, Markus Söder, makes a grandiose entrance.
The government rightly trumpets reforms launched after David Cameron, a former prime minister, declared that corruption-fighting should be a priority.
But it's unfortunate that cronyism remains alive and well in a democratic society that trumpets the values of the free market.
He's got a big smile as he shifts pounds of foraged black trumpets to clear a space for me to sit.
And the "news" Greathouse trumpets — hide your identity and get ahead at work — is a tired trope that needs to die.
It trumpets the slogan "Question More," yet generally sticks to the same major news that CNN or the BBC is covering.
Couples of all ages, some in lederhosen and traditional dresses, danced joyously to the sound of accordions, trumpets and string instruments.
For his Tiny Desk performance, he doesn't let these stories escape his memory, singing them over blaring trumpets, keys and bass.
Sometimes the meme trumpets that victory, like the Ethereum stans chuckling at Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash ripping one another to shreds.
Steinway's brands include Bach Stradivarius trumpets, Selmer Paris saxophones, C.G. Conn French horns, Leblanc clarinets, King trombones and Ludwig snare drums.
"Bychkov Conducts 'An Alpine Symphony,' " trumpets the page on the New York Philharmonic's website for its subscription concerts beginning on Thursday.
BuzzAngle, a new tracking service that competes with Nielsen and Billboard, and trumpets its faster technology, finalized its chart on Sunday.
As the trumpets sang and the drums pounded, I looked at Neil, whose face was lit up by a huge grin.
The language in question trumpets the end to the penalty that Americans must now pay if opting out of health coverage.
One pictures crowns and carriages, trumpets tooting in the background, and maybe some falling snowflakes or a cartoon bluebird hovering over them.
Pipeline companies can look forward to four years under a president who trumpets fossil fuels and wants billions spent on infrastructure projects.
He often trumpets the fact that he opposed the Iraq War (though he falsely insists that he opposed it before it started).
UNEP trumpets the positive effects of investment in solar and wind energy and efficient appliances and cars, and efforts to preserve forests.
It was while I enjoyed the trumpets and trombone of Unemployed Lovers that I really felt an affinity with the Focal Clears.
"Lived in Bars" by Cat Power: A song about trumpets and dancing on tables, and for some reason feeling sad about it.
Like old friends, The Beatles forgive my straying toward newer musicians who build off their precedent, with synths and computers and trumpets.
"Trumpets and standards were the visible signs, conventional warfare the means, and political control of the commonwealth was the end," Armitage writes.
As Happy Runxin's band struck up saxophones, trumpets, oboes and drums, a monitor next to the troupe flickered to life: 75 decibels.
China's 2050 plan trumpets the grand ambition of it all, because it puts today and Made in China 2025 in blunt context.
I love the setting of Psalm 150, which calls to praise God with dancing and the sounds of trumpets, harps and cymbals.
Stories about mysterious "sky trumpets" heard around the world went viral in 2015, but many of them turned out to be hoaxes.
But it was a whole different story at the Supreme Court today, where cellphones, usually prohibited, were welcomed with trumpets and flowers.
"Walmart should have been doing a big pre-dance with bright lights and trumpets, and now it's staring at floodlights," he said.
The product's description also trumpets having up to 18 hours of battery life so you can save time on charging the device.
Sound the trumpets: Daniel Craig will play James Bond in at least one more film, which will be released in November 2019.
New ambassadors delighted at the flourish of trumpets, waving of flags and presidential one-on-one that now constituted the official greeting package.
If he stays up too late reading, she warns him, not even trumpets will wake him in time to get to his job.
Elephants play, mimic, use tools, and communicate with a wide vocabulary ranging from blasting trumpets to low frequency rumbles that can travel miles.
" DocuSign's website trumpets its benefits: "Sign documents anywhere from any device"; "No overnighting, faxing or waiting"; and, of course: "More secure than paper.
" Brian Fallon, a campaign spokesman, wrote on Twitter early Wednesday: "The descent into authoritarianism does not announce itself with the blaring of trumpets.
" Without citing to any scientific evidence or medical data, the platform also trumpets that "abortion endangers the health and well-being of women.
One sad fountain on the edge of the Gateway still trumpets the Olympic theme tune every hour on the hour to mostly no one.
The ad trumpets the endorsements Mr. Sanders has received: "From postal workers to nurses, he's been endorsed for real change," a female narrator says.
Many of today's orchestral instruments were designed to be heard over a distance outdoors, whether trumpets (military), horns (the hunt) or oboes (rowdy shepherds).
