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45 Sentences With "word pictures"

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

Because I work with children I try to tell stories through word pictures.
The word pictures that Wilson painted in 1919 remain beguiling, in spite of their overreach.
FBI case, as much as he is trying to paint word pictures without actually completing a usable portrait.
"Up until that point, it was a matter of basically painting word pictures out of thin air," he said.
Mel Torme and his collaborator Bob Wells were trying to escape the heat, at least mentally, by conjuring up those ice-cold word-pictures.
The play, an underproduced masterpiece, is a mosaic of women's pictures, in every sense of the wordpictures that Kennedy crafts by marrying poetry to action.
Already a well known football commentator – see, we told you Robot Wars was a sport – Pearce could paint the most visceral of word pictures to compliment the robotic violence on screen.
Yet here the word "pictures" also has a certain gentlemanly flavor, carrying echoes of the 18th-century aesthetic cult of the "picturesque," a characteristically British tempering of the excesses of Continental romanticism.
He used his startling gift for language to create word pictures as detailed and visionary, and as varied, as paintings by Edward Hopper and Hieronymus Bosch, capturing the lives of outsiders — the lost, the dispossessed, the damned — with empathy and unsparing candor.
With their word-pictures of Reaganesque bills being sent for the Trump signature, and their fawning praise for the Trump clan, some are describing a sort of elected monarchy, complete with princelings, in which important decisions are guided or taken by a Prime Minister Pence from the ruling Republican Party.
On a visit to America, she brought with her Chinese word pictures that she translated into English, which Lowell turned into rhymed poetry.
Susie Root Rhodes, Economy Administration Cook Book (W. B. Conkey & Company 1913): 216. Published writings by Bertha Heustis include Word Pictures (1923) and Pietro (1915).
Zorns Lemma emerged from Word Pictures, a photography project that Frampton made from 1962 to 1963. For Word Pictures, Frampton shot over 2000 black-and-white 35mm photographs of environmental words, seeking to explore the illusions of photography as a medium. However, he had difficulty devising a form in which to present the photographs. During this period, Frampton became less active as a photographer and first started to experiment with filmmaking.
Goldsboro's is from his album, Word Pictures. It reached number 36 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and number six on the Adult Contemporary chart. It also became a hit in Canada (#19).
Before the era of television, when radio and rugby were New Zealand passions, he had broadcast 38 tests, creating vivid, unforgettable word pictures. He had also commentated other sports, such as cricket and boxing, and commentated at the 1950 and 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth and 1956 Olympic games.
I'm more used to acquiescing to what the producer wants to do, what the director wants to do." Buck himself sized up CBS' handling of the announcers by saying "CBS never got that baseball play-by-play draws word- pictures. All they knew was that football stars analysts. So they said, 'Let [analyst Tim] McCarver run the show.
"Robertson's Word Pictures of the New Testament". Broadman Press 1932,33, Renewal 1960. This argument is problematic, however, because both trace their genealogy through Joseph. Eusebius of Caesarea, on the other hand, affirmed the interpretation of Africanus that Luke's genealogy is of Joseph (not of Mary), who was the natural son of Jacob, though legally of Eli who was the uterine brother of Jacob.
He was concerned that aviation had not been sufficiently seriously regarded before 1914 and the same should not be allowed to happen to civil aviation which would develop once peace was achieved. He painted word pictures of trunk routes through Britain and Ireland with links throughout Europe even to the United States and New Zealand through India and Australia.Business Flying. Outlook For Air Mails After The War.
The years 1946-1955 can be seen as Annemarie von Matt's second period. The few sculpted forms she produced had a magical symbolism and later came to be seem as precursors of concept art. There are also drawings and collages which mirror her own "individual mythology". During the time she also authored numerous aphoristic observations, "word pictures" and poems that draw attention to her fascination with language.
Hunting dogs were generally connected to the aristocracy. Only the nobility were allowed to keep hunting dogs, and this would signal status. Dog portraits became increasingly popular in the 18th century, and the establishment of The Kennel Club in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in 1873, and the American Kennel Club in 1884 introduced breed standards or 'word pictures', which further encouraged the popularity of dog portraiture.
Laurel and Hardy adapted well to silent films, both being skilled at slapstick, and their nonverbal interplay with each other and the audience became famous—Laurel's cry and Hardy's downtrodden glances to the camera whenever something went wrong—and were carried over to their later talkies. Tthey were one of the few silent acts who made a successful transition to spoken word pictures in the 1930s, showing themselves to be equally adept at verbal wordplay.
