How To Use Pathos In A Sentence

  • It's conceptual art with pathos! Times, Sunday Times
  • For some, the inexorable march of years and the pathos of mortality bring an inward, deep resentment. Christianity Today
  • Dickens'works are also characterized by a mingling of humor and pathos.
  • Not only are they pushing the boundaries of irreverence, which is hilarious, but it is grounded in this humanity, this pain, this pathos, that goes beyond what we think of as comedy. USATODAY.com News
  • Beyond this pathos concerning the relation of political and theological liberalism, we encounter another paradox. The Times Literary Supplement
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  • As a result of this self-willed discipline, I had to often trade off drama for realism, like in "Maalishwalla," where I (initially) had a dramatic cinematographic ending and then changed it to one of actual pathos. Anis Shivani: 'Breathless In Bombay' Author Murzban Shroff Reflects On The Real Mumbai: Exclusive Interview
  • In any case, it fully confirms it as concerns one essential point, what I have called the contingent nature of society and the attendant pathos.
  • Here at last we have all the drama, tragedy, pathos and humour those courtroom appearances produced.
  • He has pathos without sentimentality, humour without guile and infinite sympathy. Times, Sunday Times
  • Lesser fly-on-the-wall programmes would have ladled the pathos on with a shovel but there's an unfussy, understated humanity here. TV highlights 29/06/2011: Killer Tigers | Timeshift: Hotel Deluxe | Finding Amelia | The Apprentice | Afghanistan: The Battle For Helmand | 24 Hours in A&E
  • However, as dark films go, this one lacked the depth of despair and pathos usually achieved.
  • This forced, violent, alembicated style is most abhorrent to me; it can’t be helped; the note was struck years ago on the Janet Nicoll, and has to be maintained somehow; and I can only hope the intrinsic horror and pathos, and a kind of fierce glow of colour there is to it, and the surely remarkable wealth of striking incident, may guide our little shallop into port. Vailima Letters
  • [Greek: pathos] and [Greek: anastasis] of Christ, has nothing to say, to the communities to which he writes, about the forgiveness of sin. History of Dogma, Volume 1 (of 7)
  • There is in these stories a curious mixture of humour, insight and pathos, with here and there a dash of grimness and a sprinkling of that charming irrelevancy which is of the essence of true humour. Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 101, August 29, 1891
  • Its collection of entwined stories is brilliantly constructed, moving between satirical comedy and unforced pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • Was his extravagant creative production an apotropaic ritual that ultimately failed in its aim, or did the procession of his creature, so ferocious, but with a tinge of pathos to it, prove somehow overwhelming for him?
  • His alternation of horizontals and verticals plays like a musician's notes; each arrangement is a complex, nuanced reflection of universal and personal pathos and always more than the sum of its parts.
  • It's all complemented with the serious pathos of Hattori's sickly and melancholy wife and naturally the full-tilt violence with numberless ruffians and no-account villains feeling Zatoichi's cold steel.
  • Its collection of entwined stories is brilliantly constructed, moving between satirical comedy and unforced pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • I have tried sarcasm, pathos, statistics, rude and crass personal ad hominem attacks, but they don't see.", he said to himself as he rose over the esker and spotted the village as dusk creeped forward. "Americans Like Big Government: They just don't really know it yet."
  • The vivid pictorialism of his descriptions is balanced by a narrative that is capable of intense pathos. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Macarthy – switching from truculence to triumphalism as fast as the cockiest small boy; buckling a fine swash for the children in the audience; offering adult eyes a suggestion of pathos, of knowing that he is trapped in a dream yet still bewitched by its promise of "fun" – certainly has something to crow about. Peter Pan – review
  • Their dialogue is gauche at times, but that is part of the realism that underpins the film 's wistful pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • Simple chords, restrained riffs and quiet imagery lead to just a perfect pathos running through each and every song.
  • It is comparatively easy to write about deprivation - to record the pathos of living in misery.
  • And Hall, usually so merry, could outfoot them all when he once got started on the cosmic pathos of religion and the gibbering anthropomorphisms of those who loved not to die. CHAPTER IX
  • When I say we were all cosmopolitans, I'm not thinking of forced emigration, the theme of so much of our cultural pathos.
