How To Use Enliven In A Sentence

  • I have returned to campus enlivened by a sense of professional renewal, and I have developed course syllabi, assignments, and activities that incorporate many ideas from my fellowship experiences.
  • A stroll down a supermarket aisle is enlivened by signs such as this one: June « 2009 « Sentence first
  • Sironi's peer in sculpture was Arturo Martini, who also used archaic forms to enliven the classical tradition in search of a non-rhetorical Fascist style.
  • a life unenlivened by romance
  • Drawings, paintings, photographs, charts, schematics and maps enliven technical discussions of building sequences that might tax a nonexpert. The Times Literary Supplement
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  • His complex philosophies are enlivened by often hilarious cracks. Times, Sunday Times
  • The mid-afternoon sun shone down from a sky only occasionally enlivened by the odd fluffy cloud.
  • It's unfortunate, however, that he has to rely on jaded Irish clichés of booze and blarney to enliven a story that is powerful enough to survive on its own merits.
  • They exchanged banter over their desks, argued about clients and enlivened their team meetings with fierce exchanges. Times, Sunday Times
  • Does that enliven the visitorial jurisdiction we have, or what do we do with it?
  • But the story is enlivened by photographs, Evon Zerbetz's striking linocut illustrations, and excerpts from the Marzluffs' journals, which add a certain immediacy to recollections now more two decades old: "We hear the deck and even the trees popping, like shots from a rifle, especially when the temperature drops ­below 0° F," Colleen writes. Coming of Age as a Bird of Prey
  • In a provincial war office, a young woman, Eve, placidly attacks her work (she is a coder), her days enlivened by the gossip of her female colleagues and the joshing of the Big Bad Wolves, a couple of lippy sergeants.
  • It occupies the entire 6-foot-high composition, with ink spatters, sgraffito and handprints enlivening the surface.
  • So enliven a gardener's world with a 1,000-count box of live red wiggler composting worms from Uncle Jim's Worm Farm. Avital Binshtock: Gifts That Keep on Living
  • The causal mechanism has been postulated to be a field effect of consciousness: enlivenment of the unified field by the peace-creating group produces an effect of collective coherence that extends into the larger population. Peace for Uganda? Yes, Says Science on the Maharishi Effect
  • When the Technos is enlivened by Bios we get artifacts that can adapt, learn and evolve.
  • The gable is ‘enlivened with twisting colonnettes, leaded windows in arched openings, and quatrefoils.’
  • His experiences would certainly enliven a dull meeting on bank recapitalisation. Times, Sunday Times
  • Proposing this debate at your next management away day should enliven proceedings.
  • In a room enlivened by a colony intelligence, visitors are at a disadvantage.
  • She met his eyes without flinching, a mutinous sparkle enlivening the depths of her own grey gaze.
  • The minuter corrections, in the Duke de la Valliere's catalogue, furnish a most enlivening article in the dryness of bibliography.
  • Also available, however, is a remastered stereo track that further enlivens the film's audio.
  • But it's nicely scaled and proportioned, and front porches enliven the streets.
  • Life within this pleasure dome could be further enlivened if the buyer takes up the option to build a new wing with a spa and indoor pool. Times, Sunday Times
  • The balconies enlivened the building with their deep and geometric shadows.
  • Lines and marks criss-cross them, enlivening the surface.
  • Herds of lechee or lechwe now enliven the meadows; and they and their younger brother, the graceful poku, smaller, and of a rounder contour, race together towards the grassy fens. A Popular Account of Dr. Livingstone's Expedition to the Zambesi and Its Tributaries
  • It is the prayer which enlivens and freshens up a person when hardships bog him down.
  • crossbill" with its deep crimson colour; and many others, equally bright and beautiful, enlivened the woods, either with their voice or their gaudy plumage. Popular Adventure Tales
  • In fact, I see them as cartoons: playful and animated spirits that disrupt and enliven the dead.
  • The wit of Mencken enlivened his age.
  • Its surfaces are covered with a checkered, machine-loomed flannel, a subtle, polychromatic patchwork of nocturnal blue, heather and black that enlivens the sculpture's truncated planes and the quiet space it occupies.
