Sentence examples for as a heyday from inspiring English sources

The phrase "as a heyday" is not correct and usable in written English.
The term "heyday" refers to a period of great success or popularity, and it is typically used without the preposition "as."
Example: "The company experienced its heyday in the late 1990s when it dominated the market."
Alternatives: "in its prime" or "at its peak."

Exact(3)

Mishra's title, and coinage, echoes W. H. Auden's "Age of Anxiety," the name for the post-A-bomb forties and fifties which reappear comically in the new accounts as a heyday of middle-class buoyancy and social mobility.

Mishra's title, and coinage, echoes W. H. Auden's "Age of Anxiety," the name for the post-A-bomb forties and fifties — which reappear comically in the new accounts as a heyday of middle-class buoyancy and social mobility.

And Karl Rove, whose appearance in this book is evidence that an interview request from Mr. Brokaw was an offer that couldn't be refused, has the strategic insight that while the '60s were perceived as a heyday for antiwar sentiment, nearly 60percentt of the vote in 1968 went to Richard Nixon and George Wallace.

Similar(57)

This school, in which wishful thinking often masquerades as analysis, is enjoying a heyday as military strains in Iraq and Afghanistan, a credit crunch, spiraling debt and the specter of recession form a picture of American overreach and decline.

"No Problem: Cologne/New York, 1984-1989," a big, museum-quality show now at the David Zwirner gallery, bemuses as the marketing of a heyday in art marketing — never mind (but do note) that the art is first-rate.

Despite overwhelming piracy in Taiwan-which has reduced the recording industry to 5 to 10 percent from its heyday-as a Taiwan singer, Jay produced an album that sold a record 300,000 copies.

And in his speeches, Romney quotes "America the Beautiful," promises more and better jobs (11 million to be exact) and invokes what he sees as a pre-Obama heyday linked to Ronald Reagan.

As a writer whose heyday spanned the years from "Bonnie and Clyde" (1967) to "Awakenings" (1990), "Sleeping With the Enemy" (1991) and "L.A. Story" (1991), Ms. Kael could mingle references to literary lions like Saul Bellow, Jean Genet and Norman Mailer with demotic condemnations like loony, sleazo, junk and bummer.

The ensemble had to abandon the hall at the end of the thirties, for financial reasons, at which point the building experienced a second heyday, as the Paradise Theatre, a famous jazz venue.

Enrollment is less than a quarter of its 1,200-student 1,200-studenthe school's heyday as a Catholic League peakrhouse, andurings futhee haschool been in question.

Never a recluse like Greta Garbo, Dietrich said she considered public life for stars "as much a duty as making a film". In her heyday she made frequent public appearances, lived in gorgeous homes and spent money lavishly.

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