In a fact sheet, for example, the EPA trumpets its finding that ACE could save power plants up to $20250 billion in compliance costs.
Trump was endorsed by the NRA in his 2016 presidential election campaign and often trumpets his support for Americans' constitutional right to own guns.
It was a union job, with good pay, and it was prestigious for the skills needed to fashion thin metal into trumpets and trombones.
Zekic: This one time, I dreamed that I was walking with my dad through a forest, and the trees had no leaves but trumpets.
In a fact sheet, for example, the EPA trumpets its finding that ACE could save power plants up to $280 billion in compliance costs.
Franz Pätzold, a brilliant young actor with a strikingly textured voice, is spellbinding as the idealistic Posa, a character who trumpets Schiller's Enlightenment ideals.
In lieu of ripeness, seed heads throughout the gardens present an eerie, ossified architecture: tight-mouthed trumpets of Iris sibirica, alliums like exploding stars.
Backed by extreme right-wing elements, he makes vague promises and trumpets his lack of political experience as a reason to vote for him.
At max volume, there is a bit of distortion among the trumpets in "Uptown Funk" and the higher guitars in Imagine Dragons&apos "Radioactive".
Ms. O'Toole, the author of "When Trumpets Call: Theodore Roosevelt After the White House," is writing a book about Theodore Roosevelt and American health.
Crunchy guitar slices out a truncated phrase in conversation with an insistent snare drum, and flutes and trumpets drape a humid cloud cover overhead.
There are talented street musicians everywhere from Belgrade, Serbia, to La Paz, Bolivia, who can play it ably on everything from accordions to trumpets.
Groban may have the voice of an angel, but the inclusion of an electric guitar, as well as trumpets and drums, didn't quite mesh well.
The width at which they open their beaks functions like the flared end of brass instruments such as trumpets and tubas that amplifies their sound.
Ruth Koleva "Didn't I" I am a sucker for a piano ballad, and Ruth Koleva does it one better by layering trumpets over the thing.
" Looking At Me The track that seals the album, "Looking At Me," is filled with Latin beats and trumpets, reminiscent of Camila Cabello's hit "Havana.
I check their homework and ask them about their days, and then they show me what they learned on their trumpets at band practice today.
As of Monday, he was still weighing that choice, cognizant of how much a Fed chairman could affect the rebounding economy he so frequently trumpets.
"Any time I touch the trumpets, whether it's to show them to a visitor or just clean them, I get the chills," Mr. Riccardi said.
On 13th March I am due to be installed as the high sheriff of Somerset at a very grand service in Wells Cathedral — trumpets blaring.
A heightened awareness of people power could favor the presidential hopeful Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who trumpets a populist anti-establishment discourse from the left.
"I am lost between the glory of Reagan — monuments everywhere, trumpets, the great hero — and the trials and tribulations of my sons," Mr. Bush said.
So far this year, the M.T.A. has made a little over $10,000 selling off our unclaimed items — including ukuleles, trumpets and a pair of skis.
Walk along 34th Street on a Sunday evening and you may catch a hint of the dueling trumpets and insistent rhythms swirling in the air.
The album gets whimsical and shoegazey at times, incorporating trumpets, cellos, and a glockenspiel (a fucking glockenspiel!), but these interludes crash head-on into earsplitting screams.
His cynicism extends to everyone and everything except his own knack for producing hit songs, which he platitudinously trumpets as a means for "bringing humanity together".
There's little indication the current market climate or political climate will support costly clean coal innovations, even as our president trumpets coal as a job creator.
While the trumpets haven't been specifically made for the wedding itself, the silver-plated instruments are stamped with the royal coat of arms, making them unique.
These "battle trumpets" are likely shofars, an ancient instrument made out of a ram's horn used in the Jewish religion during Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.
These king trumpets are steamed in a parchment pouch in a super-hot oven, then plated up with slow-grilled rutabaga and whatever grain you'd like.
The set closed with "The Rhythm Changes," a blues extension written by Ms. Maricle, with the trombones, trumpets and saxophones unified in a full-throated declaration.
They pass many people too busy to look for the moon, caught up in mailing letters, practicing trumpets in upstairs bedrooms, doing homework and buying groceries.
Inviting former inmates, or a 64-year-old Black grandmother, to model for a line whose ethos trumpets diversity makes a lot of sense in theory.
He often trumpets an upcoming "red wave" of Republican victories, downplaying suggestions that Democrats are poised to exploit his divisiveness and retake the House or Senate.
