Sentence examples for multifarious many from inspiring English sources

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"Boston Black," the brainchild of Joanne Jones-Rizzi, the museum's director of community programs and partnerships, playfully presents the idea that blackness is multifarious: many voices, many faces, many hairdos.

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Introducing one number that night, Plant describes his band as "a multifarious, many-headed and beautiful beast!" "We love you Robert!" shouts a lady from the darkness.

Her sculptural, varied and bizarre outfits feed into the collective psyche of multifarious alter egos allowing many to believe that they have some hand in her creation -- that they are the authors.

Fiction's multifarious nature is why so many people have attributed so many effects to imaginative literature, some of them contradictory: catharsis (Aristotle); dangerous corruption of the spirit (Plato); feverish loosening of morals (Rousseau); redemptive escape from personality (Eliot); empowering creation beyond the boundaries of morality (Joyce).

In an address to the Engineering Section of the Royal Society of New South Wales in 1900, Selfe recalled his work for Russell's: While there [I] prepared plans for numbers of flour mills, and for the first ice-making machines, designing machinery for the multifarious requirements of colonial industries, many of which (such as sheep-washing and boiling down) no longer exist on the old lines.

It's a film that tells us about French youth today: diverse, multifarious, and tormented by life's many tricks and dilemma".

Over the past several years this section of Brooklyn has morphed into a multifarious neighborhood now dense with as many Wi-Fi cafes and organic mini-marts as there are bodegas and barbershops.

While yielding important knowledge claims about globalization, traditional approaches to the study of globalization often fail to capture many facets involved within its multifarious and complex processes: that whatever globalization is, it is not something that is easily definable or reasonably encapsulated by a single trend (or bundle of trends) associated with global interconnection.

Maybe the most resonant of le Carré's many formulation of his hero's multifarious self is this: "Ted Mundy, life's eternal apprentice".

Of course there are multifarious examples: Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism and many others.

This app-as-life analogy applies to many of us who embrace a multifarious lifestyle.

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