Sentence examples for transatlantic generation from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

His father epitomised the transatlantic generation.

Similar(58)

A British native, Adès is one of the leading transatlantic composers of his generation; the Met presented his first grand opera, "The Tempest," in 2012.

This, I think, hints a little at pleasure in being represented by Andrew "the Jackal" Wylie, the pre-eminent transatlantic agent of his generation, and a lot at habituation to having well-appointed institutional rooms at his disposal.

The producers of the latest generation of transatlantic dramas have looked to counter this phenomenon investing in the cost of production – so-called deficit financing – to fill the gap between what the show will cost to make and what the broadcaster is prepared to pay and retaining the sort of editorial control which Moffat lacked.

When the conversation switches to English, his command of the language is immaculate but his accent has none of the transatlantic twang of the younger generation of French executives.The question of cultural identity is of more than personal interest.

The billionaire Virgin Group founder said his Spaceship company would help Denver-based startup Boom build a new generation of supersonic jets and reintroduce transatlantic flight times unseen since Concorde was scrapped.

Just as building democracy in new places is a work of a generation or more, so the tensions in transatlantic relations will not disappear overnight.

Later generations of Americans were more cosmopolitan, thanks in part to faster transatlantic crossings by steamships and better communication because of the invention of the electric telegraph — an idea that first came to Samuel Morse in Paris, though he had to go home to the business-minded United States to actually put it into operation in 1844.

Maybe a new generation of women performers will have a sideline in "doing" Maggie in numberless transatlantic TV co-productions the way males of a certain age "do" Winston Churchill.

UN panel explores the legacy of the slave trade on the 200th anniversary of abolition NEW YORK, New York, 27 March 2007 – Communities torn apart, millions of lives lost and bonded, and generations of Africans stripped of their native heritage – this is the legacy of the transatlantic slave trade, which accounted for one of the longest and widest-ranging human tragedies in history.

By Anwulika Okafor NEW YORK, New York, 27 March 2007 – Communities torn apart, millions of lives lost and bonded, and generations of Africans stripped of their native heritage – this is the legacy of the transatlantic slave trade, which accounted for one of the longest and widest-ranging human tragedies in history.

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