The former secretary of state released her first New York ad on Wednesday, a spot that trumpets New York's diversity and takes on Republican frontrunner Donald Trump.
I think it'd be easier to see how disingenuous this story is if it weren't presented to us with so much fanfare, often with literal blaring trumpets.
In his quarterly letter to clients, Einhorn also trumpets a successful short position in Tesla but does not specifically mention if the fund is betting against Chewy.
The American stock market is on a historic tear, regularly setting all-time highs while the president trumpets each new threshold the Dow Jones Industrial Average breaks.
American exceptionalism trumpets to the world that we have a spectacular model of justice built on a set of values that Democrats say Donald Trump is violating.
The sounds of clinking leg chains, elephant cries and trumpets, and music composed and blended by Chris Peck haunted "Elephant" and transported the audience into the stories.
The room also contained more than 50,000 pieces of turquoise, 6,000 pieces of worked shell, turquoise-encrusted conch shell trumpets and a collection of carved wooden flutes.
Taken together, the trade conflicts — and the threat of even more barriers — raise the specter of damage to a healthy American economy that the president frequently trumpets.
Martin Popoff's 2015 tome Who Invented Heavy Metal charts the form from the trumpets at the Battle of Jericho in 1250 BC to the end of 1971.
Take the early morning "sweat commitment"—vigorous exercise, right when you wake up, every day—that he trumpets as his main secret to success on his website.
For those whose worst fears were confirmed, there were funerals, with processions haltingly making their way to cemeteries to the traditional sounds of Oaxaca's drums and trumpets.
Pig Zero trumpets the benefits of coupling tiamulin with chlortetracycline, a drug made by Elanco's competitors that both American and international regulators consider medically important to humans.
The diversity fashion trumpets so loudly now (and that it took so long to get around to) has yet to include much representation from the Arab world.
Empire Brass embraces the classic brass quintet configuration — a pair of trumpets, French horn, trombone and tuba — and has long been known for its virtuosity and showmanship.
But Mr. Trump had long expressed skepticism about sending more troops, and the issue has never been easy for an administration that trumpets an "America first" strategy.
A 30-piece carnival band, brandishing trumpets, tubas and bass drums, walked him down the aisle, and he took his seat on the stage to deafening applause.
One question late in the competition asked: In the era of what leader did the Kingdom of Judah return to Jerusalem "with psalteries and harps and trumpets"?
With the possible exception of its superb pastry crust, the same was true of venison Wellington, with chestnuts and black trumpets inside a ring of huckleberry sauce.
The heavy percussion and brass instruments (those trumpets that ring over the chorus) are hallmarks of Urie's style, which owes a debt to the Beatles in the Sgt.
The nominee has been friendlier to companies than to workers and consumers, and trumpets the rights of religious entities to exempt themselves from rules like Obamacare's contraceptive mandate.
The project was a near-solo effort, with a few musicians contributing trumpets and trombones but most of it coming straight out of Vernon's head and onto tape.
Mr Rouhani's government trumpets falling inflation and economic growth, but youth unemployment has risen to 27%, the prices of some basic goods have soared and inequality is growing.
By NICK CORASANITI Shrouded in darkness, the ad trumpets Mr. Trump's call to bar Muslims from entering the United States and promises a wall on the Mexican border.
But, he knows when the first violin should be playing, and he knows when the trumpets should be loud or soft, and when the drummer should be drumming.
Nearly 100 Extinction Rebellion marchers joined the 1.7-mile-long parade, as brass bands and other musical groups erupted in a cacophony of beating drums, trumpets and voices.
Instruments ranging from trumpets to bongo and snare drums maintain a constant rhythm of sound, with some 40 fans leading the way with an endless stream of chants.
"The American people", he trumpets, "deserve the opportunity during this election year to weigh in" on the type of justice best suited to serve on the Supreme Court.
The independence the WHCA frequently trumpets won't be on display at the 2019 Correspondents' Dinner -- but it's not too late for the other 364 days of the year.
Auker trumpets a strong female voice, both in her written work and here at the gathering, staking her rightful claim in what is still a male-dominated event.
It has been said, with regard to the Vin Américain 2018 , that even the archangels might be counted on to blow their trumpets (no pun intended) in surprise.
Click here to view original GIFWhen you see a 15-piece orchestra full of trumpets, violins, and cellos, you're probably expecting to hear a little Chopin, or Mozart.
At the New School on Friday, though, New Yorkers can hear Ms. Vierk's rarely performed 1987 "Cirrus," in which six trumpets create an immense collage of Doppler effects.
