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How To Use Exuberant In A Sentence

  • It was purfled about the rim of the soundbox with trapezia of shimmering mother-of-pearl, and it had a black strikeplate in the shape of a clematis flower, inlaid with multicoloured blossoms that were purely the result of an exuberant craftsman's imagination. Captain Corelli's Mandolin
  • A Catalan parade will kick off an exuberant evening of Catalonian dance, music and fireworks.
  • There are times of praise, adoration, extolment, when thankfulness is more exuberant, runs over into bursting joy, and times when longing desire carries us into the very bosom of God. The Right Knock A Story
  • Hothouse plants do not possess exuberant vitality.
  • Some, called runners, spread exuberantly, and others are classified as clumpers, which slowly expands from the original planting.
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  • Her works are exuberant, full of colour, look nice on walls and make people feel happy. Times, Sunday Times
  • Despite the exuberant breasts in the snug sweater and the lissome hips in the tight-fitting mini, there is a certain adolescent gawkiness about this woman. Alice in Jeopardy
  • The frieze, where of old would prance an exuberant processional of gods, is, in this case, bare of decoration, but upon the epistyle is written in simple, stern letters the word "EUSTON. Men, Women, and Boats
  • Constructed of pine, its painted surface is an exuberant expression of the artist's imagination and creativity.
  • He's a bit of a charming scamp, a perfect fit for the exuberant, free-wheeling '60s.
  • When we moved to a bedraggled wood 10 years ago, we were greeted the following spring by the exuberant golden blossoms of kerria.
  • Rather, it typically involves acts of aggression towards players and officials, or over-exuberant celebratory activity including the vandalism of property.
  • The exuberant first dance sequence brings to the New York streets a multiethnic rhythm nation of cuties in halters and hip-huggers, all waving little American flags.
  • Lively and exuberant, it teased him to be identified. Somewhere East of Life
  • Prune as needed to keep the exuberant foliage from casting unwanted shade on neighboring plants.
  • Across the sandy track that was the main village street, exuberant bunting flew between bamboo poles. Indian Balm - Travels in the Southern Subcontinent
  • He is an exuberant personality and a joker in the Durham ranks. Times, Sunday Times
  • Equally in much demand were also relief images of ancient Russian warriors, powerful outposts, as well as tsarevnas with exuberant crown kokoshniks.
  • The cowpuncher was a potential cattle-owner and good citizen, and if he went wild on occasion it was largely because he was so exuberantly young. Roosevelt in the Bad Lands
  • In the past fifteen years, her work has taken a distinct turn towards playful irony and exuberant narration.
  • The cancan, that high kicking, exuberant dance of showgirls, originated in Le Moulin Rouge during the 1890s.
  • In many cases these rugs were created by women for their own use, and some of the most exuberant survivals are those worked in New England, particularly in New Hampshire, in the latter half of the nineteenth century.
  • For anyone with eyes to see and a television to be parked in front of by benignly neglectful eighties parents Floella is of course best known for her exuberantly dungareed presenting work on Playschool and Playaway. Film | guardian.co.uk
  • The cancan, that high kicking, exuberant dance of showgirls, originated in Le Moulin Rouge during the 1890s.
  • Hothouse plants do not possess exuberant vitality. Slumber not in the tents of your fathers.
  • Once Tribble returned the kickoff to the BC 37 for the final play, the Wolfpack sideline spilled onto the field in exuberant celebration. USATODAY.com - College Football - Boston College vs. N.C. State
  • In three days' time the bucolic town of Bunol will burst into life for its annual tomato-throwing frenzy as 30,000 fruit-wielding revellers paint the pueblo red for La Tomatina, one of Spain's most exuberant fiestas.
  • I imagine him gesturing like an exuberant host over a verdant landscape that stretches farther than the eye can see. Christianity Today
  • Derain's lifelong versatility is evident in his far less exuberant but still cheerful riverscape, The Pool of London, painted at about the same time.
  • While we might think of Rubens in terms of exuberant light and colour, he was, not least, a talented draughtsman.
  • Two of Smith's untitled, long vertical paintings, one from 1956 in which suggestions of Jackson Pollock shine forth from a ladderlike assemblage of forms, and another from 1958 in which blunt, Guston-like dark lines give form to a spray enamel surface, are some of the most exuberant objects in either show. Art reviews: 'Philip Guston, Roma' and 'David Smith Invents' at the Phillips
  • Williamson possesses a deep, sardonic baritone that makes for a curious counterpoint to his exuberant indie-pop dancercise routines.