  • It adds: ‘Well-designed restaurants and bars will also be encouraged adjacent to the public open spaces to create lively frontages and enliven the areas.’
  • The camaraderie is infectious, and is continuously enlivened by new arrivals and passing vehicles honking their support.
  • This he speaks of as the saddest of all his journeys -- "the only time in my life when the wild turkeys that so often crossed my path, and the thousands of lesser birds that enlivened the woods and the prairies, all looked like enemies, and I turned my eyes from them, as if I could have wished that they had never existed. John James Audubon
  • There is nothing like life-threatening riots to enliven a man and invigorate life.
  • However, others will find that the historically grounded embellishments enliven the story of Richard Etheridge and the Pea Island lifesavers, a story that has been long overdue in its telling.
  • Gruppman's bracing attack and Kosower's warmly resonant tone enlivened the Allegro finale.
  • But I dubitate whether this abstruser sort of speculation (though enlivened by some apposite instances from Aristophanes) would sufficiently interest your oppidan readers. The Biglow Papers
  • They've made the choice to create a kind of enlivenment packaged as entertainment that presents the baser side of human experience, knowing that humans, out of their boredom, self-doubts, or lack of fulfillment, can be attracted to the negative if they don't have the option of turning to the positive that's packaged in an equally entertaining fashion. Mike Schwager: Why We Need to Transform Television
  • Li Yen is the signature restaurant of The Ritz-Carlton and has the snug atmosphere of a private Cantonese club, albeit one enlivened with the bright, cascading notes of a yang quin, or traditional hammered dulcimer, and the chatter of prosperous Chinese families spinning their lazy susans. Kuala Lumpur Update
  • They exchanged banter over their desks, argued about clients and enlivened their team meetings with fierce exchanges. Times, Sunday Times
  • While bright color and multicolored nubs and slubs enlivened the tweeds, the houndstooth wovens were often found in black and white.
  • Green walls are not only spectacularly beautiful, but they also help enliven a space, humidify the air, and process toxins. Flora Grubb Panels Let You Design Your Own Vertical Garden | Inhabitat
  • His complex philosophies are enlivened by often hilarious cracks. Times, Sunday Times
  • Grand sea fans enliven a reef inhabited by leaf fish, lionfish, and a polychromatic array of nudibranchs.
  • Few Frenchmen would recognize their beloved hanger steak enshrouded and enlivened by jalapeño mojo.
  • They exchanged banter over their desks, argued about clients and enlivened their team meetings with fierce exchanges. Times, Sunday Times
  • Xenophon the Artist: the “kinsman” of Cyrus again, and the light by-play to enliven the severe history. Cyropaedia
  • But the sickroom was a different place now, when we had Allan's cheery visits to enliven our long evenings. Esther : a book for girls
  • Life within this pleasure dome could be further enlivened if the buyer takes up the option to build a new wing with a spa and indoor pool. Times, Sunday Times
  • Elegant oil paintings alternated with picturesque watercolours, while a number of acrylic paintings enlivened the display spread over two rooms at the gallery.
  • The third law of imaginative metamorphosis involves their completion, by which Dilthey means a process "by which something outer is enlivened by something inner or something inner is made visible and intuitable by something outer" (Dilthey 1985, 104). Wilhelm Dilthey
  • The hall of fame was instituted four years ago and honours and celebrates a combination of past broadcasters and those who continue to enliven the airwaves and engage and entrance the imagination of listeners.
  • The tedious process of choosing a panel of 12 jurors was enlivened yesterday when it emerged the Jackson team planned to call a host of Hollywood celebrities in his defence.
  • It seems that poetry ought to enliven us.
  • These elements are crucial in understanding the full import of piety as a spirated virtue by the enlivening power of the Holy Spirit in our lives, designed to assist us in becoming more fully one in and with Christ. Part I: Piety the Gift
  • Singers, composers and bandleaders have been drawing inspiration from all the borders of the sea to enliven and enrich their recipes.
  • It occupies the entire 6-foot-high composition, with ink spatters, sgraffito and handprints enlivening the surface.
