Use "evocative" in a sentence

1. Avocative From the web: what does evocative mean; evocative define; what does the word evocative mean

2. It's very evocative.

3. That smell is evocative of school.

4. The graveyard at Satipur was especially evocative.

5. Many musical Ballads are slow and emotionally evocative

6. Evocative packaging makes the pens even more appealing!

7. Banksias are an evocative native Australian flowering plant; evocative because of the way they instantly conjure up the Australian bush

8. Those old toys are evocative of my boyhood.

9. Devising an evocative name is only the first hurdle.

10. "Cocooning, The Butterfly" is Book 1 of the coming "Circle B Ranch Series" 910 pages ebook pages of evocative emotion 5-STAR Reviews EVOCATIVE ~ IRREVERSIBLY CAPTIVATING! "An adrenalin pumping and evocative experience.

11. Her new book is wonderfully evocative of village life.

12. Her story is sharply evocative of Italian provincial life.

13. The Anthologist Collection includes evocative curios that celebrate cultural conservation

14. Her pictures remain richly evocative of natural forms and textures.

15. The taste of the cakes was evocative of my childhood.

16. Like the Pyro's other Polycount Pack items, the Attendant is evocative

17. Some representations of St James the Greater are evocative of Sucellus.

18. 17 Devising an evocative name is only the first hurdle.

19. Finding or remembering an evocative scent is a good first step.

20. Tuyman's drawings are strangely evocative of the paintings of Egon Schiele.

21. The Bush Stone-Curlew call is an evocative and unforgettable sound

22. It is woven into our souls and has an evocative quality.

23. The air was full of evocative smells of flowers and freshly cut grass.

24. 15 The successful copywriter is a master of apposite and evocative verbal images.

25. It was one of the last of his evocative flights of homespun philosophy.

26. Beautiful amethyst necklace in sterling silver. Absolutely stunningand evocative of a gothic princess.

27. An ageing leaf, suggested by random blobs upon a shape evocative of a leaf.

28. Evocative, yes, but don't think that today's Ireland is set in some quaint emerald aspic.

29. Synonyms for Anamnestic include remembering, recall, anamnesis, retrospection, rote, feuilleton, remembered, memorised, memorized and evocative

30. The lost Wolfprince - dear me, there's a very evocative ring to it, don't you think?

31. Our scenarios are incomplete, no more than works-in-progress, meant to be evocative, not exhaustive.

32. This artistic achievement, evocative of the contemporary Abenaki culture, will inspire and nourish the creative team of …

33. Arcady is an extremely well written fantasy, positively bursting with the most sumptuous, sensual and evocative language

34. And it doesn't really matter where you're from or what age you are -- it's really evocative.

35. Evocative, unique, and masterly crafted, Californium is a coming-of-age novel set in the 1980’s

36. Bobolinks were also particularly an familiar and evocative sight through the 1800s and into the past century

37. Calke Abbey is what it is – an evocative and at times poignant reminder of bygone and fading age

38. With a haunting original score by Randy Risling and evocative quotes, Airsick plays out like an unsettling dream.

39. Even small bowls can become evocative symbols of the East with a frangipani or two floated on the surface.

40. There are certain forms of display - such as toys and period interiors - which are particularly evocative of nostalgia.

41. A great selection of men's leather golf Belts, featuring buckles and conchos engraved with imagery evocative of the sport

42. In this book I shall use the awkward but evocative term hegemon to describe the asymmetry in the global system.

43. Using evocative images and music, Balletomane takes a surreal look at an interview between a ballerina and a dance journalist.

44. The Scout Bobber is essentially the same as the standard Scout, but gets a sexier, stripped down and evocative design

45. The new structures have rejoiced in wonderfully evocative names like the beehive, the bell, the doughnut and the bicycle wheel.

46. Creaks carry an evocative art style that blends the curious architecture of Tim Burton with hints of Edward Gorey’s unique illustrations

47. The term "Crosstalk" itself is evocative of the age of analog telephony, and of "talking across lines"

48. Benigno gave the performance a "B+", while Michael Slezak of TVLine gave it an "A−" and praised their "powerful, evocative voices".

49. “Anglomania” was one of the museum’s grandest exhibitions, positioning mannequins throughout the museum’s period rooms in vignettes evocative of theater or film.

50. He was clear about what he wanted, but gave the dancers evocative images to help them understand and deepen their interpretations.

51. The detector adopts pressure drop principium to measure micro-ohm. Electric circuit structure adopts four-circuit measuring method, eliminate connection evocative error.