  • They were totally different, one as introverted and shy as the other was exuberant. THREE KINDS OF KISSING - SCOTTISH SHORT STORIES
  • We drink it through a bombilla, the little metal suckable strainer they also use in Argentina to drink maté, an exuberantly undrinkable local tea brewed from some violent green shrub.
  • It's exuberant, trashy and filled with hummable musical numbers and teenage misbehaviour. Times, Sunday Times
  • He is noted for his exuberant style and previously caused uproar by boiling lobsters live on the show. Times, Sunday Times
  • Pumping turn after exuberant turn, I drop to the south side of the mountain until I'm looking straight down into the gaping bergschrund.
  • He was just 40, and in this rural idyll he began to paint landscapes filled with lush, exuberant nature.
  • A wonderland of mechanical organs rich with exuberant carvings.
  • I had this great adrenalin surge and I walked out feeling exuberant, almost as if I was drugged.
  • This slam-bang B-movie pastiche is wildly uneven as it doggedly strives (sometimes with obvious strain) to sustain a freewheeling, anything-goes air of exuberant junkiness," writes Joe Leydon. Venice film festival opens with Darren Aronofsky's Black Swan
  • The key issue of this week's Paris shows is simple: will Paris, having fastened its grey, navy and camel colours to the mast of minimalism six months ago, stand its ground in the wake of the onslaught of exuberant 70s maximalism and technicolour seen so far in NY, London and Milan? Fashion week live blog
  • Yet for all its eclecticism it builds in a single arc -- its core the long second movement, propelled upward by quasi-Minimalist rhythmic repetitions -- until the exuberant jam session is capped by the churchly sobriety of the orchestral idiom, returning as if to remind everyone of where they are, though more focusing the mood than interrupting it. In performance: NSO and Yo-Yo Ma
  • Prune as needed to keep the exuberant foliage from casting unwanted shade on neighboring plants.
  • The second time, he covered the same material and used the same textbook, but made a big effort to be more exuberant, adding hand gestures and varying the pitch of his voice.
  • However, at most music shows these days, organisers and security personnel don't seem to mind exuberant youngsters climbing onto their chairs, just to wave and sway, keeping time to the music.
  • Drug revelations aside, the claims of exuberant youth versus wily experience will be a central issue.
  • Rather than rescue the late work, this retrospective ends an iconic American career not with an exuberant yawp, but, sadly, with a whimper. Height and Depths of Expression
  • His book is an exuberant celebration of the efforts to compile information through the ages. Times, Sunday Times
  • Tonight's episode has less of the exuberant energy that has fuelled the rest of the series. Times, Sunday Times
  • He spoofs himself into an exuberant documentary that demonstrates the all-pervasive influence of modern advertising by satiric example, and with great ingenuity—talking, for example, about product placement while he's placed in such products as a JetBlue terminal where he slugs down a bottle of POM Wonderful. 'Incendies' Burns With Mystery, Truth
  • He is an exuberant personality and a joker in the Durham ranks. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's almost a redundant question for a show as exuberantly multisensory as this. Times, Sunday Times
  • The musical landscape has changed, but Sade's jazzy urban style is as exuberant and satisfying as ever, nowhere more so than on the title track.
  • No exuberant celebrations or despairing shows of emotion. Times, Sunday Times
  • They have an exuberant, vital, natural radiance around them that is infectious to others.
  • This feature of the song serves to explain its inordinate length, for a song may occupy the greater part of a night, apparently without tiring the audience by its verbose periphrases and its exuberant figures. The Manóbos of Mindanáo Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume XXIII, First Memoir
  • An overexuberant sprinkler that sprays over the fence also works well. Times, Sunday Times
  • »4* DIOSCORIDIS Vulgares tampfan£. flores amicijiimos afibus creant & fauorum ce „ tas exuberant. Pedanii Dioscoridis Anazarbei De medicinali materia libri sex
  • I like its tomatoes and its exuberant driving style. Times, Sunday Times
  • In 1924 he published, to great acclaim, The Flaming Terrapin, an exuberant allegorical narrative of the Flood, in which the terrapin represents energy and rejuvenation.
  • His versatile and exuberant style captured the attention of galleries and collectors across the United States and more than 700 of his paintings sold in three years.
  • It's exuberant, trashy and filled with hummable musical numbers. Times, Sunday Times
  • He played rugby in the most exuberant and abrasive manner yet was a mass of nerves before the big games. Times, Sunday Times
  • The technological model of this system adoption B/S, provided exuberant sources of date, and used ASP.
