How To Use Euphonious In A Sentence

  • It would be just another speech, just another collection of euphonious platitudes - if it weren't for the sword we've slowly unsheathed over the last six months.
  • It is only later generations, yearning for the comfort of a golden past, who have fallen for his euphonious silliness. Times, Sunday Times
  • To the scientific mind, a euphonious musical piece that calms the mind and soul is as aesthetically beautiful as a complex mathematical formula.
  • Another hot new technique for field biologists is the euphoniously named science of molecular scatology.
  • My choice, because it is clear, euphonious, and uncontaminated by other associations, is psychedelic, mind-manifesting.
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  • Write yourself fully and always Harriet Beecher Stowe, which is a name euphonious, flowing, and full of meaning. The Life of Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • It's not clear how his ‘twenty million’, euphonious though it is, serves that end.
  • There's also a call for ‘bright rights,’ a euphonious phrase if ever there was one.
  • The house my friends were living in rejoiced in the euphonious name of "Motesitzkysches Haus," and it used to provoke me to hear the glib way in which the shop-keepers would run the name off when desired to send home parcels. A Lady's Glimpse of the Late War in Bohemia
  • He said the word meant ‘mind manifesting’ and called it ‘clear, euphonious and uncontaminated by other associations.’
  • Our birthplace is the only country in the West that I know of that cannot be easily and euphoniously turned into a uniquely descriptive title for its people. Election Day Draws to a Close....
  • Adding to the theatrics of the show, when the euphoniously named model Coco Rocha first appeared on the runway, she was in full mermaid tail and walking on two coral crutches! Fish Tales
  • “I see no objection to its being old,” the Princess answered dryly, “but whatever else it is it’s not euphonious,” she went on, isolating the word euphonious as though between inverted commas, a little affectation to which the Swann's Way
  • Another time I interrupted a marketing meeting to argue with the editor in chief about whether ‘ineluctable’ or ‘deliquescence’ was the more euphonious.
  • The art of packing, a special skill developed largely by the Mexicans, was euphonious with Spanish terms like cargadore, aparejo, suadera, and cincha. THE AMERICAN WEST
  • The natural harmony between subject and verb is usually euphonious.
  • I'm sure that the actual Chinese name for it is less amusingly euphonious, but there you go.
  • The apostate failed, and the once vibrant gods of Greece degenerated until they became mere rhetorical flourishes that permitted learned poets, like Milton, to ornament his verse with their euphonious names.
  • The audience's surrogate -- in order words, the hero with stupidly romantic ideas about how life should be and little sense of self-preservation -- is the euphoniously named Jacob Jankowski, played by the woefully untalented Robert Pattinson. Marshall Fine: HuffPost Review: Water for Elephants
  • These data were analyzed using a new method, euphoniously labeled the serological testing algorithm for recent HIV seroconversion (STARHS). Harold Pollack: News About This HIV Thing, When We're Done Discussing the Governor's Cool Eyeglasses
  • These data were analyzed using a new method, euphoniously labeled the serological testing algorithm for recent HIV seroconversion (STARHS). Harold Pollack: News About This HIV Thing, When We're Done Discussing the Governor's Cool Eyeglasses
  • There is always a euphonious tone when her name is said, as if honey was rolling off the tips of their tongues.
  • It was euphonious and easy to sing and to our young ears sounded good.
  • Snarled hanks of colored line nest devotedly against one another and suspend euphoniously from a planar filigree of black over white.
  • Prince Hohenlohe, as he was less euphoniously known, had long tried the patience of his church superiors, who disapproved of his bent for exorcism and flamboyant public cures. A Mixed Blessing
  • I love that the wind blew strong and cold today, that the leaves on the ground crunch euphoniously under my feet, that fall is actually here. Scorpi07 Diary Entry
  • Meantime we must remark, that the first three of Mr. Campbell's variations are mere caprices of the press; as is Shagspere; or, more probably, this last euphonious variety arose out of the gross clownish pronunciation of the two hiccuping _ "marksmen" _ who rode over to Worcester for the license; and one cannot forbear laughing at the bishop's secretary for having been so misled by two varlets, professedly incapable of signing their own names. Biographical Essays
  • I think that's a lot more euphonious than Gliese 581g. Newly Discovered Exoplanet Ripe For Life
  • No one must be different from himself in voice, clothes, manners, recreations, choice of food: Here is someone who speaks English rather more clearly and euphoniously than I — it must be a vile, upstage, la-di-da affectation. Screwtape on Democracy | Diane Duane's weblog: "Out of Ambit"
  • Unfortunately, this euphonious name recalls that of the heretic Pelagius, who thanks to Augustine's attack on him gave his name to an abiding view of how Christians achieve salvation.
