Sentence examples for imagined view from inspiring English sources

Exact(5)

Although it's not a substantially imagined view of Simone's life, it at least leaves room for imagination, which the other two films, in their overheated and fabricated excesses, foreclose.

It is an imagined view of the Louvre's grand gallery, with many famous works, including the "Mona Lisa," clustered on one wall.

His miniature scenes helped to form our imagined view of rural history, and today, while Bewick's name has faded, we probably all know his work, stumbling across it unacknowledged in everything from poetry anthologies to jam pot labels.

These emerging displays of angles and loops contribute to the imagined view that she crafted these angle pathways on purpose to show us twoness.

If Trump were true to his business school training, he would know that "Making America Great Again" is a slogan, not serious plan, and that his half-baked proposals would only aggravate existing problems rather than achieve some imagined view of "greatness".

Similar(55)

They depicted suburban villas and Egyptian ruins that they had actually seen, and imagined views of polar ice floes and the devastation of an earthquake in Lisbon.

When individuals view a visual scene and are then asked to imagine it in the absence of the stimulus, as many as 90% of the voxels that are active during online perception are also activated during imagined viewing of the scene (Ganis, Thompson, & Kosslyn, 2004; Kosslyn, Thompson, & Alpert, 1997).

A listing from 1970 includes shows titled The Story of Eclipses, which looked at how solar eclipses occur and their scientific importance, Man and the Zodiac which explored the history of mythology and astrology with regard to the night sky, and The Planet Venus which surveyed the history of the planet in mythology, the planet's motion across the sky and featured imagined views from its surface.

By W. S. Merwin The New Yorker, May 23 , 1988P. 28 This is the way we were all brought up now we imagine View Article W. S. Merwin's poetry first appeared in The New Yorker in 1955, and the magazine has since published close to two hundred of his poems and short stories.

Warzel tells me he was imagining view counts would be "anonymized", without names.

Some people might find televised sports such as snooker painfully slow to watch, but imagine viewing five hours of non-stop knitting.

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