He has aired a commercial in which he shoots sporting clays and trumpets his "support of the Second Amendment" as well as his N.R.A. A rating as governor.
Guitars, cellos, flutes, saxophones and trumpets will be in the "Instrument Petting Zoo" at this free open house at the community arts school at the Kaufman Music Center.
But he knows when the first violin should be playing, and he knows when the trumpets should be loud or soft, and when the drummer should be drumming.
It had nothing to do, the Columbia administration explained, with the band's tradition of bursting into the library, trumpets blaring, on the eve of the organic chemistry final.
McDougall also trumpets some incremental industry fiddling — such as trade bodies agreeing to update their guidance — as somehow relevant to turning the tanker in a fundamentally broken system.
The $22024 billion that Mr. Trump trumpets is actually less than what Mr. Obama spent on war and military in the 24 fiscal year, when adjusted for inflation.
The Swiss tech company behind this stylish but low-tech phone trumpets a sales pitch that conjures the aspirational vanity lurking in us all: Offline is the new luxury.
LG's marketing loudly trumpets these new features, but when you pick up the phone, the device itself doesn't make much of an effort to convince you to use them.
Bethesda's new Doom reboot ushered in a new era of modified soundtracks featuring toy trumpets blaring the theme and pictures of the Doom Slayer driven mad by demon dooting.
A stunning, pedestal-based work, "Untitled (ST4)" brings the Dr. Seuss: from a central void resembling a cartoon explosion, protrusions resembling both trumpets and ears blast up and out.
Still, these agreements never disadvantaged American interests relative to those of our trading partners, and the new agreements that Trump trumpets are only dressed-up versions of prior deals.
He also trumpets his "Trump Scorecard" of agreement with the president at 95.9 percent, ahead of conservative stalwarts like Senators Ted Cruz of Texas and Mike Lee of Utah.
And as Amneris pledged revenge against the man who won't love her, a passing trill in the trumpets — usually buried in the orchestral textures — was a memorably angry flare.
The marching band trumpets swelled in anticipation until Beyoncé yelled, "Hit me!" and the three strutted out in matching camouflage-print looks — an ode to "Survivor" music video from 2001.
Yet even a man who has supplied trumpets to two royal weddings and heralded the entrance of Queen Elizabeth on countless occasions, still has one or two ambitions to fulfil.
As Apple loudly trumpets its commitment to privacy, it seems increasingly wacky that I let Google, one the world's biggest advertising powerhouses, track some of my activity online for years.
President Donald Trump trumpets the promise of clean coal, but his war on regulations and elements within his administration could make it difficult to bring carbon-free coal into reality.
The bass-heavy shuffle of "Rodent," released earlier this year, is a pointedly fun reminder, sneaking in delirious vocal synth experimentation and fluttering trumpets amidst the typical sample-flipping joy.
His inability to repeat that feat against a more popular opponent, Mr. Biden, further undercuts his argument that only a candidate who trumpets far-reaching change can energize voters there.
PARIS — As trumpets sound the opening bars of Berlioz's "Marche des Troyens," first one, then more tiny heads appear on the horizon, a good 150 feet from the orchestra pit.
In Spain, anger has likewise helped lift a new far-right party, Vox, which trumpets a nationalist platform that feeds into fears of immigrants taking jobs and driving down wages.
Some scintillating passages for trumpets and vibraphones were brimming with a metallic resonance that the orchestra and its music director, Jaap van Zweden, balanced beautifully with the strings and winds.
The percolating instrument returns at the end of the concerto, having the final word after the cello cedes to deathly, teeming violins and the open-ended call of two trumpets.
Her arrival at Yahoo was met with metaphorical trumpets and flocks of doves: Employees slapped her face on Obama-style "Hope" posters and even rolled out the purple carpet for her.
Mihyar, the hero of the collection, is a figure of mythic proportions, an exile who roams through a blighted landscape and trumpets a new creed—indeed, a creed of the New.
Up close, I was struck by the complexity of a single blossom: a large yellow star wreathed a cluster of five tubular petals, shaped like angel's trumpets and pooled with nectar.
Also in the chilled room were many varieties of wild mushrooms — black trumpets, porcinis, hedgehogs, morels and chanterelles — and other rarities including fresh wasabi from Japan, which runs $210 a pound.
As the Chinese government trumpets its response to the virus, the US is accusing China of covering up a public health crisis and costing the world valuable time to take action.