  • She shares this sequestered spot with her cartoonist husband, Bob, and their two enormous, exuberant dogs.
  • Whether we'll get back to what I call exuberant of the past, I don't know. Comerica Incorporated CEO Discusses Q4 2010 Earnings Call Transcript - Seeking Alpha
  • And it's all thanks to one exuberant, idealistic man -- Doug Taylor, executive pastry chef at the Batali-Bastianich Hospitality Group's three Las Vegas restaurants: B & B, Carnevino, and Enoteca San Marco. Kerry Trueman: Meet Mario Batali's Las Vegas Visionary
  • It's fine to be exuberant when you are on the right stride but danger lurks when you are not. Times, Sunday Times
  • His book is an exuberant celebration of the efforts to compile information through the ages. Times, Sunday Times
  • CoffeeGeek: what you'd expect, a nanopublishing venture slavishly devoted to discussing the minutae of the bean in mind-numbing, exuberant detail. Boing Boing: May 11, 2003 - May 17, 2003 Archives
  • However, to those uninitiated into Clive's plans and untouched by his exuberant enthusiasm, there seems to be a bit of a problem.
  • Suddenly, he was interrupted by a big, exuberant kiss - from his wife, Mary, who had dashed from the side of Grand Av. Heroes or Villains?
  • There are myriad greens in this landscape but in winter the new growth brings forth a richer than rich green - a vibrant, exuberant, vivid celebration of green.
  • I like its tomatoes and its exuberant driving style. Times, Sunday Times
  • Immediately after a revolution or a dramatic change of government there are some exuberant examples of patriotic art.
  • This type of behaviour will extend into the exuberantly fertile genteel, resulting in an explosion in demand for pre-teen notes of recognition.
  • We left him there, his head still spinning with thoughts of Minnie, and her delightful, exuberant girlishness.
  • Local authorities have reported a sharp increase in noise complaints about overexuberant congregations. Times, Sunday Times
  • Think of Mamie Eisenhower's exuberant pink frocks in the can-do post-War '50s; Rosalynnn Carter's recycled gown in the down-in-the-dumps' 70s, Jackie Kennedy regalness in the everything-is-possible '60s. Stylelist Feeds
  • As the exuberant Ford encores with the roistering folk-punk of Nothing at All and his acerbic signature tune, Cheer Up (You Miserable Fuck), it's clear that he is an artist deserving of a far wider audience. David Ford
  • The Last To Know is the most exuberant track, helped by a vibrant horn section and a catchy melody.
  • You'll hear rather than see the unassuming clank of diesel locos sliding in and out of Newton Dale and the more exuberant klaxon and puff, puff, puff of the steam trains.
  • Outside on the streets the water hydrants dribbled miserably after entertaining shrieking Hispanic kids all day long in exuberant gushes.
  • Their chests swelled with pride as they saluted the general, did an about-face, and marched away exuberantly.
  • Sadly, Shaolin Soccer in no way lives up to the wagonload of Hong Kong Film awards and exuberant internet praise heaped upon it.
  • The folk dances were a bit bouncy, rather than earthbound, but done with exuberant energy.
  • It is vital, that their opponents do not become overexuberant. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Lady Boys of Bangkok, or the sound of them and their audience at least, rising exuberantly from the theatre next door to contend with the wisdom of the later panelists: a vaguely fantastical backdrop to musings on fantasy. Brian Ruckley · Alt.Fiction 2008: Getting There, Being There, Getting Back
  • We left him there, his head still spinning with thoughts of Minnie, and her delightful, exuberant girlishness.
  • the exuberantly baroque decoration of the church
  • Chavez and his cronies live in exuberant luxury, they love their privileges, ferraris and desinger clothing. Matthew Yglesias » Hugo Chavez, Inflation Hawk
  • He was most capital company, rolling out perpetual jokes and _calembour_, and bubbling over with exuberant _joie de vivre_. Here, There and Everywhere
  • Their Arab legionnaires galloped behind, firing their rifles exuberantly into the sky like extras in a Beau Geste film.
  • He is an exuberant young man full of energy.
  • Fun-loving, spirited, humorous and attracted to outdoor amour, be warned that these high energy, exuberant wooers set a strapping pace.
  • The top drawers are rounded on the front, as they are on others of Stahl's chests, and the backboard is exuberantly shaped to resemble breaking waves, typical of Soap Hollow chests.
  • The evergreen chanteuse romps like a woman a quarter her age through an exuberant programme of pop and musical hits.
