Sentence examples for sinister resemblance from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

First, Trump may indeed be a little fascistic, but that sinister resemblance is just one part of his reality-television meets WWE-heel-turn campaign style.

And Dr. Kilbourne remained convinced that the mass vaccinations were the right policy, pointing out that the virus that killed the soldier bore a sinister resemblance to the pandemic of 1918-19, whinfectedctwo billionlion people around the world and killed 20 million to 40 million.

It all powers up a little more in the Arsenale, which opens fittingly with an arsenal of weapons – chainsaws, cannons, fierce blades gathered into sheaves and titled Nymphéas by the Algerian artist Adel Abdemessed for their startlingly sinister resemblance to waterlilies.

But they left a chilling scar on their victim, whom they knew was of Eastern European Jewish ancestry: a six-digit number carved into his forearm, bearing a sinister resemblance to the tattoos printed on prisoners in Nazi concentration camps.

Similar(56)

As my wife of 52 years, a wise observer of character during our Moscow days, later reminded me, Mr. Putin, having manipulated his way into power, bears a chilling resemblance to a sinister figure of czarist days: Rasputin.

At the center of all this is the sinister Lemond Bishop, a character who bears a resemblance to "The Wire" 's Stringer Bell: he's a drug dealer with a public life as a respectable businessman.

He bears little resemblance to the heavier, more sinister Logan, running his hand often through wavy, curly hair and a gray-speckled goatee.

Instead of being reassured, too close a resemblance to a human form was seen as sinister.

And, on a more sinister note, several armies and military-equipment firms are working on high-energy laser weapons that bear a striking resemblance to phasers.

Take a look at the character's biography and there are definitely some resemblances to a certain other antagonist he's played (emphasis mine): 'Born Nathaniel Essex in Victorian London, Sinister became a biologist in 1859…[he] believed his peers were shackled by too many moral constraints and that their research should be beyond morality.

Sinister menace?

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