Sentence examples for the third panoply from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

"Is this the end?" my dad asked the executive chef, Michael Rotondo, as the third panoply of desserts — criollo cake with merlot jelly and candied vanilla; guava and caramelized white chocolate with pink peppercorn meringue — landed in front of him.

Similar(59)

In Coleridge he sees "the first fully modern panoply of an offender's compulsions, rationalizations and excuses...

Drawing examples from the Schering Plough Research Institute in the latter half of the twentieth century, a panoply of techniques and a host of scientists are presented addressing the challenges of creating chemical compounds to combat disease.

In the first panel, a panoply of shimmering greens, the eye teases out the freely drawn fleur-de-lis; in another panel, it glows prominently in a hearty pink-rose touched by white against a background of celestial blue.

Meanwhile, people of Mexican descent, nearly invisible in the panoply of Latino groups just 10 years ago, have become the third biggest single group of Hispanic New Yorkers, after Puerto Ricans and those of Dominican ancestry.

"LifeAfter," the second scripted series from Panoply and GE Podcast Theater, is a sci-fi piece that plays with ideas of life, death and artificial intelligence.

Whatever the answer to that question, Marvel was taking no chances with the third Captain America film, packaging the patriotically attired shield slinger with a panoply of other Avengers characters, notably top franchise performer Iron Man.

The first part is a propulsive panoply of planning, like a compressed Day of the Jackal, but spread out among a number of young Parisians.

The Fourth Infantry Division has the usual panoply of artillery, aviation and antiaircraft units that are needed in war but have little role in peacekeeping and security duties.

He was the first person to import the full panoply of British Eurosceptics' talking points to Ireland, with their core message that hard-to-read EU texts like Lisbon are a plot to transfer sovereignty from national governments to unelected Eurocrats.

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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