  • At the ripe age of 39, this exuberant Brazilian choreographer has rapidly become a major player in the cultural landscape of her native country.
  • Seth is an exuberant young man, rather socially awkward, and a bit of a wise aleck.
  • I'll leave you with a funny Emily quote (she has a new obsession with the word exuberant): PARENTAL ADVISORY WARNING: excessive bitching
  • It featured exuberant decorative patterns, designs in the brickwork and wooden attachments.
  • For the first half of 2009 he appeared confused, determined to mask his exuberant personality as a joker and mimic with a more serious and reserved approach. Times, Sunday Times
  • The exuberant, fluffy result is one of Allen's lightest, airiest, silliest, and most fun concoctions. Archive 2008-08-01
  • Some reflect the neo-expressionism of the Neue Wilde, as in an exuberant, graffiti-esque 1983 Veit Hofmann poster with playfully crossed-out dates and primitive markings, or Angela Hampel's boldly feminist images of androgynous women, such as a punk Cassandra. The Flicker of Art Through Tyranny
  • Western societies might live to regret an overexuberant embrace of this counterrational viewpoint, but for now it rides high. Times, Sunday Times
  • He has given more exuberant performances but his influence was undeniable. Times, Sunday Times
  • His father had staked him some money to buy a limited partnership in Mostly Bull when the firm was still a calfling during the exuberant days when the Insecurity business was actually making money for some people.
  • We hope they will have the farsightedness to see past the exuberant accolades that are fleetingly bestowed upon them.
  • It's fine to be exuberant when you are on the right stride but danger lurks when you are not. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is reported that up to 25,000 exuberant lindy hoppers will be there, involved in an orgy of synchronised happiness.
  • Banana plantations and chestnut orchards compete for space with exuberant pines. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their chests swelled with pride as they saluted the general, did an about-face, and marched away exuberantly.
  • Aidan called exuberantly as he jogged half a step ahead of Coglin. Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead
  • He was a bit exuberant today but he was stuck in second gear. Times, Sunday Times
  • As a father of four boys, some of them rather exuberant, I have carefully chosen elementary schools for my sons where the effects are somewhat ameliorated.
  • One of the most wonderful and exotic sights on Jomtien Beach in those days was when young, exuberant mahouts would take their elephants down to the seashore and wade in and go swimming.
  • Both are exuberant riots of colour, from the palest avocado to looming midnight blues, with great carefree splodges of paint and taught, pacy lines that spiral into little whirlwinds of detail.
  • It epitomises the exuberant way they have of expressing candidness and their heartfelt passion for music.
  • He is noted for his exuberant style and previously caused uproar by boiling lobsters live on the show. Times, Sunday Times
  • His exuberant style and strong narrative add to his creative substance.
  • They were labelled exuberantly, ‘Butifull Toledo steel works, mad only in San Juan’, and it was not for tourists to enquire how Toledo steel came to be made only in San Juan, or where were the foundries and workshops necessarily implied. Tour de Force
  • In these cases, owing to the non-development of the internodes, the nascent leaves are closely packed, and the conditions for adhesion are favorable, but in most of the so-called cases of adhesion of leaf to leaf by the surface, a preferable explanation is afforded either by an exuberant development (hypertrophy) or by chorisis (see sections on those subjects). Vegetable Teratology An Account of the Principal Deviations from the Usual Construction of Plants
  • No matter how shy or eccentric you are, there will be people who understand you or who make you look exuberant and suave by contrast. Times, Sunday Times
  • There's something about their exuberant cheesiness that, quite frankly, disgusts me.
  • She had hugged him exuberantly and invited him to dinner the next day.
  • His hair sprouts upwards from his head and his speech is exuberant, his voice feathery and light, and there is an airiness to him that contradicts the expectation of the marble toughness required to succeed in business.
  • Always bitterly exuberant, you see life as a pink spathe swathing a yellow spadix.
  • He has given more exuberant performances but his influence was undeniable. Times, Sunday Times
  • The students exuberantly shot out questions and he sat there answering them in equal spirit.
  • Column and pilaster shafts are beige botticino marble while capitals and entablatures are painted plaster.schafphoto. com Like the shrine, the focus is again on a baldachin - here, with swirling bronze Solomonic columns and an exuberant superstructure inspired by Bernini's baldachin at St. Peter's. Holy Architecture
  • I heartily adored you, delighting in your company and relishing your exuberant sense of humor.
  • The quietness doesn't promise the coming of an exuberant crowd.
