Sentence examples for ingenious thought from inspiring English sources

Exact(5)

It turns to account the ingenious thought of tracing back all relations concerning bodies and their relative positions to the very simple concept "distance" (Strecke).

The first was that carrying the disclaimer would violate ABC's First Amendment right to freedom of speech and expression an ingenious thought but one that seemed Pythonesque at best and Orwellian at worst.

Meanwhile, conspiracy theorists came up with the ingenious thought that Richard Branson may have launched his challenge to the Labour leader so that Virgin would dominate the news cycle on a day when his rival British Airways was pulling off a PR coup by flying Team GB back to London from Rio.

An ever-evolving sculpture structurally directed by auditory frequencies, this demonstration derives directly from the ingenious thought of Swiss medical doctor Hans Jenny, father of cymatics the study of visible sound and vibration.

Ingenious thought it is, no genies appear in Emily Hall's tiny and effective Found and Lost, subtitled "an opera installation", conceived with David Sheppard and based on poems by Matthew Welton written using texts found within Corinthia hotel, London.

Similar(54)

These shortcomings make the end of the book less rewarding than the ingenious and thought-provoking 400 pages that precede it.

(very ingenious I thought).

The technical exegesis seems sometimes dated or misguided, but mostly thought-provoking and ingenious, especially when it challenged the Eurocentric truisms of his time.

In the history of English spelling, though, we can trace a whole series of purposive, thought-through and often ingenious practical decisions – made over the years by scribes, compositors and lexicographers – whose net result is a complete flaming boggins.

It has supplied the Persian poets with a flexible vehicle for ingenious aphorisms and similarly concise expressions of thought for religious, erotic, or skeptical purposes.

In an extended anticlimax, Gayford hazards ingenious speculations about van Gogh's febrile thought process (why an ear?) and proposes, for what it's worth, a likely clinical diagnosis: bipolar affective disorder.

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