  • No one must be different from himself in voice, clothes, manners, recreations, choice of food: Here is someone who speaks English rather more clearly and euphoniously than I — it must be a vile, upstage, la-di-da affectation. Screwtape on Democracy | Diane Duane's weblog: "Out of Ambit"
  • She awoke to the dulcetptwee-ptwerr of the iridescent-wingedsila languet, one of the most euphonious of all the inhabitants of New Riviera's takari forests. Flinx's Folly
  • There were sedgy plants in bloom, jack-in-the-pulpit, and what might have been a lily, with a more euphonious name. A Little Girl in Old Salem
  • Don't you mean 'euphonious'?" asked Migwan with a smile. The Camp Fire Girls Do Their Bit Or, over the Top with the Winnebagos
  • Sylvia, receiving this into a sore and raw consciousness, said to herself with an embittered instinct for cynicism that she had never heard more euphonious periphrases for selling yourself for money. The Bent Twig
  • Snarled hanks of colored line nest devotedly against one another and suspend euphoniously from a planar filigree of black over white.
  • The long-flowing lines smile euphoniously, without generating harsh inner tensions, and evoking a serenity appropriate to G major's blessedness.
  • The phrase itself is both alliterative and euphonious, and it's certainly not a random adjective-noun combination like we've become used to with band names; furnaces have flames in them, and thus they are fiery.
  • The Hoopoe is euphoniously named for its call.
  • a euphonious trill of silver laughter
  • The Second sounds euphoniously high - spirited to our ears, but in 1803, at the time of its premiere, it gave listeners some serious jolts. 'The Ninth'
  • Soon the tranquil surroundings are filled with an euphonious rendition of ‘Aye mere watan ke logon’.
  • They sat in the euphonious forest, listening to the sounds of the birds and insects.
  • The ancients thought of their _lives_ as woven on the loom of spiteful fates, whom they endeavored to humor by calling euphonious names. Love to the Uttermost Expositions of John XIII.-XXI.
  • Everyone who's ever read one of my reviews knows, however, that there's nearly always something cheerful to say (about, say, a book's cover design, or an actor's euphonious name), so that should be incentive enough.
  • But, once the government takes over from the free market as musical director - and certainly after it appoints the central bank to conduct the orchestra - things are never quite so euphonious.
  • In her euphonious name we find both her family's fantasies and their poverty. Why Juliet Could Never Be Plain Julie
  • I see no objection to its being old," the Princess answered dryly, "but whatever else it is it's not euphonious," she went on, isolating the word euphonious as though between inverted commas, a little affectation to which the Guermantes set were addicted. Swann's Way
  • From the seed feeders on the deck come the euphonious calls of chickadees, the bell-like trill of the dark-eyed juncos, the down-slurred whistle of the titmice, the “ank-ank” of the nuthatches, the “zree” of the house finches, and the coo of doves; from the nectar feeders and flowers, the whirr of hummingbird wings. Birdology
  • If I lived in Burkina Faso (in the city with the most euphonious name, Ouagadougou), I'd be complaining about the Ouagadougouns.
  • The term is French for “under vacuum”; it sounds much nicer than “vacuum packed” and more euphonious than “boil-in bag” or “Cryovac” — the food-grade plastic that has become a generic label for both the process and the bags in which food is vacuum sealed, cooked, chilled, and reheated. Out of the Frying Pan
  • They were baffled when I refused to change quoted words to make them more suspenseful, euphonious or, with the puritanism of Americans, less coarse.
  • her euphonious Southern speech
  • Some Uzbek soups are euphoniously called shurpa, and a prominent range of main dishes there go under the name plov.
  • Are you bride glowing in the setting sun, the euphonious audio.
  • Since the word euphonious is an adjective meaning melodious, to say an euphonious keeps you smart would make a musician laugh and a professor scratch his head. Refreshment in Refuge
  • I of course think that education should return to being education, which is to say a classical education, by means of which one learns to master language and thought, so that one knows how to find information, how to evaluate it, how to draw inferences therefrom, and how to organize and express clearly, simply and euphoniously one's thoughts concerning same. So you thought ...
  • Enormity is more euphonious than enormousness. Times, Sunday Times
  • There were bands on horses and bands on chariots, and at the tail of the procession a fearful and wonderful instrument bearing the euphonious and classic name of the "calliope," whose chief function seemed to be that of terrifying the farmers 'horses into frantic and determined attempts to escape from these horrid alarms of the city to the peaceful haunts of their rural solitudes. Corporal Cameron of the North West Mounted Police; a tale of the Macleod trail
  • But the personal attacks were there, veiled under euphonious indirection.
  • If it's not a masterpiece, it's certainly euphonious. Times, Sunday Times
  • Opening with euphonious chimes and husky vocals, the song later erupts into a fever of racing drums and soaring guitars. The Sun
  • Prince Hohenlohe, as he was less euphoniously known, had long tried the patience of his church superiors, who disapproved of his bent for exorcism and flamboyant public cures. A Mixed Blessing

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