allusively การใช้
- I sometimes write allusively; I am accustomed to writing for an educated audience.
- Later I felt as though Poe was watching me allusively from his photograph on his headstone .
- They were named allusively by the United Kingdom Antarctic Place-Names Committee ( UK-APC ) in 1987.
- :A little googling shows that this expression has gotten to be used very vaguely and ( to be charitable ) allusively.
- Plainly, " Blood Simple " is the nightmare that films noir like " Detour " were always allusively damming off.
- The term is also used allusively for any person who intervenes with advice and instructions in affairs they are not responsible for, or subjects they may not understand well.
- The entry for " Mintie " in a major Australian dictionary defines the phrase as " . . . widely current . . . used allusively as an emblem of solace ".
- "The Americans " sealed his reputation and influence for three reasons : It is a subtly, poetically, allusively sequenced work that adds up to much more than its parts.
- Writing for the radio, he has indicated a new power for poetry in the use of the word in action, without props or settings, the allusively spoken word and the " word-excited imagination ."
- In these and other works, Gonzalez-Torres allusively explores themes-- Minimalism, AIDS, the metaphoric possibilities of light-- that Bleckner explores as well, though in a mode as understated as Bleckner's is not.
- The phrase " Box and Cox " has entered the English language : the Oxford English Dictionary defines it as " applied allusively to an arrangement in which two persons take turns in sustaining a part, occupying a position, or the like ."
- He was using parliamentary in a sense now obsolete, to be found in the Oxford English Dictionary, of " such as is permitted to be used in Parliament; hence allusively, admissible in polite conversation or discussion; civil, courteous ."
- But " Find Your Roots / Explain My Roots " seems to include the basic elements of his work over the last 25 years : it is comically symbolic, allusively self-involved, plaintively adolescent, obsessed with time, date, land, frame and point of view.
- And when he sings, earnestly crooning like Mel Torme when he begins a verse, then caustically ( and a little comically ) muttering like Lou Reed to end it, he does so through a filter that distorts his voice electronically, allusively _ it's the voice pleading through the intercom from the apartment vestibule, the voice leaving a message on the cell at 4 a . m . It's the voice of New York, or anyway youngish New York, at its most intimate.