Sentence examples for embodies a range from inspiring English sources

Exact(6)

"The Mother of Us All" embodies a range of contradictions that, since the opera's première, at Columbia University, in 1947, have only become deeper with time.

The city of Sochi, on the edge of the Black Sea, embodies a range of familiar Olympic problems: concerns about the host city's political climate and human-rights record; threats of boycotts; geographic flaws that present maddening logistical concerns; frantic and expensive local development that is intended to serve specific, idiosyncratic, short-term needs at the expense of long-term planning.

He embodies a range of well-constructed and imaginative characters – a highlight is a priest who reviews films in plainsong – and while the writing is undoubtedly crisp and funny, he comes into his own when he forces the crowd to get involved.

The impact of design on people and environment embodies a range of values and experience.

First, as Hays and Kearney (2001) stated, HR systems by themselves are subjected to a fundamental transition in their operating practices, which embodies a range of opportunities as well as daunting pressures on replacing the established ones (Truss 2009a; Teo and Rodwell 2007).

The Global Ocean Data Assimilation Experiment embodies a range of processes and applications, drawing power from the fact that they all require ocean data and models, and that there are important commonalities among the components that can be exploited for cost-effectiveness.

Similar(54)

Further, they embody a range of vices and virtues, and gradations thereof.

An unreliable narrator who sold reliable gear, Herter embodied a range of American archetypes: ornery survivalist, unabashed huckster, eccentric gastronome, reclusive tinkerer, teller of tall tales.

But where Washington tapped men like Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson -- who were not only the best brains the nation could offer but who also embodied a range of views -- Jackson relied on like-minded yes men.

Principally, they seem to exist to embody a range of problems faced by women in the early days of feminism, when the traditional roles of the sexes are under siege.

Potentially, models may embody a range of characteristics: as typical or representative; as ideal or perfect; as convenient, tractable, or manipulable; as homologous (conserved evolutionarily); as analogous; as exemplars; as abstractions.

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