  • When the two travellers entered the hut, the old couple beamed with genuine exuberant happiness.
  • He began as an exuberant young pup setting teen hearts aflutter with his homely good looks.
  • Best Mate is not a horse who draws gasps of astonishment with an exuberant leap or a sudden blinding burst.
  • The crowd followed us to the boat, and shouted and waved in exuberant Papuan style as we sailed away; while the Arabs, incongruous amid their surroundings – gay for the day in long white flowing robes, broidered vests, and bright-coloured turbans – stood on the very edge, watching us as far as they could see us, with evident sadness that their short intercourse with the outer world had already ended. Insulinde: Experiences of a Naturalist's Wife in the Eastern Archipelago
  • He didn't direct "It's a Wonderful Life," but he lived one, a life of zestful achievement and exuberant friendship that seldom took him far from New York, the city he used, in all its gritty glory, as his back lot for such films as "Dog Day Afternoon," "Serpico" and "Prince of the City. The Lasting Legacy Of Sidney Lumet
  • The local message board for area sysops was a pretty busy place and one of the younger sysops was especially exuberant.
  • His poetry appears in exuberant colours and only rarely takes on the character of melodious music; but it is all the more plastic in the creation of forms suited to expressing feelings and ideas. Nobel Prize in Literature 1901 - Presentation Speech
  • His vigorous will seemed to dominate over the whole household; he would drag me out peremptorily for what he called wholesome exercise, which meant long, scrambling walks, which sent me home with tingling pulses and exuberant spirits, until the atmosphere of the sick room moderated and subdued them again. Esther : a book for girls
  • Picasso's pots, pitchers, and platters are exuberantly modern, not only in their late Surrealist morphological fluidity, but also in their rapport with the Duchampian readymade.
  • The exhibition had to be closed after four days because of the injuries caused by exuberant and energetic participation. Times, Sunday Times
  • The 16-year-old Canadian turned a relatively oblivious crowd into exuberant fans with his incredible stage show.
  • It tells the stories of three families of different culture in the same borough of London and is an exuberant read.
  • They smiled exuberantly while mud clung to their hair in clumps, lined the crevices of their ears, nostrils, the rims of their helmets.
  • They're coveted by a generation too young to remember the designer's heyday, when she was one of the brightest stars in the fashion firmament, turning out exuberant, fantastical creations.
  • Sometimes he is exuberant and exciting. Christianity Today
  • Both are exuberant riots of colour, from the palest avocado to looming midnight blues, with great carefree splodges of paint and taught, pacy lines that spiral into little whirlwinds of detail.
  • No matter how shy or eccentric you are, there will be people who understand you or who make you look exuberant and suave by contrast. Times, Sunday Times
  • They don't even try to fit in with the younger, more exuberant and well-dressed crowd.
  • Surreal lamppost sculptures, "Composition Exubérante de Réverbères Hybrides," by Niçois artists Pascal Pinaud and Stéphane Magnin, are true to their name -- in English, exuberant hybrid streetlamps -- and light up the university quarter of Saint-Jean d'Angely. Tram Transports City of Nice with Art
  • She was in her usual exuberant mood.
  • Column and pilaster shafts are beige botticino marble while capitals and entablatures are painted plaster.schafphoto. com Like the shrine, the focus is again on a baldachin - here, with swirling bronze Solomonic columns and an exuberant superstructure inspired by Bernini's baldachin at St. Peter's. Holy Architecture
  • An evening of freewheeling and exuberant music is on offer in Basingstoke tomorrow night.
  • Her laugh was a gleeful, exuberant shout, her deep voice making it almost masculine.
  • Their fourth album is their most fully realised, an exuberant affair with grand arrangements with a distinct whiff of salty sea air. The Sun
  • Kim was an exuberant, charismatic woman who emanated a warmth and generosity that was instantly recognizable.
  • They went out of the pavilion hand in hand, and on through the sunshine they strolled, swinging hands gaily, reacting exuberantly from the week of deadening toil. CHAPTER II
  • Rows of polystyrene heads, faceless but exuberantly bewigged, stare eyelessly down from shelves. Times, Sunday Times
  • She was normally exuberant and excited to be seeing him at the end of a long, hard day.
  • There comes a definitive moment at the end of every Super Bowl when exuberant and downcast fans alike know when to shut off the TV, or at least change the channel.
  • It's exuberant, trashy and filled with hummable musical numbers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Rather, it typically involves acts of aggression towards players and officials, or over-exuberant celebratory activity including the vandalism of property.
