poignantly in Germany

poignantly [pɔinjəntliː] scharf, scharfe

Sentence patterns related to "poignantly"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "poignantly" from the English - Germany Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "poignantly", or refer to the context using the word "poignantly" in the English - Germany Dictionary.

1. Lewis, the striving, pragmatic Christian writer, poignantly framed the issue.

2. The parting between the two great composers was poignantly prescient.

3. Naomi's mothering experiences are poignantly described in her fiction.

4. 5 Naomi's mothering experiences are poignantly described in her fiction.

5. Never before had its teachings been so scientifically and poignantly questioned.

6. His story is told poignantly in the film, A Beautiful Mind, now showing here.

7. In fact, one reference work poignantly describes adolescence as “one long goodbye.”

8. Jewish life is poignantly described in Wiesel's journal, "The Jews of Silence".

9. His piano had a single red rose poignantly lying across the keyboard.

10. A 12-year-old girl poignantly notes in her diary, "only Tanya is left".

11. Misspell forepoled an fixture's mudras, a anodizes blinks Antipestilently yourselves Serapis expiation where executes poignantly

12. Poignantly, the second returned with photographs of a mining helmet, its light still glowing.

13. It might be delicately written in curlicue letters on a flower covered card or poignantly stated in the modern manner.

14. Arm amputation is usually caused by trauma, with things like industrial accidents, motor vehicle collisions or, very poignantly, war.

15. Most poignantly of all, material possessions cannot be magically acquired, and stigma of poverty cannot be covered up through magical means.

16. "The artifice of manufactured cheer (a requirement for soldiers in battle) made the wards even more poignantly desolate, " Mukherjee writes.

17. He adds, poignantly, "I knew the marine life would be more abundant, but I couldn't imagine it would be so spectacular".

18. To die is poignantly bitter, but the idea of having to die without having lived is unbearable. Erich Fromm 

19. Fitzgerald's characteristic theme, expressed poignantly in The Great Gatsby, is the tendency of youth's golden dreams to dissolve in failure and disappointment.

20. Aside from Edward Hopper and his use of light in Accentuating loneliness, I know of no one else who has so poignantly captured that feeling as

21. Most poignantly, just three weeks before she died of an overdose at the age of she says she felt that 'life begins at 40'.

22. On Indian television, the veteran U.S. diplomat Frank Wisner poignantly noted that the United States has to delicately negotiate "ambiguity" in its relationship with Pakistan.

23. It was perhaps never more poignantly played out than during the two greatest maritime disasters in history: the sinking of the Titanic and the Lusitania.

24. Poignantly, after so many others ignored the bleeding girl, the woman who finally helped her was a poor migrant who had been collecting trash on the street.

25. The great Tunisian poet Abul-Qasim Al Shabi has captured poignantly the spirit of Egypt’s saga: “If one day the people want life, then fate will arise...night fade away, chains broken...”

Der große tunesische Dichter Abu al-Qasim asch-Schabbi hat den Geist der ägyptischen Saga treffend eingefangen: „Wenn die Menschen eines Tages das Leben wollen, dann wird das Schicksal sich erheben ... die Nacht schwinden, Ketten gerissen ...“

26. I learned that he'd worked on a farm, played in a band with the scouts and had always enjoyed a hearty breakfast, but all his replies were poignantly humble.

27. Rather poignantly for someone born into celebrity and making a career in fashion, McCartney is quite unusually unphotogenic; she's far more attractive in the flesh than she ever looks in pictures.

28. This last observation seems so heartfelt, so poignantly rendered, that one can only advise Mr de Botton himself to cease his solitary endeavours and take the plunge into the pleasures of office life.

29. This big-bang finish — which includes a topsy-turvy image that poignantly suggests the world has been turned on its axis for good — is sloppy, at times visually incoherent, yet touching.

30. Contemptus mundi (contempt for the world) is an expression that captures rather poignantly the complex of attitudes, behaviors and rhetorics associated with groups that were part of many different cultures of Greco-Roman antiquity and beyond

31. Exit A term for listening to sounds within the body as a method of diagnosis is a poignantly perfect moniker for Portland producer Joel Shanahan’s most elusive and emotive electronic aura-reading solo alias: Auscultation.

32. The great Tunisian poet Abul-Qasim Al Shabi has captured poignantly the spirit of Egypt’s saga: “If one day the people want life, then fate will arise...night fade away, chains broken...” That, in essence, is what the young in Egypt have done.

Der große tunesische Dichter Abu al-Qasim asch-Schabbi hat den Geist der ägyptischen Saga treffend eingefangen: „Wenn die Menschen eines Tages das Leben wollen, dann wird das Schicksal sich erheben ... die Nacht schwinden, Ketten gerissen ...“ Das ist im Wesentlichen, was die Jugend in Ägypten getan hat.