Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

32 Sentences With "tumultuously"

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

Nowhere has 3G's approach played out more tumultuously than at Kraft Heinz.
" Manzoni writes that "the city, already tumultuously inclined, was now turned upside down.
" Calling the past week "tumultuously positive," Cramer said next week "will be the craziest reporting period ... you've seen in ages.
" Calling the past week "tumultuously positive," the "Mad Money" host said next week "will be the craziest reporting period ... you've seen in ages.
So as the surreal American election barrels tumultuously toward a conclusion, perhaps an outsider can most accurately portray the culture that produced it.
The project manager on SSAFE for example, Randy Wigginton, was Apple's sixth employee and has since worked for eBay, Paypal, and (somewhat tumultuously) Google.
As the Milwaukee Bucks try to shake free from a tumultuously disappointing regular season, Eric Bledsoe is well-positioned to assert himself as so much more than a supplementary sidekick.
HELSINKI, Finland — After his 24-season N.H.L. coaching career ended tumultuously, Ron Wilson needed time to decompress and fall back in love with hockey before he would even consider coaching again.
However, Simmons Leissner exited from her long-held role as Creative Director in 2010, tumultuously, it had been reported at the time, as it became a part of the Kellwood Company.
The result is a tumultuously tender portrait of what it really means to honestly connect with the person you love — even in an environment overwhelmed by possible, and occasionally devastating, distractions.
However, Simmons Leissner exited from her long-held role as Creative Director in 2010, tumultuously, it had been reported at the time, as it became a part of the Kellwood Company.
" Jesse Green, then at New York magazine and now at The Times, was more positive, calling the production "bracing; like the onstage rain that pours tumultuously during the final scene, it smells fresh and raises shivers.
Over the past few years, Mr. Hvorostovsky had been public about his treatment for brain cancer, and his appearances in New York City since his diagnosis had been love fests, culminating in a tumultuously received surprise cameo in May at the gala concert celebrating the Met's 50th anniversary at Lincoln Center.
A long list of lawyers have cycled tumultuously in and out of Mr. Trump's orbit over the past three years: Donald F. McGahn II, his first White House counsel; Ty Cobb and John M. Dowd, who represented him in the early stages of the special counsel's investigation; and Emmet T. Flood, who saw Mr. Trump through the completion of the Mueller report.
The couple separated but later reunited. In 1975 Cullinan died of a heart attack. Todd later married a fellow stage actor, Robin Dolton. Their marriage ended tumultuously, as Dolton died during their divorce proceedings.
According to the Chronicle of 754, Roderic "tumultuously [tumultuose] invaded the kingdom [regnum] with the encouragement of [or at the exhortation of] the senate [senatus]."Thompson, 249.Collins, Visigothic, 113. Historians have long debated the exact meaning of these words.
While Foscolo lived tumultuously between adventures, amorous relations, and books, Leopardi was barely able to escape from his domestic oppression. To Leopardi, Rome seemed squalid and modest when compared to the idealized image that he had created of it.Giacomo Leopardi, A Silvia, v. 16: le sudate carte.
There have also been moments in Roman history when an army has performed better after the deaths of their consuls. At the end of the chapter, Machiavelli asserts that "a captain who has time to instruct men and occasion to arm them is very much more to be trusted than an insolent army with a head made tumultuously by it."trans.
"Why I should have heard this romantic piece at the same period that I was tumultuously involved in the primitivism of [other works] is beyond my understanding."Quoted in Broyles and Von Glahn (2007), p. 6. Commenting on the piece after Ornstein's death approximately three-quarters of a century later, critic Martin Anderson wrote that it "rivals Rachmaninov's [cello sonata] in gorgeous tunes."Anderson (2002a).
Nicholas sternly and adamantly refused, reproaching his uncle for asking him to break his coronation oath to maintain autocratic power for his successors. In the Duma on 2 December 1916, Vladimir Purishkevich, a fervent patriot, monarchist and war worker, denounced the dark forces which surrounded the throne in a thunderous two-hour speech which was tumultuously applauded. "Revolution threatens," he warned, "and an obscure peasant shall govern Russia no longer!"Tames, p. 49.
The City's reforms was modeled upon London's Metropolitan Police Service of a full-time professional police force in 1845. The Municipal Police replaced the inadequate night watch system which had been in place since the 17th century, when the city was founded by the Dutch as New Amsterdam. In 1857, the Municipal Police were tumultuously replaced by the Metropolitan Police, which consolidated other local police departments. Late 19th and early 20th century trends included professionalization and struggles against corruption.
During the justice's interview with Bosavern, rioters gathered outside the house and claimed the intention to break in. As a result, all the prisoners were committed to the Prison of Newgate, to be tried with the charge of:Hitchcock, Tim; Shoemaker, Robert, Tales from the Hanging Court, London: Hodder Arnold, 2007, p. 109. "High treason in levying war against his majesty by riotously and tumultuously assembling themselves together in order to suppress and pull down all bawdy houses".LMA, MJ/SP/1749/07/096.
In Canada, the Riot Act has been incorporated in a modified form into the Criminal Code, a federal statute. Sections 32 and 33 of the Code deal with the power of police officers to suppress riots. The Code defines a riot as an "unlawful assembly" that has "begun to disturb the peace tumultuously". When twelve or more persons are "unlawfully and riotously assembled together", the proclamation can be read by a number of public officials, such as justices of the peace, provincial court judges, mayors, and sheriffs.