In the Keys, Mr. Curbelo trumpets the growing support for Mr. Trump's decision to punish China over trade and for his own push to secure federal dollars for Hurricane Irma recovery.
Though it also makes clarinets, bassoons and trumpets, the company is best known for saxophones played by jazz legends like John Coltrane, Stan Getz, Sonny Rollins, Joe Henderson and Wayne Shorter.
"Salsa pa' Tu Lechón" trumpets the basics — manicongo and lerenes (both peanut-shaped tubers served with traditional Dominican dishes) and keeping up with your dancing partner's fast-paced twists and turns.
If the long arc of history does indeed bend toward justice, the devil and his angels are making sure they grab everything that isn't nailed down before the final trumpets sound.
Venezuela's president, Nicolás Maduro, trumpets repeated increases in the minimum wage (four so far this year) as evidence of the generosity of the "Bolivarian revolution", begun by his late predecessor, Hugo Chávez.
Despite the prospect of a global audience of millions watching his trumpets performing live, however, Smith is remarkably calm about the huge role his instruments are going to play in the event.
There is much fanfare before the running of the Japan Cup, including trumpets, and the crowd claps in unison before releasing a joint roar of celebration at the start of the race.
"We've been growing steadily for the past 18 years without heralding trumpets, or asking for support from the government," William Floyd, Google's head of external affairs in New York said this month.
The track's hazy sounds have a similar appeal: Over a background of gently spinning harmonies, a small corps of trumpets restates its part over and over, warped a little differently each time.
In Ruben Santiago-Hudson's vital revival of a 1982 play only now making its Broadway debut, words take on the shimmer of molten-gold notes from the trumpets of Louis and Miles.
At the Loewe exhibition in Paris, Jonathan Anderson stayed tied to his penchant for the homemade, presenting chains with carved dogs' heads along with earrings in the shape of miniature brass trumpets.
State of the Art You could almost hear the trumpets blaring in the background of Mark Zuckerberg's announcement last week that Facebook would now promote local news stories in its news feed.
The Invisible Girl of the early nineteenth century was a communication illusion where participants could ask questions to a suspended balloon, and through the use of speaking trumpets, a female voice would respond.
Only two governors and five state attorneys general are Democratic women, an acute problem for a party that counts women as a pillar of its base and trumpets the value of diverse representation.
Those fortissimo salvos in the Bruckner had power but also a high-gloss polish — especially across the brass section, where individual colors were alloyed together, with just the gleaming trumpets sailing on top.
The 13 musicians of the splendid Mariachi Los Camperos ensemble (with six violins, three trumpets, guitars, a vihuela and harp) perform from the back of the stage and sometimes join in the singing.
This album is one of Mr. Smith's finest, a collection of carefully orchestrated, luminous threads (flute, saxophone, vibraphone, bass, other trumpets) rising and exhaling together, following the loose prescriptions of Mr. Smith's compositions.
This is not the first time that someone working closely with Nike — which trumpets the value of hard training, sweat, and grit in its slick advertising — has been embroiled in a doping scandal.
He trumpets his conservative Christianity and avoids supping alone with any woman other than his wife, then turns around and steadfastly enables an avowed groper with a bulging record of profanely sexual comments.
Since the Russian government regularly trumpets that its security is in jeopardy from Western policies, it is impossible to know what this really means — and under what conditions it will launch nuclear weapons.
The meat of the article trumpets a handful of lower court decisions that question the longstanding consensus that courts should not interfere with economic regulation absent an explicit constitutional command to do so.
"He's anxious that we should order a squillion A380s before he goes, so that he'll go out with a fanfare of trumpets or whatever," Clark joked in an interview with Reuters in Asia.
Music has accompanied acts of war since trumpets sounded at the walls of Jericho, but in recent decades it has been weaponized as never before—outfitted for the unreal landscape of modern battle.
And according to a Politico/Morning Consult survey published a few days ago, 51 percent of voters support the sweeping raids by ICE that the president trumpets, while just 35 percent oppose them.
And according to a Politico/Morning Consult survey published a few days ago, 51 percent of voters support the sweeping raids by ICE that the president trumpets, while just 35 percent oppose them.
Soldiers swinging their left arms while carrying machine guns in their right marched in green uniforms as a band played the Vatican and United Arab Emirate anthems on bagpipes, silver trumpets and tubas.
Like riding the bus with your headphones in––you'll still catch uncomfortable snippets of stranger's conversations between the trumpets, guitars, synths, or whatever it is your particular music streaming service is feeding you.
