Sentence examples for often evinced from inspiring English sources

Exact(5)

The novelist Jonathan Lethem, a friend, called Mr. Bowman "a writer of voice" whose work often evinced "a mordantly urgent investigation into the collapse of some piece of the American dream".

Anyway, if this callow dude, who so often evinced a devil-may-care attitude toward results, could succumb to the queasy dread of the starting gate, one can only imagine the forces roiling Shiffrin.

Within a few short years, the English elite had been almost entirely replaced by cronies of the new Norman king, and England found itself ruled by a foreign aristocracy who often evinced contempt for Anglo-Saxon culture.

Both believed that, as Silone said, "the last battle" would be between Communists and former Communists, like themselves, and such men too often evinced in their anti-Bolshevik guise the dogmatism or even fanaticism that had made them Bolsheviks in the first place.

Though he regarded his mother as something of a naïve romantic, and often evinced a "low-level anger about her frequent absences," she always remained, in Mr. Maraniss's view, "the conscience of his inner life": he would never shed the conviction, nourished by her, that he couldn't "sit around like some good-time Charlie," that he was expected to do good.

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Before Mr. Simon went Hollywood, creating the endlessly exalted "Wire" and the current HBO series "Treme," he was a longtime crime reporter for The Baltimore Sun, and he often evinces that breed's hard-bitten outlook and allergy to cheap sentimentality.

Their selections often evince a gratifying affinity for color, form, beauty and pleasure, and a lack of interest in finger-wagging didacticism.

But the stories themselves often evince a conservative viewpoint: women suffer passively, the victims of their emotions and their physiology; true love prevails.

The Coens in turn have made their careers with impeccable technique and an exaggerated visual style — they sure love their low-angle shots and traveling cameras — but it's a wonder they keep making films about a subject for which they often evince so little regard, namely other people.

The writers often evince an appreciation for liberal ideals, but the show makes jokes across the political spectrum.

Whereas apoptosis is manifested by volume reduction of the nucleus and cytoplasm (cell shrinkage), necrosis (the mode of cell death with which apoptosis is most often confused) is evinced by cytoplasmic swelling, rupture of the plasma membrane, swelling of cytoplasmic organelles (particularly mitochondria), and some condensation of nuclear chromatin (Galluzzi et al. 2007).

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