Sentence examples for panache into from inspiring English sources

Exact(6)

From a narrow angle, he passed the ball with panache into the far corner.

Yet, as this revelatory show proves, he continued to evolve as a painter and to produce giant-scale canvases with terrific panache into the late 1990s.

I'm sure it was accurate – the Victorian penchant for varnished shades of soup has turned the Regency decorative panache into a permanent surprise – but it didn't convince and the general impact was like an expensive "Coaching Days" Christmas card.

But Sipsmith is just one of an array of start-ups injecting spirit and panache into Britain's often bland distilling industry, with its ubiquitous brands and obsession with bulk sales.Once upon a time, micro-distilling was as common in Britain as fog or mud.

But while it packs a lot of theatrical panache into its 75-minute running time (the production includes a 15-minute "sound walk," in which patrons listen to a monologue that touches on the play's themes), "The Golden Dragon" doesn't leave you with much to contemplate.

There's a five-packs-per-person limit in force, which people find imaginative ways to break, either through taping packets to their body under their clothes (one branch of Morrisons at the border even has a changing room on site), driving them across in secret compartments in their cars or if they enjoy injecting a bit of panache into their smuggling by jet ski.

Similar(53)

Ravi Bopara, an exasperating batsman because it is so hard to predict which Bopara will turn up, on Monday batted with impressive panache late into the Hampshire night.

In many ways it is a rolling testament of G.M.'s shortsightedness: a pinch of pizazz, a dash of panache, all mixed into a package of unmet promise.

The word "panache" was adopted into English only after the phenomenal success of the French playwright Edmond Rostand's 1897 "heroic comedy" "Cyrano de Bergerac," whose flamboyant, big-nosed hero took revenge on his ugliness by making a legend of his physical and intellectual prowess.

In this period, too, Kidron threw himself into (unpaid) political organising, campaigning and lecturing, acting with charm and panache in a movement often noted for its solemnity and dourness.

Hugh Carleton Greene breezed in from journalism and, with panache, ushered the BBC into the exhilarating liberation and merry-go-round of the 60s.

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