The United States frequently trumpets the fact that of the countries donating to the United Nations in support of Syrian refugees, it gives the most aid, much of it going to front-line countries.
Britain is no longer a "brave galleon, banners waving, trumpets blaring", as Steven Erlanger wrote in his farewell to the country that had been his home for two long spells as a foreign correspondent.
On The Tonight Show, her performance emphasized the song's opening trumpets, and she wore a bright red jumpsuit against a yellow background, aligning her style with the primary-color vibrancy associated with Latinx music.
The lead story of last Sunday's New York Times ("In 5G Race With China, U.S. Pushes Allies to Fight Huawei") trumpets the contest over 5G cellular networks, which exponentially accelerate online speed and ubiquity.
Last summer, as the purple-tipped spears of irises unsheathed themselves and nasturtiums flaunted trumpets of fire, a team of archaeologists excavated another one of Dickinson's gardens near the southeastern corner of the house.
The R&B-tinged pop song shows off Normani's smooth vocals while the 808s and trumpets make for an invigorating beat — which the singer uses to showcase some of her signature killer dance moves.
The subtitle to Jerry Oppenheimer's "The Kardashians: An American Drama" evokes the panoramic scope and muted trumpets of a Ken Burns epic, but crack open the book and the whiff of cheese is unmistakable.
Redemption came in a steamy cup of tea brewed from three kinds of mushrooms, including some black trumpets like the ones she hoped we might find down by the river once the rain stopped.
ARIA symbolically authorized $1.5 billion for regional security, aid, and diplomatic initiatives, and trumpets the United States' enduring commitment to a litany of existing agreements and treaties with our Indo-Pacific allies and partners.
Terry McAuliffe of Virginia, who is considering a presidential run and trumpets his progressive record on race, gender and sexual orientation but believes that Democrats must resist the temptation of lashing the business community.
In "Angel's Trumpets, Devil's Bells" (2019), Cuban artist María Magdalena Campos-Pons adorns—and besets—a colossal female nude with pressed campana bouquets: the medicinal Caribbean flowers form a crown for her gathered, upswept dreadlocks.
"Platoons, raise your arms - salute fallen leaders," a soldier said in a loud voice as ministers and parliament members bowed their heads, while military men saluted to the sound of trumpets at Yangon's Martyrs' Mausoleum.
Yet although Mr Cameron told a parliamentary committee on May 4th that he wanted a big, bold Britain, the Remain side hardly trumpets a more positive future, relying heavily on stressing the risks of Brexit.
The call to action was released in a clip uploaded to Facebook by Blaine Cooper on Tuesday, which shows two men, one of whom is wearing camouflage, blowing into trumpets for a solid 43 seconds.
After an opening section coasted for a bit on a meditative air, courtesy of pinging bells and hissing high strings, the soft-grained entrance of trumpets signaled a change, without overhauling the moderate, peaceable dynamics.
They made a ruckus, using trumpets, whistles and upbeat cumbia and polka songs as they called for the resignation of the official, whom they accuse of protecting judges who have been soft on corrupt politicians.
Mr. O'Reilly typically trumpets the tour on his Fox News program — "Tickets make great Mother's Day and Father's Day gifts, plus birthdays, you know the deal," he said last week — to alert viewers about shows.
With its lively trumpets, El Gran Combo's "La Fiesta de Pilito" echoes the loud music, continuous parties and late-night caroling (known as parranda) that usually take place during the holiday season on the island.
On the centre-right Mr Fillon, who trumpets his Catholic identity, is winning over small-town voters who might once have voted Socialist but are uneasy about liberal moves such as France's legalisation of gay marriage.
A Spanish-language bop, "Cariño" encapsulates the band's silky-smooth approach to multi-genre songwriting—via psychedelic guitars, jazzy trumpets, and chilled-out lounge vocals that melt you into your seat—and María's own cultural multiplicity.
One of the reasons Yiannopoulos blended in so well with reactionary conservatives — despite being an openly gay man — is because he spouted the anti-feminist, anti-Muslim, and otherwise bigoted messages that the fringe movement trumpets.
The orchestra performed some concerts in Carnegie Hall, but the early recordings made in 8-H often sound boxy, dry, and flat, even a little coarse, with blaring trumpets and insufficient solidity in the lower strings.
As they ambled along the route, families stood on their porches or in their yards to sing "Happy birthday" in harmony, or to play the tune on everything from guitars and ukeleles to saxophones and trumpets.