  • Cushions of thrift and bladder campion on old walls have faded, but purple spikes of betony and the white of yarrow and sea carrot enliven vegetation along the coastal path. Country diary: Cornwall
  • Throughout the book, the writing is enlivened with bright flashes of wit and Kent's consistently elegant use of language.
  • There were also subtleties that enlivened the action without detracting from the music.
  • These nicknames of affection or derision, from the French slang soubriquet, “a chuck under the chin,” enlivened the political language of a previous era. No Uncertain Terms
  • We travelled along the Wharfe into the Dale, that takes its name from the river, which reaches from York about 20 miles, enlivened almoft all the way with gentlemens feats at a little diftance from each other; and left Otley-cheven, on the fouth fide of the river, a fmall market - town, no otherwife of note than for its fituation, which is under a large craggy cliff. A tour through the island of Great Britain : divided into circuits or journies ...
  • Elegant oil paintings alternated with picturesque watercolours, while a number of acrylic paintings enlivened the display spread over two rooms at the gallery.
  • The other chucklesome moment enlivening a dull match was Champion's description of Greece coach Otto Rehhagel's hair as "unfeasibly dark for a man his age. World Cup 2010 coverage: We need to see more of Diego Maradona
  • A lively and crude cast of food wizards and malaperts enliven Bourdain's narrative.
  • Emigrating to Europe, she co-starred with Paul Robeson in two Brit films of the 30s and enlivened other Brit films for the next four decades.
  • Life within this pleasure dome could be further enlivened if the buyer takes up the option to build a new wing with a spa and indoor pool. Times, Sunday Times
  • The last two seem to have very little in common with the addiction to singing and dancing characteristic of the rest, and are the only ones who can be imagined as feeling themselves at home in a modern museum, excepting on those evenings when the authorities use the museum (as is the custom in London) for a "conversazione," enlivened by brass bands and songs. More Science From an Easy Chair
  • Practice in the speech of pleasantry may have great value in giving a man repose, in giving him that saving grace, an appreciation of the humorous, in affording him a means of relief or enlivenment to the serious speech. Public Speaking
  • Directing breath to the ovaries is a powerful way to enliven their energy. Wild Feminine
  • The routine can be enlivened at any time of year by the occasional charter to other destinations.
  • These fleet animals no sooner heard the enlivening sound, than, eager for the chase, they sprang away all of a sudden, and strained every nerve to partake of the sport, flew across the fields with incredible speed, overleaped hedges and ditches, and everything in their way, without the least regard to their unfortunate riders. The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle
  • Life within this pleasure dome could be further enlivened if the buyer takes up the option to build a new wing with a spa and indoor pool. Times, Sunday Times
  • As on earlier discs, he enlivens Caribbean traditions with masterful jazz piano, by turns clamorous, poignant, playful and even swinging.
  • Harte's _History of Gustavus_, a wilderness which mere human patience seems unable to explore, is yet enlivened here and there with a cheerful spot, when he tells us of some scalade or camisado, or speculates on troopers rendered bullet-proof by art-magic. The Life of Friedrich Schiller Comprehending an Examination of His Works
  • And what better to enliven the befuddled mind than chess? Times, Sunday Times
  • His accounts of what he saw and learned on these visits, not least from the researchers he interviewed, enliven the proceedings throughout. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Visitors to the site will be enlivened by compulsive news about European handball, volleyball and water polo, as well as being enticed into buying wardrobes.
  • Yet, that unsavoury incident enlivened the game. Times, Sunday Times
  • Life within this pleasure dome could be further enlivened if the buyer takes up the option to build a new wing with a spa and indoor pool. Times, Sunday Times
  • Objecting to the tenderness and aloofness of humor and the vulgarism of humor, Lu Xun advocated a new concept of humor to criticize the reality, improve the work, and enliven life.
  • Life within this pleasure dome could be further enlivened if the buyer takes up the option to build a new wing with a spa and indoor pool. Times, Sunday Times
  • When strengthened and enlivened, your love-body magnetizes more love into your life. Love For No Reason
  • Barrie succeeded in getting his mother's attention and thus encouraged he made every effort possible to enliven her and to make her forget David.
