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figure loom การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • New Zealand figures loom large in Akhtar's checkered history.
  • Inside, giant carved figures loom over the registration area.
  • Sins of the father figure loom large in Daisuke Tengan's screenplay, which is based on a story by Ryu Murakami.
  • These are things produced with homemade canvas, figure loom rugs, earthenware and carpenter goods, wickerwork of straw, osier, and bast.
  • Stunning full-page illustrations feature dazzling jewel tones and fantastic proportions, in which important figures loom large no matter where they tall on the page.
  • Stunning full-page illustrations feature dazzling jewel tones and fantastic proportions, in which important figures loom large no matter where they fall on the page.
  • In the image, two elderly figures loom forward from a black background; although they are assumed to be men, their gender is not readily apparent.
  • There is a respect for the flatness of the picture plane, where the figures loom in dignity and where animation resides in structural and textural relationships as much as in ostensible movements.
  • So leaving aside the question of whether any Shaw-like figure looms, larger than life, in the wings, would there even be a place in this altered landscape for such a figure?
  • In any debate about American policy toward Cuba, few figures loom larger than Jorge Mas Canosa, considered by many in both countries to be a principal architect of the hostile, uncompromising approach toward Fidel Castro that guided Washington until the Clinton administration announced Tuesday that it had reached an agreement with Havana on immigration.
  • Another nugget of dance is for a chorus of oversize beer cans rollicking to James Brown singing " I Got You ( I Feel Good ) . " ( The collage also includes reggae, anthems and music by Dead Can Dance and Arvo Paert . ) Babe Ruth and other historical figures loom over the proceedings, vivid shadows that come and go.
  • Langdon Hammer, chairman of the English Department at Yale University, wrote in 2008, " No figure looms so large in American poetry over the past 50 years as John Ashbery " and " No American poet has had a larger, more diverse vocabulary, not Pound . " Stephen Burt, a poet and Harvard professor of English, has compared Ashbery to T . S . Eliot, calling Ashbery " the last figure whom half the English-language poets alive thought a great model, and the other half thought incomprehensible ".