There are sheafs of handwritten notes, handpicked flowers painted gold, Christmas songs and brass trumpets and photos of high schoolers resplendent in red and green polo shirts, standing among fake Christmas trees and cotton-ball snow.
When Republican "mad men" make sexist comments — Trump using a vulgarism about Clinton's 2008 loss to Obama or Ted Cruz saying Clinton needed a spanking — the Clinton campaign barely conceals its delight as it sounds the trumpets.
Alibaba said it had also provided information about how it reports data about Singles Day, China's e-commerce holiday in November, for which Alibaba widely trumpets the total amount of goods its vendors sell on its sites.
Mr Kuchkarov also trumpets the government's decision to allow petty traders to cross the country's previously closed borders, which he says is spurring cottage industries in areas like the Fergana valley, where Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan intertwine.
On a recent sun-scorched afternoon, the sound of trumpets blasted from an attic by the gatehouse while piano duets thundered from the hall, and a cacophony of wind ensembles, string quartets and opera filled the outbuildings.
For the Yankees, a franchise that loudly trumpets its history and major league-best 27 World Series titles, this will be the first decade since the 1910s in which they have not appeared in a World Series.
Los Angeles — As the trumpets struck up a brassy fanfare, Emma Stone — perched on a pink feather-bedecked golden litter held aloft by a retinue of bare-chested men — made her entrance into a cavernous arena here.
Over the course of this past week, the Anaheim Convention Center was filled with a raucous cacophony of guitars, ukuleles, banjos, drums, cymbals, harmonicas, flutes, saxophones, trumpets, tubas, trombones, pianos, and a few weird hybrid creations in between.
Later, as they returned with flushed faces and tales of the raucous chanting, the trumpets, and the frenzied hostilities between 20103,000 fans always threatening to boil over into something more, she yearned more than ever to join them.
"It is ridiculous that Japan still trumpets about time-worn 'threat' at a time when a new era of peace settles on the Korean peninsula and in the region," another KCNA dispatch said at the end of July.
Hers trumpets that it offers Addyi, though the drug has had a troubled journey to market, and some medical professionals have questioned its effectiveness — or at the very least, the wisdom of prescribing it without a physical examination.
It's commercialism and capitalism blowing the trumpets to herald the arrival of one day a year when it's completely acceptable to yearn for a hazy, barely remembered past full of sleigh rides and ice-skating and family togetherness.
The Neediest Cases Fund Angels are everywhere in the Muñiz family's apartment in the Bronx: paintings of angels on the wall, ceramic angels flanking the ancient VCR, angels strumming lyres or blowing little golden trumpets on the bathroom shelves.
If its frenetic, sepulchral rumbling on the cello's lowest string — or the riotous, frankly impossible cacophony of massed, warring trumpets in "Die Soldaten," his sole opera — is not representative of growling hounds of hell, no music ever will be.
With a TV on mute providing cues, he and his 8-Bit Big Band were recording the music from Mario Kart 64, blown way out with 36 instruments, including saxophones, trumpets, trombones, 133 violins, three cellos and a harp.
But Ms. Garcia is likely better (or more widely) known — to "4.5 million engaged followers on social media," as the news release announcing her appointment trumpets — from her life in public: on social media, on books and on television.
When that fades out, there's a surprise coda: a minute-long instrumental from Trombone Shorty, a local hero in New Orleans, overdubbing his trumpets and trombones into flamboyant free jazz and then a grooving horn section, unmistakably from Louisiana.
King trumpets, encased in glass, float above the bar, where a long row of taps supplies beer, sake, French wine, and premade cocktails—among them a tarragon margarita and a cherry-blossom Manhattan, well priced but accordingly watered down.
After chatting briefly, they climbed into the queen's Range Rover and the 94-year-old Philip drove them to the royal residence, which has been a family home for British monarchs for nearly 1,000 years, as trumpets sounded in the distance.
It is music for voices, drums and bamboo trumpets that each play one note (sounding like the syllable "bu"), hooting in complex patterns of syncopation, akin to the rara music of Haiti and the gaga music of the Dominican Republic.
Counsel describes the rise of Syliphone and its core state-funded orchestras: The government supplied all of the groups with musical instruments, which, in the vein of the Cuban/Jazz style popular at the time, included electric guitars, saxophones and trumpets.
Horns, after all, are far louder than telephones, and during one particular performance of that famous piece, he sat right in front of the brass instruments: one tuba, nine French horns, four trombones, and four trumpets — including the main trumpet.