On the 1st logo, in very dim light, almost no light at all, an old door slams shut by itself. The camera moves over to the keyhole, where a demon-possessed skull moves over to the left of the screen. The camera moves back a space or two, showing the skull's face in the keyhole. The words "ghost" and "house" appear on the sides of the keyhole, and the word "pictures" appears at the bottom.
The R.E.A. company still exists, and was worth approximately GBP 37 million in 2010. Maclaren wrote several other books including Climbs and Changes, Chuckles from a Cheery Corner, and Word Pictures of War (a book of poetry based on experiences of the First World War, published by Methuen, London, in 1917). He died on 3 June 1921. Posthumously in 1922, his Child's Song-Story Book was published for private circulation by Blackie & Son, Glasgow.
Goldsmith's open-minded approach meant that Amazing and Fantastic published some writers who did not fit into the other magazines. Philip K. Dick's sales to magazines had dropped, but his work began to appear in Amazing, and Goldsmith also regularly published David R. Bunch's stories of Moderan, a world whose inhabitants were part human and part metal. Bunch, whose stories were "bewildering, exotic word pictures" according to Mike Ashley, had been unable to sell regularly elsewhere.
Some poets concentrate on simile while others on style. But “Magh” was one great poet who used simile with great effect, had great felicity with the language, used meaningful words and was the master of ornate and exotic style. So it has been aptly said about him: “Maghe” santi trayo Guna It has been acknowledged by scholars that he combined in his persona, Kalidas's mastery over simile, Bharvi” flair for drawing word-pictures and dandi” elegant style of writing.
Arnimal followed in the wake of the tradition of her predecessor and made the love lyrics adopted by her predecessor Habba Khatoon more of a plaintive wail. Arnimal's lyrics are masterpieces of Kashmiri language. The word pictures of delicate sentiments drawn by her are so vivid, real and charming that very few Kashmiri poets have reached the standard set by her. Most of these lyrics have been set to music and are sung even now by Kashmiri minstrels with great interest and gusto.
He also made a number of appearances as a celebrity guest contestant on the "Pyramid" game shows in the late 1970s and 1980s. He reprised his Eight Is Enough role in two reunion movies during the late 1980s, and also appeared in several episodes of Murder, She Wrote. As the 1990s came to a close, he made an appearance on The WB's hit series 7th Heaven as Captain Jack Smith. In 2000, Goodeve appeared as the host of Word Pictures' production Proving the Bible through Archeology.
March, time, 1791. The song refers to "Bacchus's tumult"; the gravediggers discuss whether the grave is too deep, taking swigs from a bottle of brännvin. The songs are "most ingeniously" set to music, the melodies accentuated by the bold construction of music, word pictures and choice of words, while the music brings out a hidden dimension not seen if the words are simply read as verse. The poems themselves, far from being the brilliant improvisations that they appear, are striking in their "formal virtuosity".
His short work (De situ orbis libri III.) remained in use nearly to the year 1500. It occupies less than one hundred pages of ordinary print, and is described by the Encyclopædia Britannica (1911) as "dry in style and deficient in method, but of pure Latinity, and occasionally relieved by pleasing word-pictures." Except for the geographical parts of Pliny's Historia naturalis (where Mela is cited as an important authority), the De situ orbis is the only formal treatise on the subject in Classical Latin.
Macy says, "In his letters Paul reveals a robust sense of humor... He teases to teach, uses grand exaggeration, enjoys parody and reversal, and even creates vivid comic [word] pictures." For example in 2 Corinthians 11, Paul uses a biting sarcasm to give what has been termed his "anti-autobiography" while calling himself a fool. In the Acts of the Apostles, a young man called Eutychus listens to Paul, falls asleep and then falls out of a window and dies. This story may be a comment on Paul's long-windedness.
Divided into five sections, the poems in this collection are categorized according to theme. The first section, Bocetos antiguos, includes poems inspired by pagan and Judeo-Christian thought; the second section, Mi museo ideal, is famous because the poems contained in it were inspired by the art of Gustave Moreau, with whom Julián had an ongoing correspondence with. The third section, Cromos españoles, is a collection of well-known Spanish word pictures. The fourth, Marfiles viejos, contains sixteen sonnets that all reflect his fears and concerns about life in general.
The word pixel is a portmanteau of pix (from "pictures", shortened to "pics") and el (for "element"); similar formations with 'el' include the words voxel and texel. The word pix appeared in Variety magazine headlines in 1932, as an abbreviation for the word pictures, in reference to movies. By 1938, "pix" was being used in reference to still pictures by photojournalists. The word "pixel" was first published in 1965 by Frederic C. Billingsley of JPL, to describe the picture elements of scanned images from space probes to the Moon and Mars.