  • They don't just only look hugely attractive; they will also deliver snips of foliage to enliven your cooking all summer.
  • Entertainment workers enlivened the rally with their acts.
  • the world that is coming," the place where everyone will know and see that All.is One and One is All. Everything is interconnected and that Intelligence that unites everything, that creates everything, that transforms everything, that enlivens everything, that revives and refreshes, that is present should be revealed and known to all of us. Tikkun Magazine - Current Thinking
  • The reason it’s enlivening is because of the pace is accelerated through ultra-short paragraphs. Three Techniques to Avoid Being a Boring Writer | Write to Done
  • Enliven dark, wet January nights by dishing up a spicy stir-fry washed down with this wonderful, grapey, citrussy Aussie white whose juicy fruit is heavy on lime and lemon zest.
  • The word sauce comes via Latin from an ancient root word meaning “salt,” the primordial condiment that was prepared by the earth billions of years before early humans learned to enliven their foods with it. On Food and Cooking, The Science and Lore of the Kitchen
  • The moralizing is given all the force which an accomplished rhetorician can provide and is enlivened by anecdote, hyperbole, and vigorous denunciation.
  • This he speaks of as the saddest of all his journeys ” “the only time in my life when the wild turkeys that so often crossed my path, and the thousands of lesser birds that enlivened the woods and the prairies, all looked like enemies, and I turned my eyes from them, as if I could have wished that they had never existed.” John James Audubon
  • Soft-touch blue nappa leather enlivens the overall look. The Sun
  • The music of Laurie Lewis will surprise you, enliven you, and cause you to reflect - just like bird songs themselves.
  • Set in a Fife factory and drawn from personal experiences, the bleak subject is enlivened with humour and wit.
  • Their daal is rich and dark, and rice pullao uses mushrooms, carrots and parsley to enliven it. Globe and Mail
  • Lamb is a miraculous meat, robustly withstanding strong flavours, showcasing subtler vibes without overpowering them, brightened by fruit, bouncing off tomato, enlivened by herbs.
  • But, with so many avenues for entertainment today to enliven the bored and the weary mind, is reading becoming a hobby of the past?
  • Heated discussions, sometimes carried on in several languages, enlivened the proceedings.
  • The veteran TV helmer may be directing from a script that could have been written by two trained chimpanzees, but he doesn't do much to enliven the proceedings.
  • Those hearing his words were filled with hope, and for myself, I must say that I am deeply enlivened at the thought of a new London. Exit the Actress
  • They exchanged banter over their desks, argued about clients and enlivened their team meetings with fierce exchanges. Times, Sunday Times
  • His experiences would certainly enliven a dull meeting on bank recapitalisation. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the boom and bust of the 1980s and early 1990s, property developers began lending spaces to artist-run initiatives, rather than let them lie fallow: this was a way of enlivening the shells of unlet buildings.
  • Around the same time that Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers were swinging their way into America's hearts with a snappy new American approach to movie musical comedy, another musical movie couple, Jeannette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy, made a huge success bringing to the screen and enlivening a dying European tradition of sentimental musical romance we call operetta. NPR Topics: News
  • What I've done," Esme said, "is to enliven its archipallium or reptilian brain. Asimov's Science Fiction
  • He also noted the technological change that had enlivened his documentaries with drones, night vision and heat-sensitive cameras. Times, Sunday Times
  • Two 48-inch-high stylized depictions of evolved Nath adepts known as siddha illustrate the power of hatha yoga practice to enliven the body's chakras -- or centers -- and thereby merge the practitioner with all levels of existence. From the Worldly to the Divine
  • All at once fall in, arms are unpiled, and, enlivened by our band, we again step out; now feet begin to ache, and boots to chafe; but the cheery music of the bands, bugles, or drums and fifes of the regiments marching next to us, generally the Rifles, infuses energy into the most footsore. Our Sailors Gallant Deeds of the British Navy during Victoria's Reign
  • They also express the weight and mass of the station's structure, which is animated and enlivened through the presence of natural light.
