Sentence examples for pose familiar from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

None the less, the young man adopts the expression and pose familiar to him from his experience of patronising respectable studios on the high street.

Eisenman likes rhyming contemporary subjects with motifs from the past, including, as she told Gioni of a number of pictures, a timeless gesture of "shoulders curled in and our eyes reverently looking down"; it's a pose familiar from classic paintings of religious piety, reënacted whenever we check our phones.

Similar(56)

As the film goes on to explore his extreme case of survivor's guilt after the war, it poses familiar questions about who is sane in an insane world and assumes that simply reiterating those questions will suffice.

Despite Mr. Goldblum's "tour-de-force performance," Stephen Holden wrote in The New York Times last year, the film "poses familiar questions about who is sane in an insane world and assumes that simply reiterating those questions will suffice".

And we pose the familiar questions: is Mr. Putin a reformer or a hard-liner?

She went on to pose the familiar question: "Is a badger more important than a cow?" (Cattle are, of course, culled in large numbers as part of the present TB controls).

Toshifumi Fujimoto's vacation pictures, posted on his Facebook page, show him in poses familiar to any tourist.

Fossils of troodontids with their skeleton arranged such that the hindlimbs are flexed beneath the belly, the neck is turned backwards, and the head is tucked between the wing and the body have documented that at least some of the maniraptoran precursors of birds had already evolved stereotypical resting poses familiar to many birds (Xu and Norell 2004).

Monitoring mechanisms which focus on fiscal controls simply did not detect the politicisation of aid.Such a situation poses a familiar dilemma for donors: aid is often misused, but stopping aid harms people in recipient countries.

It's all very impressive, and often quite exhausting, but "Roots, Rhymes and Rage," which closes on Dec. 31, poses a familiar question: What is this stuff doing in a museum?

WEEK IN REVIEW, PAGE 12 THE PUBLIC EDITOR The recent terror attacks in Mumbai posed a familiar semantic issue for Times editors: what to call people who pursue political, religious or unidentifiable goals through violence on civilians.

Show more...

Ludwig, your English writing platform

Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.

Student

Used by millions of students, scientific researchers, professional translators and editors from all over the world!

MitStanfordHarvardAustralian Nationa UniversityNanyangOxford

Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak quote

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak

CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com

Get started for free

Unlock your writing potential with Ludwig

Letters

Most frequent sentences: