Sentence examples for own characterised from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

Admirers have grown over the past four years, especially of the game plan that Australia has made its own, characterised by ever speedier scoring rates, through 2001 (3.8 per over), 2002 (4) and 2003 (4.1), and the prosecution of results, so successful that Waugh has led Australia in only six drawn Tests.

As his skills matured, he developed a style uniquely his own, characterised by his individual orchestration and his uses of chromatic harmony.

Similar(58)

Devereux, for his own part, characterises his style thus: "Speak softly and carry a big stick".

Winton's own background was characterised by a working class sensibility and evangelical religion.

In others words (if I understand this right), it was a way of referring to its own campaign as characterised by its opponents – "a joke phrase", as Shorthouse told the Herald, "that was all about poking fun at the Nats and their constant dismissal of every legitimate point raised by anyone and everyone as scaremongering".

Kierkegaard's own time was characterised by an accelerated expansion of knowledge – particularly of historical knowledge, including the history of the bible and of Christian doctrine, which came more and more to be viewed as human phenomena that, despite claims to articulate eternal truths, evolved through time just like other ideas, customs and institutions.

This probability determined the proportion of children in the cohort that cycled through the model according to the transition probabilities for patients receiving appropriate treatment, while the remainder of the cohort is assumed to receive inadequate or no treatment, with their own transition probabilities (characterised by worse health outcomes).

Lucian Freud characterised his own early work as the result of "maximum observation by staring at my subject matter".

Even our Aggy plumped for out-of-character Hollywood glamour, forgoing the Vivienne Westwood punk ethos that has characterised her own star quality.

By the time his machine is complete, we accept it as a metaphor for Horne's life, and for our own: pointless, beautiful and characterised by intricate interconnections.

Churches and monasteries were now not only wealthy in their own right, but also characterised by routines, with a whole panoply of institutional garb (the sixth century saw the arrival of the tonsure and the habit).

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