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How To Use Declamatory In A Sentence

  • No less futile were it to waste declamatory tears upon the strife of absolutism with new-fledged democracy, or to vaticinate a reign of socialistic terror for the immediate future. Renaissance in Italy, Volumes 1 and 2 The Catholic Reaction
  • Pazira and Hassan Tantai (who plays the doctor) speak in a flat, declamatory fashion that shows lack of experience, or the time to develop a certain level of performing skill.
  • In Mozart and Salieri he wrote in a highly expressive declamatory idiom, while in Tsarskaya nevesta he used traditional forms and smooth melodies.
  • These pieces are the perhaps most conventionally dramatic, although Sedayne's declamatory vocals may not be to every listener's taste.
  • Davis's verse is characterized by robust statements of urban themes, a fierce social consciousness, a strong declamatory voice, and an almost rabid racial pride.
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  • He had chosen this work, he said, because the declamatory style was framed in imitation of the eastern authors. Chapter 13
  • The "Sho 'nuff" is not declamatory now; not fully interrogatory, either; circumflexed.) "Our leader - (" Yes?) - is the man - Deadspin
  • The later, post-World War II version of this genre featured explosive, distorted electric guitar work, thunderous drumming, and fierce, declamatory vocals.
  • The arias contained in the work are dominantly of two types, the aria di bravura, with rich coloratura elements, and the aria parlante, in declamatory vocal style.
  • Rebels like Katharine Hamnett have made a name for bold, declamatory statements.
  • But this latest permutation of the Fall's guitar prang, rhythmic swing, wonky electronics and declamatory zeal continues to sound the same, only different to every preceding Fall record, as John Peel once quipped. Your Future Our Clutter by The Fall
  • The language became more and more reminiscent of scripture and the style more declamatory and personal.
  • Before Brook, theatre was declamatory, overly theatrical and staid.
  • One of these, as I have pointed out, was the substitution of one note for another in certain places; another, that in declamatory recitative, or _recitativo parlante_, the chord in the orchestra should come _after_ the voice Style in Singing
  • Petrarch dominates the first volume and is well represented in the others, with a six-section canzone cycle Standomi un giorno in a ‘narrative’, vibrantly declamatory style opening the second book. Archive 2009-06-01
  • Macklin's championing of realistic delivery in place of a declamatory manner greatly influenced contemporaries, notably David Garrick.
  • He made this speech in a declamatory manner, standing in front of the fire, addressing himself half to Lucasta and half to an unseen audience in the middle distance.
  • For most of the 1740s and early 1750s he appeared regularly at Covent Garden and with his contrasting, somewhat old-fashioned declamatory style was seen as the rival of the more naturalistic Garrick at Drury Lane.
  • IT'S overlong; declamatory; reads like a communique from some Edinburgh Soviet; and when it's not stating the blindingly bloody obvious, it's full of big words nobody will understand.
  • Aside from the political intrigue of the plot, the play is filled with brilliant speeches, timeless both for their declamatory techniques and for the passions they reflect and evoke.
  • In Mozart and Salieri he wrote in a highly expressive declamatory idiom, while in Tsarskaya nevesta he used traditional forms and smooth melodies.
  • And on the few occasions when Fauré calls for it, she has huge, declamatory power at the very summit of her voice.
  • The students compiled declamatory speeches on issues of global and social concern.
  • indeed, in its orotund grandiosity, its declamatory incoherence, its choliambic grandeur, and its unedited seediness, it threatens to leave me fixed here in speechlessness, gaping. Making Light: Rowling's being sued for plagiarism again
  • Then, too, the ideal voice for this heroic part needs the sort of declamatory clarion brilliance that the Italians call 'squillo'.
  • In theatre terms, the plays are didactic and are prone to long impassioned declamatory speeches.
  • The space is totally unsympathetic and encourages declamatory performances.
  • You do not have to be a political expert or a brilliant analyst of the Israeli situation in order to understand that our parliament represents us: "populistic, declamatory, irresponsible and saturated with racism" (Haaretz). Avraham Burg: American Jews, You Are Next
  • Beginning in 1976 with the album Blue Moves, his rock influences became less pronounced, and a more churchlike English pop style emerged in ballads like “Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word” (1976), which typified the staid declamatory aura of his mature ballads. Five People Born on March 25 | myFiveBest
  • The opening line is humorous, touching,and declamatory at one and the same time, its pentameter rhythm sedate and arresting.
  • The music's expression ranges from declamatory to lyrical.
  • After all, A Comedy Of Errors has a sonorous, declamatory opening.
  • The freshman had begun to read his essay in a loud, declamatory style; but gradually, knowing with an orator's instinct, I suppose, that his audience was not 'with' him, he had quieted down, and become rather nervous -- too nervous to skip, as I am sure he wished to skip, the especially conflagrant passages. Yet Again
  • The thunderous declamatory tones preferred by his father, leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, are absent.
  • This intrusion or invasion into the thick impasto of the declamatory surface is peculiarly poignant and suggestive.
  • There is an emphasis on costume, spectacle and big, declamatory delivery.
  • Clips and graphics are stitched together with a droll, deadpan voiceover and often a declamatory musical score, though Moore's ursine baseball-capped form does not itself shamble into view until well into the film.
  • The sparse dialogue is as mind-numbingly declamatory and unsubtle as political oratory or operatic aria.
  • Bennett was a bitter opponent of Wagner; but in the unvocal and declamatory character of this solo, and in the dramatic force he has given to it, to the sacrifice of melody, he certainly ventured some distance in the Wagnerian direction. The Standard Oratorios Their Stories, Their Music, And Their Composers

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