It's lighthearted and buoyant, the way all the performers form a small arc as they walk downstage in time with Bach's music, sometimes with stately strides, then speeding up with perky steps as the violins and trumpets describe a little trill.
"The National Emergency Crisis and Disasters Management Authority denies claims by the coup trumpets in Yemen that they fired a missile toward the airspace of the United Arab Emirates," the department said in a statement carried by state news agency WAM.
Reaganism made "ritualized denunciation" of the government routine, encouraging cynicism among conservatives; among liberals, a focus on marginalized groups has led to the competitive articulation of suffering, creating a culture of "majority victimhood," in which every group trumpets its grievances.
But Mr. Trump eagerly trumpets market increases, making them a substitute metric for success given his anemic poll numbers, and claims credit for corporate decisions with the gusto of a mayor or governor, whether related to his policies or not.
Its eight low-slung, terra-cotta-tiled houses are built into a hill covered in willow and angel's trumpets, and, from the hotel's restaurant (don't miss the corn-and-quinoa tamales), guests can watch alpacas graze on the front lawn.
"If I'm playing a horn arrangement on keyboard, or strings, it sounds like strings or horns, 'cause I know how to phrase it, how a string phrases, different attacks from the aperture for horns, trumpets, sax or trombones," he said.
"Kill This Love," a track that opens to triumphant trumpets and culls from both modern pop and hip-hop, climbed to No. 1 on the iTunes top song chart on April 4, shortly after the single's release that same day.
Walking behind Meghan as they entered St. George's chapel, Brian's excitable reaction appeared to have been prompted by the trumpets announcing the bride's arrival, something his dad, Canadian TV host Ben Mulroney later confirmed on CTV's Your Morning show, which he co-hosts.
The drums become the driving heart of the song, making it feel like Swift and Urie are always moving forward with a pep in their step, while the brash trumpets keep the vibe upbeat, putting a sheen of a smile over the music.
Mr. Christie, who typically trumpets his law-and-order credentials as a former federal prosecutor to prove his toughness to voters, used unusually soft language and conveyed empathy as he dealt with a question about the Black Lives Matter movement from a student.
"They've got to stand to attention in the cold and wet for around half an hour, then they've got to raise their trumpet up to their lips and start playing a note immediately," says instrument maker Richard Smith, 73, of Smith-Watkins Trumpets.
Apparently it was influenced by his recent divorce, which is great for people who found his formerly upbeat, hand-claps-and-trumpets mood absolutely unbearable, and also great for those among us who know that sad music is the best music of all.
Fitbit's website, which calls the Surge model "the ultimate fitness super watch," trumpets "GPS tracking" and "wireless syncing" as two key features — both of which could be problematic for security officials who are not keen on broadcasting the president's location and condition at any moment.
It reached No. 4 on Tuesday night with "Rinaldo" at Merkin Concert Hall, and it was hard to know which was more remarkable: the presence of four countertenors, two of them very fine; or of four Baroque trumpets, and players to wield them adequately.
The website for the National Rifle Association trumpets the fact that "Smith & Wesson supports children's charities with its annual Night of Laughter event featuring live comedy acts," without acknowledging that their AR-15-style rifles were used in countless mass shootings, including the Parkland massacre.
A ritual—because really, that's the only word that fits—of this magnitude has never been seen at Roadburn before, with its ten members, four guitars, two basses, Hammond and Roland organs, trumpets, horns, cello, incense, bones, water, wine... the end result was magificent.
The collection includes 1,600 recordings; 650 home-recorded reel-to-reel tapes in hand-decorated boxes; 86 scrapbooks; 5,000 photographs; 270 sets of band parts; 12 linear feet of papers, letters, and manuscripts; five trumpets; 14 mouthpieces; 120 awards and plaques; and much more.
According to the MTA's data set, as of Wednesday inside the Lost and Found were 7,584 pants, trousers, and shorts; 96 trumpets; 9 answering machines; 27 death certificates; 91 insulin pumps; and 21 Tefillin, the leather boxes that Orthodox Jewish men strap onto their heads.
The first protestors had started showing up for what grew to be an enormous, clamorous demonstration, with people shivering in the January cold but chanting, "Build a wall, we'll tear it down" as they played trumpets, drums and even banged on pots and pans.
The unnerving trailer trumpets the presence of producer James Gunn, who was fired from the "Guardians of the Galaxy" franchise over offensive past tweets, but the film was actually written by his brother Brian Gunn and cousin Mark Gunn, and directed by David Yarovesky.

No results under this filter, show 314 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.