Sentence examples for bring to peak from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

Velázquez landed the country's one plum job for an artist, as chief painter to King Philip IV, in Madrid, where he could bring to peak refinement his astonishing naturalism, with secular subjects in sophisticated company.

Similar(58)

It was only recently that his trainer was satisfied he could be brought to peak fitness in time.

Walwyn had the patience of a priest, and a rare skill with late-maturing horses that he could bring to their peak for the big occasion.

Mr. Mercer-Taylor writes, "Never had a musician so singularly dedicated to the consolidation of a canon of German masterworks -- and so distinctly equipped with training, personal charisma and innate musicianship to bring to the peak of their capabilities whatever ensemble was placed before him -- been placed in charge of a cluster of ensembles so capable of realizing his vision".

The Aon Chase, which is over a much more suitable three miles and which he won in 2008, is supposed to help bring Denman to peak condition for his third Gold Cup against Kauto Star, who lives in the box next to his at Paul ­Nicholls's ­Somerset stable.

Unless the machine can be brought up to peak capacity, the Tevatron will be downgraded from a long shot to a noncontender in the race to find the Higgs boson: a huge, undiscovered particle that theory says is the source of mass.

Many had been brought to a peak of perfection in their trade in the US itself or in its bases in the Panama canal zone by US instructors.

These two men brought to its peak English Baroque an architecture concerned with the rhythmic effect of diversified masses, using Classical architectural elements to that end.

Encaustic painting was invented by the ancient Greeks and was brought to the peak of its technical perfection by the genre painter Pausias in the 4th century bc.

By provisioning the birds with as much food as they can eat, females have been brought to the peak of condition the ideal state to produce top-class sons.

Reflecting microscopes, in which the image is magnified through concave mirrors rather than convex lenses, were brought to their peak of perfection in 1947 by British physicist C.R. Burch, who made a series of giant instruments that used ultraviolet rays.

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