  • Glyndebourne has an exuberant young neighbour. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her works are exuberant, full of colour, look nice on walls and make people feel happy. Times, Sunday Times
  • In his fleece-lined leather flight suit and dashing silk scarf, Dad epitomized exuberant youth and boundless vitality.
  • The single Two Months Off is glorious, a mass of shifting electronic textures and exuberant, repetitious vocals.
  • The mood of the crowd was very cheerful and exuberant.
  • Everyone looked fit and well and appeared to be in supremely good health as well as exuberant and excited mood.
  • She discovered that I didn't revert to ballet steps, but with primitive glee made wild, exuberant jumps when we danced to Offenbach's Gaite Parisienne.
  • His style is clear and exuberant, his opinions, whether we agree with them or not, are expressed forcefully, often with humour and a little gentle malice.
  • The Secret Service says it questioned and released an "overexuberant" fan of President Barack Obama who had tossed a paperback book near the president at a Philadelphia rally on Sunday.
  • Tina Wilkinson's striking vocals dart over the aggressive and exuberant title track with charismatic panache.
  • It's slow, but unhesitating, and it's bright not exuberant.
  • He played rugby in the most exuberant and abrasive manner yet was a mass of nerves before the big games. Times, Sunday Times
  • Replacing exuberant floral country chintz and contrasting piping, the sedate slipcovers produced instant calm - a comfort zone for Bob.
  • The rococo style is characterized by exuberant decoration and ornament frequently based on such natural motifs as shells, rocks, flowers, and leaves.
  • Highway patrol cars, camouflaged like scorpions against the desert, wait to ambush overexuberant drivers. Times, Sunday Times
  • But hypomania, which is also a symptom of the disorder, is a high-energy state in which a person feels exuberant but hasn't lost his or her grip on reality. Bipolar Disorder: 10 Subtle Signs
  • Yet it was seldom heavy or pompous, for it excelled also in a richly complex stage imagery, and in entertaining touches of inventive humour and exuberant burlesque. Times, Sunday Times
  • His eyes glint and dart with mischief, his gestures are as exuberant as his rhetorical flourishes.
  • His book is an exuberant celebration of the efforts to compile information through the ages. Times, Sunday Times
  • The chief changes come in Chapters Six and Seven of Trimalchio, and the long, late chapter, as Gatsby and Nick sit by the open French windows in Gatsby's house, the dawn after Myrtle's killing, when Gatsby breaks out "exuberantly": "I'll tell you everything. Fitzgerald's 'Radiant World'
  • Having designed a center that revels in the exuberant complexities of Columbus Circle, Time Warner's architects stint on the details.
  • Both return to early quartos of the plays in question, bypassing Jonson's magisterial - perhaps too magisterial - reworkings of them in his 1616 Folio: the plays that emerge are fresh, exuberant, and distinctly unfamiliar.
  • Lively and exuberant, it teased him to be identified. Somewhere East of Life
  • The frieze, where of old would prance an exuberant processional of gods, is, in this case, bare of decoration, but upon the epistyle is written in simple, stern letters the word, "EUSTON. The Scotch Express
  • You'll hear rather than see the unassuming clank of diesel locos sliding in and out of Newton Dale and the more exuberant klaxon and puff, puff, puff of the steam trains.
  • An exuberant Bertelli danced, sang and cavorted among the huge throng at the Prada camp.
  • And he exuberantly flung his arms wide and his head back as he hurled himself into the mood. The Sun
  • In the second part of Henry IV Barrit's Falstaff, his face pocked with sores and his body decaying, became a more grotesque, more disturbing but also more exuberant figure.
  • Those who enjoy dinner plate sized dahlias, or even beds of exuberantly increasing sweet woodruff need not apply.
  • I imagine him gesturing like an exuberant host over a verdant landscape that stretches farther than the eye can see. Christianity Today
  • ‘Buffy!’ she squealed, in an exuberant pleasure he knew to be genuine, if with no more depth than a sheet of onionskin.’
  • Mary Tyler Moore looked wonderful, and the hat toss was exactly the right exuberant gesture.
  • A chorus of spring peepers was so deafening it nearly drowned out the chorus frogs, whose exuberant songs nearly drowned out a lone, early-bird bullfrog.
  • She gave an exuberant account of the party.
  • The creators of Ice Age trade glaciers for altogether warmer climes in this exuberant animation about a bird who needs to learn to spread his wings. Times, Sunday Times
  • Fisticuffs, drinking, and also mockery of power-holding elders were expressions of the exuberant energy of the young.

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