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pensiveness การใช้

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  • The pensiveness isn't caused by his current, and rare, turn in the rumor mill.
  • It's a sweet, charming city, but there's a sort of pensiveness, too ."
  • He composes himself for the photographer, a study in pensiveness, but it's the calm before the storm.
  • Though ponder is big _ evidently pensiveness is coming on strong in the news _ the word of the year is mull.
  • Throughout the evening, thousands of people poured into Times Square, where the crowd alternated between somber pensiveness and jubilant expectation.
  • Criticisms include its lack of " pride " as an emotion, despite listing mild emotions such as distraction, pensiveness, and boredom.
  • The haunted pensiveness is gone, blown away with the watershed victory at the Memorial Tournament in June, his first triumph in nine years.
  • Repeatedly, brashness alternates with pensiveness in this moving work, earlier called " Symphonic Fragments " and " Essay Toward a Requiem ."
  • "As far as meeting people now, it's different, it's an adjustment, " he says with Dawson-esque pensiveness.
  • The piece was among Strauss's last great waltzes and it brims with youthful vigour yet with hints of pensiveness and poignant moments as was common among his last works.
  • The casting worked wonderfully : The Bolger sisters mix playfulness and pensiveness, and give the best child-actor performances since Haley Joel Osment in " The Sixth Sense ."
  • With our pens we had wished each other the good cheer of a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year, and that scarcely discharged the pensiveness of our unrelief of bank work.
  • Then night drops its curtain Making certain your loneliness And fills a longing cloud [ also : " and drops a shroud of gloom "-better ! ] That leaves you in your lonely pensiveness.
  • The other thing one notices about this scene is the sudden changes in tone and the predictable occurances ( their getting caught, for instance ) that come with unexpected twists ( the sudden pensiveness of Danny's father ).
  • He said Dole was " rated high on neuroticism, moody, pensiveness, prone to be downhearted and sad, and also rated low on agreeableness, extroversion and openness to experience " _ all of which gave Clinton the nod.
  • Overall, Gheeraerts'portraiture in the Jacobean era is characterized by the " quietness, pensiveness, and gentle charm of mood " seen in his portraits of Catherine Killigrew, Lady Jermyn ( 1614 ) and Mary Throckmorton, Lady Scudamore ( 1615 ).
  • He got gentleness ( in a photograph of his father reading ); eccentricity ( in a photograph of his brother, Skeffington Hume Dodgson, dressed in fishing gear and looking as if he's expecting to get wet ); domestic tranquillity ( in a photograph of two women named Alice Donkin ), and youthful pensiveness ( in a photograph of Robert Bickersteth leaning on a column ).
  • He authored a song dedicated to the Soviet Pacific Fleet, " Above the Bleak Kuriles Range " ( " 04 A5 @  > 9 C @ 8; LA :  > 9 3 @ O4 > N " ) ( lyrics by Nikolai Bukin ), a work which combined elements of heroic devotion to the Motherland with pensiveness and longing for the far-away family and its comforts.
  • Kevin Jackson, ( 1996 ) singled out Chodzko from the other YBA s for his art s " " pensiveness " ", involving " " quiet acts of infiltration " . . . " nothing to do with one-line shock effects . " " In 2013, Dan Fox, reappraising the diversity of British Art of the early 1990s, writes of Chodzko's work from this period as developing a " " British occult modern . . . behavioural experiments to probe the public sphere . " ", whilst Jonathan Jones ( journalist ) described Chodzko as a " " subversive . . . master of provocation " " in The Guardian.
  • In Buckley's " The Dawnings of Distinguished Men " ( Routledge, 1853 ), the author acknowledged " I am again a grateful debtor to the kindness of my friend Kenneth R . H . Mackenzie, Esq ., whose Memoir of Thomas Chatterton forms one of its most interesting chapters . " ( " As his taste differed from that of children of his age, his dispositions were also different, " Mackenzie, 19, wrote of the dreamy 18th century romantic poet and document forger who had committed suicide in London at the age of 18 . " Instead of the thoughtless levity of childhood he possessed the gravity, pensiveness, and melancholy of mature life . . . . some dark, doubtful ideas of the great Life had presented themselves, and his spirit was grappling with them in hard strife . ")