52. The name is evocative of circadian rhythms, the difference being that circadian rhythms are based on scientific observation, while Biorhythms are pure pseudoscience.

53. Imagine wandering through a golden-lit citrus grove in southern Italy; perhaps that gives a sense of what makes Bergamot such an evocative scent.

54. Menus may be beautifully written, but don't let evocative descriptions of cattle breeds and root vegetables trick you into ordering a flavorless Irish stew.

55. Anthologist practices the art of storytelling by combining soulful design concepts, evocative environments, and the passionate sourcing of profound objects from antiques to folk art.

56. Steeped in Circus lore, filled with evocative scenes of magic and illusion, enriched by characters as varied as the clockmaker who crafted the Circus’s iconic timepiece

57. With its lively, informal décor evocative of turn-of-the-century France, Absinthe has romanced locals and visitors alike since its inception and

58. The Authentics is a deep exploration into the substance of style through evocative photography and stimulating interviews that seek to unravel the tenets of taste and talent

59. “Curlews are instantly recognisable on winter estuaries or summer moors by their striking long, curved beak, long legs and evocative call,” said RSPB’s Dr Daniel Hayhow.

60. Blasphemous is a punishing action-platformer that combines the fast-paced, skilled combat of a hack-n-slash game with a deep and evocative narrative core.

61. Amal is an emotionally evocative story about an auto-rickshaw driver in New Delhi (Amal) who is content with his small, but vital role in life

62. Being of striking appropriateness and pertinence Synonyms: apt, pertinent Examples - an apt reply - the successful copywriter is a master of Apposite and evocative verbal images; Description

63. Anyhoo's companions in the category of "informal and slang" are similarly evocative, from achy-breaky (adjective, informal: achingly sad) to angsty (adjective, informal: feeling, showing, or

64. Adj Apposite being of striking appropriateness and pertinence "the successful copywriter is a master of Apposite and evocative verbal images","an apt reply"

65. In accord with the Bible. evocative of or suggesting the Bible or Biblical times, especially in size or extent: disaster on a Biblical scale; a Biblical landscape.

66. Hildegard’s language, characterized by an original and effective style, makes ample use of poetic expressions and is rich in symbols, dazzling intuitions, incisive comparisons and evocative metaphors.

67. The Authentics is a deep exploration into the substance of style through evocative photography and stimulating interviews that seek to unravel the tenets of taste and talent

68. An excellent study of Bondwomen and a penetrating look at the rival geographies created by enslaved people."-- "Journal of Southern History" "Wonderfully evocative

69. Apposite - being of striking appropriateness and pertinence; "the successful copywriter is a master of Apposite and evocative verbal images"; "an apt reply" pertinent , apt apropos - …

70. The Curlew is the largest European wading bird, instantly recognisable on winter estuaries or summer moors by its long, downcurved bill, brown upperparts, long legs and evocative call

71. Work for today is to continue reading greygirlbeast's brilliant, evocative, nihilistic A is for Alien and thinking about what I want to say about her work on Acritical level.

72. "Backlands is a wonderful novel—epic and moving, electric and evocative—written in a voice so persuasive and precise that I can’t get it out of my head

73. Celia Forner whisks you through the bedrooms of queens and emperors, designers and decorators, today’s most exclusive hotels, and even the most evocative fictional Boudoirs from stage and screen.

74. The cathedral, of course, always adds powerfully to the atmospherics at work - whether wrapping an evocative halo around the divided-chorus Antiphony in Elizabeth Poston's "Jesus Christ the Apple …

75. Blighty was, by the summer of 1915, one of the most prominent—and certainly the most evocative—of the new lexical items which had come to be associated with the war

76. Aelbert Cuyp (1620 - 1691), one of the foremost landscape painters of the Dutch golden age, is particularly known for evocative representations of the Dutch countryside drenched in an atmospheric golden light

77. The first tarot deck inspired by the Byzantine Empire, this sumptuous and evocative package will appeal to all those with an interest in history, ancient kingdoms, iconography and history of art

78. It’s an evocative character study with a firm grasp on its subject matter that may be traced back to Robertson, an ex-Carny who also produced and co-wrote the story

79. An evocative and enjoyable account of life in Africa in the early 20th Century- Beryl was a female pioneer and aviator overcoming the odds to live a colourful and fascinating life.

80. The Bather is one of Cézanne 's most evocative paintings of the figure, although the unmuscled torso and arms have no heroic pretensions, and the drawing, in traditional, nineteenth-century terms,