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hellishness การใช้

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  • And " Andersonville " glories in that hellishness.
  • Yet the hellishness of the day comes through even in these unembellished accounts.
  • It's not necessary to see her as a pure victim to appreciate the hellishness of her ordeal.
  • The desperate-ambition-gone-awry stuff doesn't work nearly as well as the dysfunctional family hellishness.
  • One young aide was in tears last week as she described the hellishness of the past seven months for those who believed in Clinton.
  • Stroman's choreography, too, creates elegant, concentric patterns on the dance floor, while at times capturing the pure hellishness of the dancers'ordeal in grueling sprints.
  • It delivers the big-bang hellishness of Dec . 7, 1941, when Japan's sneak attack on the Pacific Fleet's naval base left America shocked and reeling.
  • Ian Bell, in " The Herald ", noted the denseness of the material and the hellishness of the twentieth century outlined by Bessel, but also that the work was thoughtful rather than being a polemic against violence.
  • Luckily for Marie ( Sandrine Bonnaire ), the old woman charged by the state with minding everybody's business speaks some French, but this is a small mercy in a situation whose hellishness is amplified by the impossibility of escape.
  • And it certainly doesn't hurt that Homme, who sounds a bit like former Soundgarden and current Audioslave singer Chris Cornell, has a big, soulful voice, while Oliveri's vocals explode with a sweet, jagged hellishness.
  • The hellishness that is everywhere in Prix's life might feel hyperbolic if Cortrhon didn't have a great ear for inner-city vernacular, if McClinton had not avoided a heightened frenzy and paced even the most furious scenes with a sense of everyday rhythm, and if the actors were not so credible in their war-zone mentality.
  • In " The South China Morning Post ", Annabel Walker decided that the book was " [ h ] onest, moving and reflective " and that " at its heart is intense grief . " Gambotto-Burke " presents the hard facts, showing that during the past 45 years suicide rates worldwide have increased by 60 per cent . . . [ a ] comfortingly honest account of the hellishness and black humour such events can bring . . . Throughout the book, Gambotto asks : Does any man have the right to dispose of his own life?