  • It was a mixed crowd, enlivened by a mother, daughter and son-in-law from Devon - blimey, the mother-in-law could put those beers away…
  • His accounts of what he saw and learned on these visits, not least from the researchers he interviewed, enliven the proceedings throughout. The Times Literary Supplement
  • These, however, may be enlivened with condimental garniture of broken and combined colors. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 04, No. 24, October, 1859
  • It's one of those twee, child-centric works that sift through the last shakings of the postmodernist bag for ways to enliven their inch-deep whimsy and fathomless solipsism – crapulous, cod-Vonnegut cutesiness being Foer's weakness – and often presume an intimacy with grave and terrible events, the better to drape themselves in the mantle of importance. Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close gleams with Oscar worthiness
  • We all desperately want to enter spiritual time, the syncopated jazz of being in the enlivened moment. The Bushman Way of Tracking God
  • And the older people, while they enjoy the spiritual enlivenment of the revival, also come under the power of social enjoyment and give themselves over to a season of communion together. The Hero of Hill House
  • Vanity Fair, namely enlivening a potentially stuffy period flick by switching the locale to somewhere far more exotic. DVD Times
  • Their anger with the corporation was ironically but nevertheless predictably an enlivenment of their musical sensibility, for their new album would be a declaration of independence from the establishment. Grace Slick The Biography
  • Digital photographs of the chair were carefully enhanced to clean and brighten the red show cover, enliven the gilding, and replace lost areas of trim.
  • His experiences would certainly enliven a dull meeting on bank recapitalisation. Times, Sunday Times
  • Jason has a girlfriend, and her energetic, cheerful presence has enlivened our household.
  • He is interesting when identifying personalities and providing biographical material to enliven the narrative.
  • An awkward, stilted speaker, he was unable to enliven his performances with either humorous anecdotes or powerful delivery. Sir Alf: A Major Reappraisal of the Life and Times of England's Greatest Football Manager
  • Laughter can enliven even monotonous proceedings on the set, " she adds.
  • ‘Then, Sir, (said Davies, who enlivened the dispute by making it somewhat dramatick,) he may become an insurer; and when he is going to the bench, he may be stopped, — “Your Lordship cannot go yet: here is a bunch of invoices: several ships are about to sail.”’ The Life of Samuel Johnson LL.D.
  • Long escapes the scholar's temptation to be dryly academic, enlivening her book with unexpected and entertaining love stories.
  • The dried heads of strawflowers and safflower will further enliven your Yuletide still-life.
  • The speaker's exuberance enlivened a boring conference.
  • On the set, Sanders was the perfect self-effacing host, happy to play straightman to his guests or to enliven a dull show with pertinent ad-libs and stupid sketches.
  • What enlivens us and mobilizes the will to live in each of us is profoundly unique.
  • This legendary flower blooms once in 12 years and is due to enliven the mountainscapes, once again in the coming year.
  • Even the most boring meeting was enlivened by Dan's presence.
  • There is a dance floor, pulsating bhangra beats and popular filmi numbers, to enliven guests.
  • My description might sound a bit mechanistic - it is hard to describe in words - but these ramp spaces look wonderful with sunlight grazing and enlivening the original bluestone and the new glass walling in the late afternoon.
  • She seemed to be enlivened by the condition outside, exhilarated by the motion of flying through it.
  • As a colorist he is generally restrained, but, in these paintings, startling reds, golden yellow and vibrant green enliven his palette.
  • The ukulele, the Hawaiian gift that enlivened vaudeville halls across North America and Europe in the early 20th century, has two exemplars in a glass case, next to a paragraph of dry information.
  • The sheet is enlivened, as a field is when the wind bends grass all in one direction.
  • An enlivening flicker of other buried colors spreads beneath the surface, but not enough to rid one of a sense of impoverishment, as if the life's blood of the painting has been baked dry or worn away.
  • However, this general problem of the volume is enlivened by a few apparently illogical digressions and unclassifiable curiosities.
  • The staging just about passes muster and it is enlivened by vivid sets and flamboyant costumes.
  • He became famous for such antics as dancing on table tops, enlivening parties by performing bump and grind striptease acts and, once, streaking naked around a swimming pool.