Not Drowning, Waving (styled as not drowning, waving) were a musical group formed in Melbourne, Australia in 1983 by David Bridie and John Phillips. Their music combined elements of rock, ambient music and world music; their lyrics dealt with characteristically Australian topics: word-pictures of landscapes and people, the seasons, and some political issues – such as Indonesia's invasion of East Timor. The group released six studio albums and two soundtracks until disbanding in 1994, they briefly reformed in 2001, 2003 and 2005–2006. From 2005 to 2007, they issued three compilation albums.
Boswell, p. 97 Countering this is traditional interpretation, which notes that the angels were sent to investigate an ongoing regional problem(Gn. 18) of fornication, and extraordinarily so, that of a homosexual nature,Albert Barnes' Notes on the BibleVincent's Word Studies "out of the order of nature."Commentary on the Old and New Testaments by Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown "Strange" is understood to mean "outside the moral law",Word pictures in the New Testament, Archibald Thomas Robertson (; ) while it is doubted that either Lot or the men of Sodom understood that the strangers were angels at the time.
As with his other books, Hudson wrote A Crystal Age in a rich and highly descriptive style. He paints lustrous word-pictures. In the palatial residence of the people of the new age, "a room of vast extent" has > ...something ethereal in its aspect, as of a nave in a cloud-cathedral, its > far-stretching shining floors and walls and columns, pure white and pearl- > gray, faintly touched with colors of exquisite delicacy. And over it all was > the roof of white or pale gray glass tinged with golden-rod – the roof which > I had seen from the outside when it seemed to me like a cloud resting on the > stony summit of a hill.
Lewis received two Emmy Awards for his show "Word Pictures"Laughing Moon on WTTW in Chicago, and he had a syndicated radio show. He appeared on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and his voice can still be heard on the Pirates of the Caribbean ride in Disneyland. He was a featured performer on the TV series Northern Exposure on CBS and Leverage on TNT (as Santa/Jack in "The Ho Ho Ho Job", 2012). Lewis was an illustrator and he wrote four books, among them Kaliban's Christmas: A Special Tale of Magic (Puffin Books, 1987), The Secret of the Quilt (Book One of The Counterpane Collection) with illustrations by Laura Kelly (Laughing Moon Productions, 1992), and the ibook Anna and the Sun (Lulu.
Moon has written a number of books and articles, and given over 200 presentations in the US, Canada, Hong Kong and Taiwan. He continues to do research, write music and perform, and make artwork. He is the author of Existential Art Therapy: The Canvas Mirror; Essentials of Art Therapy Education and Practice; Art and Soul: Reflections on an Artistic Psychology; Introduction to Art Therapy: Faith in the Product; The Dynamics of Art as Therapy with Adolescents, Working with Images: The Art of Art Therapists; Word Pictures: The Poetry and Art of Art Therapy; Ethical Issues in Art Therapy; The Role of Metaphor in Art Therapy; and Art-Based Group Therapy: Theory and Practice. His newest book, with Dr. Chris Belkofer, Artist, Therapist and Teacher: Selected Papers.
Heilborn successfully completed his secondary education at the French School in Berlin, and went on to study Philosophy, History and German literature with linguistics at university in Jena and Berlin. He received his doctorate in 1890 with a dissertation entitled tantalizingly "Der Wortschatz der sogenannten ersten schlesischen dichterschule in wortbildung und wortzusammensetzung dargestellt" (The Vocabulary of the so-called first First Silesian School of Poets presented in word pictures and word composition)) In the 1890s he began work in the world of German journalism. He was the editor of various newspapers and magazines, and between 1912 and 1933 he was managing editor of Das literarische Echo (renamed "Die Literatur" in 1923). Since 1901 he had been reporting on the Berlin theatre scene for the Frankfurter Zeitung.
In listening to the groups that Salamunovich led full-time at the professional, collegiate and church levels as well as his numerous guest conducting positions around the world, it is noteworthy he managed to get his signature sound and interpretation no matter what level of ability the singers possessed. He also managed to accomplish this in a remarkably short amount of rehearsal time. His rehearsals were performances in themselves in which his analogies and "word pictures" turned subjective concepts into definable sounds that could immediately be grasped by the singers he conducted. Given his years conducting church choirs while having to play the organ, Salamunovich developed the use of his facial expressions almost like another set of hands to communicate the tone and vocal "shape" he wanted from the choir.