She had great success and was tumultuously acclaimed by the normally staid London audiences. She returned to London in 1930 in Norma, L'amore dei tre re, and La traviata (her first performances as Violetta). In her final London season in 1931, she sang in La forza del destino, Fedra (an opera by her coach and long-time friend, Romano Romani), and a reprise of La traviata. In 1933 Ponselle sang her only performances in Italy, as Giulia in La vestale, with the Maggio Musicale in Florence.
During their descent, Rob's rope apparently breaks, causing him to fall to his death. Alison is pelted with falling debris as she tumultuously reaches the bottom, whereupon she discovers Rob's rope was cut. Seeing a figure move away from the top of the cliff, it becomes clear the people who imprisoned Anna are trying to kill them. After killing Rob and the unsuccessful attempt on Alison, Anna's kidnappers Mr. Kidd and Mr. Mcrae murder two nearby poachers and take their rifles, using them to open fire as Alison regroups with the others.
The act created a mechanism for certain local officials to make a proclamation ordering the dispersal of any group of more than twelve people who were "unlawfully, riotously, and tumultuously assembled together". If the group failed to disperse within one hour, then anyone remaining gathered was guilty of a felony without benefit of clergy, punishable by death. The proclamation could be made in an incorporated town or city by the mayor, bailiff or "other head officer", or a justice of the peace. Elsewhere it could be made by a justice of the peace or the sheriff, undersheriff or parish constable.
The act also made it a felony punishable by death without benefit of clergy for "any persons unlawfully, riotously and tumultuously assembled together" to cause (or begin to cause) serious damage to places of religious worship, houses, barns, and stables. In the event of buildings being damaged in areas that were not incorporated into a town or city, the residents of the hundred were made liable to pay damages to the property owners concerned. Unlike the rest of the act, this required a civil action. In the case of incorporated areas, the action could be brought against two or more named individuals.
Stan and Oliver decide to test the solution for themselves when the professor leaves the room to fetch and rejuvenate the butler. As Oliver is leaning over the vat with a huge beaker of the rejuvenation solution and an eyedropper, Stan accidentally knocks Oliver and the container of solution into the vat. After churning and gurgling tumultuously for some moments as the excessively-large amount of solution and water mix (accompanied by agonized screams and whooping yowls from Oliver), the vat eventually settles back down, and Oliver emerges as a chimpanzee. Stan plaintively asks if Ollie still knows him and will speak to him.
The poem however continues to explain how the boy's feelings suddenly burst out tumultuously, and he ran weeping down to the sea in the moonlight as the bird's call unlocked the questions in his own heart. Knowing that he will never escape the unknown want aroused in him, 'the sweet hell within', he begs for some word more of understanding. The unhurrying sea > Lisp'd to me the low and delicious word death, > And again death, death, death, death > Hissing melodious, neither like the bird nor like my arous'd child's heart, > But edging near as privately for me rustling at my feet, > Creeping thence steadily up to my ears and laving me softly all over, > Death, death, death, death, death.
Gaga performing "Telephone" on the Born This Way Ball tour (2012–2013) The song has garnered positive reviews from music critics. Michael Hubbard from MusicOMH said that the song was "probably the best thing here [on The Fame Monster]". He also complimented the "brilliant bridge" and the ending of the song where the caller gets through to her voicemail. Popjustice gave the song a positive review: "It's a little bit like Gwen [Stefani]'s "What You Waiting For?" meets Timbaland's "The Way I Are' meets about fifty other things ... The structure's quite exciting ... there is something tumultuously brilliant about Beyoncé's contribution that makes everything seem fine and as if it was the plan all along.
This section now reads: Section 6(a) was repealed by Schedule 22 to the Merchant Shipping Act 1894. It read: "in the case of the plundering, damage, or destruction of any ship or boat stranded or in distress on or near the shore of any sea or tidal water, or of any part of the cargo or apparel of such ship or boat, by persons riotously and tumultuously assembled together, whether on shore or afloat." The words "plundering, damage" in the penultimate place, and the words "and as if, in the case of such ship, boat, or cargo not being in any police district, such plundering, damage, or destruction took place in the nearest police district" at the end, were repealed by the same Schedule.
Montauk Variations received positive reviews across the UK press and was generally praised for its sense of serenity and stillness compared to Bourne's earlier work in "improvisational jazz [and] proto metal outfits". On the Metacritic website, which aggregates reviews from critics and assigns a normalised rating out of 100, Montauk Variations received a score of 74, based on 1 mixed and 5 positive reviews. All About Jazz wrote, "Montauk Variations is about economy and lyricism. Bourne's use of sharper edges only serves to highlight the sheer beauty of their surrounding soft surfaces, making Montauk Variations an absolutely beautiful album of respite, restoration and renewal". The Skinny praised the album, saying, "Whether mellow and romantic (Juliet) or tumultuously erratic (Étude Psychotique), Bourne’s work is ceaselessly inventive and always absorbing". Drowned In Sound wrote that "whilst the album may be far from simple, it’s certainly the feeling of simplicity that makes this endearing, if not inspiring".

No results under this filter, show 32 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.