  • Its bulky, tough concrete forms and large expanses of glass are softened with unexpectedly elegant touches: striated Italian marble that decorates the borders of two large cantilevers; light rods that enliven the glass wall beneath an overhang; white-aluminum-paneled ceilings, dotted with lights and embellished with a stamped pattern, that extend into the building from the underside of the cantilevers. Lee Rosenbaum: First Look: Rem Koolhaas' Architecture For Architects At Cornell University
  • Life within this pleasure dome could be further enlivened if the buyer takes up the option to build a new wing with a spa and indoor pool. Times, Sunday Times
  • Enliven the dull gray planes of a weather-beaten deck by adding subtle, colorful stripes.
  • A moment of coherence-where art, architecture, landscape, and activity all enliven one another-is the art of the Chinati Foundation. atherine Wagley looks at what happens when nature takes over. Museum Blogs
  • The sobriety of the scene was indeed somewhat enlivened by the presence of Sir Piercie Shafton, who, to show that his skill in the manege was not inferior to his other accomplishments, kept alternately pressing and checking his gay courser, forcing him to piaffe, to caracole, to passage, and to do all the other feats of the school, to the great annoyance of the Lord The Monastery
  • The "cardinal grosbeak" (_Pitylus cardinalis_) with his bright scarlet wings; the blue jay, noisy and chattering; the rarer "crossbill" (_Loxia_) with its deep crimson colour; and many others, equally bright and beautiful, enlivened the woods, either with their voice or their gaudy plumage. The Young Voyageurs Boy Hunters in the North
  • The iconic faces are earthen masks softly manifesting a light from within, with distinct final strokes representing the enlivening action of uncreated grace.
  • Their words, she says, not only enliven her but also help jog her memory about speeches she's given during the past 15 years.
  • I cannot describe the odd sense of enlivenment, of pleasure I had when I saw this new sign. The Friendly Road: New Adventures in Contentment
  • As a colorist he is generally restrained, but, in these paintings, startling reds, golden yellow and vibrant green enliven his palette.
  • The narrative is uneven, the pacing - not exactly enlivening, the costuming - very wannabe - and the music - thoroughly off-putting
  • Near the Adzumabashi, following his prescription against domestic enlivenment, he entered a grog shop; to turn his good coin into wine. The Yotsuya Kwaidan or O'Iwa Inari Tales of the Tokugawa, Volume 1 (of 2)
  • This is enlivened by Mondial blue flourishes on the dash, sports steering wheel and gearstick, and the same drilled aluminium pedals as the 172.
  • In 1974, only a couple of years after Kubrick abandoned "Napoleon" to the snows of time, Burgess wrote a novel, "The Napoleon Symphony," that might have been devised as a reproach to Kubrick for never calling him to enliven his unmade chef-d'oeuvre. How Stanley Kubrick Met His Waterloo
  • Lines and marks criss-cross them, enlivening the surface.
  • Up to the age of 14, children in Britain are taught the basics of archaeology and history from prehistory to the recent past - and this now includes much more archaeology to enrich and enliven the story than there was 20 years ago.
  • The coasts of the ocean are enlivened by flocks of seals and morses; its waters, by shoals of sociable cetaceans; and even in the depths of the great plateau of Central Mutual Aid; a factor of evolution
  • 'This good girl,' said Mr. Tyrold, 'is herself desirous to quit the present gaieties of Cleves, to try to enliven my solitude till we all may meet again.' Camilla
  • The whole enlivened, and rendered more variegated, and fanciful, by the various windings of the Chester river.
  • I love the interplay of the sweeter ginger and sharper, more fiery coriander in the beginning, and the way spices enliven the dry resinousness of cedar and elemi. Archive 2009-06-01
  • Care to enliven this conversation with some drippy tidbits about Bea Arthur? Analyze this
  • Quotations from articles in and letters to women's magazines enhanced and enlivened the chapter on professional working women.