"Jack's Last Muster" is reminiscent of Gordon in his raciest style. It is written in the metre of "How we beat the Favourite;" but beyond portraying Boake's love of the horse, it is scarcely illustrative of the brooding, melancholy bushman as we know him.""Australian Poet: A Study in Theme" by N. E. Gladhill, The West Australian, 28 June 1930, p5 In a survey of the poet's work, an essayist in The Observer (Adelaide) states "Kendall wrote of 'sweet running waters, and soft unfooted dells,' but Boake drew vivid word- pictures of the inland country in its most savage and most pitiless aspects. In dealing with such scenes lie submerged the idealistic in his temperament, and described the life as he found it — took bright patches from Nature and transferred them to paper.
Census entry for Stuart F. Forbes, age 38, born in Illinois. Ancestry.com. 1910 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Year: 1910; Census Place: Seattle Ward 3, King, Washington; Roll: T624_1658; Page: 1A; Enumeration District: 0089; ; FHL microfilm: 1375671. As of 1918, Forbes was living in Chicago where he was employed as a supervising engineer for construction quality management at a U.S. government cold storage warehouse.Draft registration card dated September 1918 for Stuart Falconer Forbes, born December 26, 1872. Ancestry.com. U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918 [database on-line]. Registration State: Illinois; Registration County: Cook; Roll: 1452461; Draft Board: 4. In 1925, Forbes published a book titled Trail Sketches: Word Pictures of the West. At the time of the 1940 U.S. Census, he was living in Port Madison, Washington, with his wife Mary L. Forbes.
As he waits for the next opportunity for a medical exam, the excitement of trading on the black market continues to draw him in. Sandulescu recounts black market trades and affairs that include selling pork from a clandestine farmhouse slaughter, a trip to Belgium disguised as a US soldier to buy 150 pounds of coffee and a trip in the company of a Red Army officer from the Balkans to Paris to buy and peddle cigarettes. He gives market prices for black market goods, primarily food, and the exchange rate in terms of packs of cigarettes, as American cigarettes were the most widely accepted currency at the time. The book includes vivid word pictures of the lives of ordinary civilians in the aftermath of the war, with rationing and shortages leading many to trade on the black market to eat well or just to survive.
He occasionally commentated on cricket, and often covered the Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race which turned out to be his last time commentating on a sporting event. As a serious broadcaster with a mellifluous voice and a deep sense of gravitas, he was regularly called upon to describe the opening and closing ceremonies at events such as the Olympic Games and World Cup, and also covered non-sporting events such as the wedding of Prince Charles to Lady Diana Spencer in 1981, and that of Prince Andrew to Sarah Ferguson in 1986. He also lent his talents to coverage of the State Opening of Parliament. Almost unrivalled for his ability to paint word pictures and capture the excitement of a great occasion, Jones was still regarded as a great broadcaster in the late 1980s, despite the rise of younger, brasher commentators who did not share his Standard English accent.
Terry Hertzler (born in Mansfield, Ohio, in 1949) is an American poet and writer. Hertzler is the owner of Caernarvon Press, a small literary press based in San Diego, California, that publishes both well-known and emerging writers. Hertzler's own work includes several chapbooks of poetry and fiction as well as The Way of the Snake, a book of poetry based on his experiences as a soldier in the war in Vietnam, and Second Skin (), of which Dorianne Laux said, "Second Skin provides ample evidence that poetry can be both accessible and powerful, that writing doesn't have to be obscure or difficult to make us think, to move us. Hertzler paints word pictures whose images stay with the reader long after the book is closed." His work has been nominated three times for The Pushcart Prize and has been widely published in literary journals and anthologies, including The Iowa Review, The Writer, Literal Latte, North American Review, Margie, Nimrod, Stand Up Poetry: An Expanded Anthology (University of Iowa Press) and In the Palm of Your Hand: The Poet’s Portable Workshop (Tilbury House, Publishers).
In the Chicago Tribune, Debby Applegate stated that "'American Creation' is one of the most enjoyable and thought-provoking books I've read in years." Cindy Kibbe, writing in the New Hampshire Business Review, said of the book, "Filled with powerful, masterfully drawn word-pictures and eye-opening insights, Ellis's 'American Creation' should be a must-read for anyone prior to going to the voting polls ... 'American Creation' lets us know we still have much to learn from, both good and bad, from the founding of our nation". In The Boston Globe, H.W. Brands called Ellis "the reigning master of the episodic approach to history"; he complimented the book's style but disagreed with Ellis' conclusion that blurred sovereignty was one of the Constitution's greatest strengths. Jonathan Yardley of The Washington Post wrote that he felt Ellis' portrait of the Founders was largely accurate, but that in his reading of the slavery issue, he was "a trifle guilty of the 'presentism' -- seeing the past through the prism of the present -- that he elsewhere deplores".

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