Get Free Checker

adumbrative

ADJECTIVE
  1. indistinctly prophetic

How To Use adumbrative In A Sentence

  • Pasolini clearly did not intend Salò as a late work, much as Mozart did not design his requiem as adumbrative lament.
  • suggestive and adumbrative manner" -- not, indeed, he acknowledges, a romantic manner, and yet "quite distinct from the classical"; i.e., because of the transcendental character of a portion of his poetry. A History of English Romanticism in the Nineteenth Century
  • And, adumbrative also video website will enter the range of mainstream media.
  • The adumbrative quality of the work's first third is mauled and mangled by the third.
  • We claim to stand there, as mute monuments, pathetically adumbrative of much. The French Revolution
  • Whilst the Evolution title may lack certain aesthetic properties, in relation to insignificant details such as stadium names and uniform branding, it more than makes up for this with an adumbrative and delineative appearance that focuses on the movement and athletic mannerisms of its pixelated contestants, rather than sacrificing gameplay gratification in order to look more appealing to a footer-sim novice (dare I suggest, one like yourself?) Pocket-lint
  • In 1982, she became a medical adumbrative to Ethicla Ltd for a year, afore spending a year in Zambia as the arch of a affiliation school, area her bedmate ran a chestnut mine. 1 Labour of Love
  • For him language is musical, felicitous, comical, flippant, suggestive, buoyant weaponry and adumbrative of mysteries beyond us.
  • Are they in " 4 nucleuses " adumbrative what does the market declare their views again and again?
  • Like the somber Hawthorne's, his style is brooding, adumbrative, rather than incisive or brilliant, and it often limps among the facts of his story like a man in pain. Definitions: Essays in Contemporary Criticism
View all