Sentence examples for rendered in print from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

"Harry Potter fans have been more than happy to buy magic that is rendered in print," Mr. Karyo said.

ON many a dull day in the mid-1970s uncounted youths (yes, this one included) would run in slow motion, pretend to bend steel bars with their bare fists and, squinting toward the horizon, emit a noise that might be rendered in print as a soft, staccato beh-beh-beh-beh-beh-beh-beh-beh-beh-beh-beh-beh-beh-beh-beh-beh.

No matter how lovingly a fictional character is rendered in print, he or she is still just a figment of the literary imagination, with a face readers can only imagine.

The 'r'-dropping of New York can be heard in a New Yorker accent saying 'New York,' which has often been rendered in print as 'New Yawk.' The common joke phrase for the Boston accent is 'Ya cahn't pahk ya cah in Hahvad Yahd'YouYou can't park your car in Harvard yard').

Similar(56)

This last innovation may have been designed to delight anthologizers and frustrate them, too, because it makes hip-hop hard to render in print.

Downey, 38, is a warm presence, and the extraordinary charm of his conversation, full of quicksilver feints away from ego, is almost impossible to render in print.

In another nearby space called Wolfbat Studio, Dennis McNett sat surrounded by images from a mythical work he rendered in woodcut prints, liberally deploying motifs he conjures up from Nordic folk tales, skate culture and what looked like the world of biker tattoos.

These marks had been made with a range of pens and saliva by the artist's elderly Hungarian grandmother, in an intimate photographic exchange magically rendered in a large print.

In Mirsaal, the calligraphic Arabic alphabet is rendered in a detached-print type that reads more similarly to the Latin print alphabet, reviving twentieth-century attempts to create an Arabic more legible to Westerners.

Effortlessly composed, rendered in small, exquisite prints, the images both document and romanticize a harsh life lived close to nature with a memorably strange and lyric realism.

Common tropes of the 1930s-born Jartisticandistic and literary movement include erotic asphyxiation (based on a real-life case at the time), a samurai slicing up a bondaged girl, snakes with human heads, or a contortionist sucking out the eyes of a young boy, rendered in traditional woodblock printing technique.

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