  • There is a small lake enlivened by fountains. Times, Sunday Times
  • But I dubitate whether this abstruser sort of speculation (though enlivened by some apposite instances from Aristophanes) would sufficiently interest your oppidan readers. The Complete Poetical Works of James Russell Lowell
  • Now we have Fred Kaplan's enlivening "1959: The Year Everything Changed," which really could be called The Fifties, but that was already taken by journalist David Halberstam's fine historical account in 1993. Tom Alderman: 1950s: The Not-So-Silent Generation
  • The changes only serve to enhance and enliven the original building.
  • a meal enlivened by the music
  • Its routine story is enlivened by good one-liners and classy performances. Times, Sunday Times
  • Theological argument, when not enlivened by bigotry, is seldom worse than narcotic: but theological fun, when not covert heresy, is almost always sialagogue. A Budget of Paradoxes, Volume I (of II)
  • The Olympic spirit enlivened people in China, especially the younger generation.
  • They may enliven parliament to the point of making it interesting.
  • Civic events were enlivened by military parades and bands, while civil disorder was suppressed by troops acting in support of the gendarmerie, which was itself a branch of the armed forces.
  • In this particular case A.S. WILS.N, whose contributions to debate are exclusively interjectionary, would be cut off from the exercise of a talent that frequently enlivens a sitting. Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 146, March 25, 1914
  • It has been used for centuries to revive the spirits, enliven any evening and fend off the cold.
  • Martin John was also blessed with a great sense of recall and memory and could enliven any gathering with his stories from back through the years.
  • When I feel rejuvenated, I feel enlivened, energized, connected with the world around me, and all of those qualities are ones that we notice in children.
  • The dinner was often a riotous affair enlivened by superbly witty speeches.
  • When the Technos is enlivened by Bios we get artifacts that can adapt, learn and evolve.
  • In their conspicuousness, they enliven and animate the city as a form of public theatre.
  • Her account – which moves from first love to married love, to adultery, families and friendship – is enlivened with personal anecdotes; this is the yeast that leavens the dough of information. All About Love: Anatomy of an Unruly Emotion by Lisa Appignanesi – review
  • Primitive athletic games and commonplace talk, enlivened by frontier jests and stories, formed the sum of social intercourse when half a dozen or a score of settlers of various ages came together at a house-raising or corn-husking, or when mere chance brought them at the same time to the post-office or the country store. A Short Life of Abraham Lincoln
  • Aided by digital graphics and other powerful tools, animation can enliven anything, from a movie to a music video.
  • Originally conceived as an impressionistic portrait of Spencer, the image broadened into the enlivenment of her popular concept of the "under thirty" generation. Grace Slick The Biography
  • It doesn't "enliven" the literary debate, it only debases it. Book Reviewing
  • Since the unified field is an all-pervading field at the basis of consciousness and matter, when unity is enlivened in the individual, unity is enlivened everywhere. Jeanne Ball: 9/11: Have We Overlooked the Most Effective Way to Prevent Terrorism and War?
  • However, I am sure that it will all be better when our household is more enlivened, which is soon to be the case, my dear mama. The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 12
  • With no suspense about the outcome to enliven the potentially dull political proceedings, the Republicans embraced the popular world of entertainment.
  • At first, of course, he merely marked down, with discretion, his less-expensive stock of prints and muslins, nuns-veilings and muslin delaines, with a few fancy braidings and trimmings in guimp or bronze to enliven the affair. The Lost Girl
  • But some animating vision nevertheless seemed miraculously to have penetrated the dense green wall, to the obvious enlivenment of the company. The Convert
  • Beneath these grow red buckeye, whose clusters of bright red flowers enliven the forest in early spring.
  • His accounts of what he saw and learned on these visits, not least from the researchers he interviewed, enliven the proceedings throughout. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Rather, it should enhance and enliven the occasion.
  • Though the paperwhite and tazetta narcissus like it dry and sharply drained, too, the majority of narcissi couldn't be easier, and I plant them by the thousand to enliven rough grass and orchards in clients 'gardens. Light up your garden with bulbs
  • he enlivened his editorials with barbed thrusts at politicians
  • His accounts of what he saw and learned on these visits, not least from the researchers he interviewed, enliven the proceedings throughout. The Times Literary Supplement

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