  • They present a perfect blend of pathos, wonder, derision, fear, disgust and fury.
  • Most people need drama, excitement, pathos, catharsis - on some level their emotions have to connect with their minds in order to understand.
  • Herzog subtly chronicles this mighty, pathos-laden struggle, treating it with the seriousness it deserves without airbrushing its blind moments or gestures of excess.
  • Guillory is obviously ready to understand the positing power of language as simply one more theme by means of which rhetorical reading generates and savors the pathos of non-human agency, but his swerve away from de Man's thematization of the performative may be taken as symptomatic of his desire to purge the theory of elements that resist being returned to cognition, and thence to self and the pedagogue's charisma, and thence to a social world. Professing Literature: John Guillory's Misreading of Paul de Man
  • It's a comic-relief part, but situated in a suitably worthy backdrop, and it affords the actress big moments of pathos as well.
  • Lesser fly-on-the-wall programmes would have ladled the pathos on with a shovel but there's an unfussy, understated humanity here. TV highlights 29/06/2011: Killer Tigers | Timeshift: Hotel Deluxe | Finding Amelia | The Apprentice | Afghanistan: The Battle For Helmand | 24 Hours in A&E
  • His work combines a wry humour with pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • The pathos is sweet, deep and genuine; tender, simple and true, utterly unlike much of our modern tinsel. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Featuring an ageing Las Vegas showgirl, brilliantly performed by Nadine Tyson, it mixed camp style and pathos with the glitz and energy of showbiz.
  • But "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" discovers a new emotion: what you'd have to call interspecies pathos. The New Yorker
  • And yet this theme is underlaid with an emotion so vital, the emotion of a wild free life, and invested with a pathos so poignant of the quick passing of all good things, that no understanding heart can but be profoundly moved by that pathos and racily rejoiced at that wildness. Irish Plays and Playwrights
  • Remembering these things the idle young "flatty" turned and looked at the green-coated and sunken-shouldered figure, touched into some rough pity by the wordless pathos of an existence which seemed without aim or reason. Never-Fail Blake
  • He gives humanity and pathos to a character that a lesser actor might turn into a complete buffoon.
  • The course of this pair's friendship has sharp pathos amid the film 's studied eccentricity. Times, Sunday Times
  • He has a genius for creating emotional drama that is devoid of pathos.
  • They present a perfect blend of pathos, wonder, derision, fear, disgust and fury.
  • His comfortableness in the persona brings us that much closer to his pathos.
  • It has it all: pathos, hamartia and not a little comedy. Times, Sunday Times
  • The absence of the worker, through illness or death is sufficient to touch the prosiest workshop and tools with the hues of pathos, and it was with a swelling bosom that Lady Constantine passed through this arena of his youthful activities to the little chamber where he lay. Two on a Tower
  • There is a real pathos running through the whole story. Times, Sunday Times
  • It had moments of genuine hilarity, and genuine pathos.
  • But in place of Hardy's pathos is a perverse little smile that's blessedly contagious. 'Tamara' And 'Funny Story': Uneasy, But Amusing
  • In other words, the cross is no more than Jesus identifying with our suffering, sharing in the pathos of it.
  • It was a beautiful mixture of humour and pathos. The Sun
  • Whose bright idea was it to call a magazine something plaintive and filled with pathos? Times, Sunday Times
  • It is the one great weakness of Dickens as a great writer, that he did try to make that sudden sadness, that abrupt pity, which we call pathos, a thing quite obvious, infectious, public, as if it were journalism or the measles. Appreciations and Criticisms of the Works of Charles Dickens
  • The pathos of the scene against the background of Christmas cheer gives the film an unusual power.
  • Minakakis' passionate, incendiary delivery provided tangible pathos to the band's awe-inspiring but detached musicianship.
  • A beautifully judged film that expertly balances humour and pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • _Andante affettuoso_ -- moderately slow, and with tenderness and pathos. Music Notation and Terminology
  • Sometimes, in momentary reaction from the pent-up feelings of indignation and revolt, which were chronic with me during my imprisonments, I could have laughed out loud at the imbecility and pathos of human fallibility, that civilised (?) educated beings could continue such processes by way of ridding themselves from the dangers and active harmfulness of crime. Prisons and Prisoners: Some Personal Experiences
  • It's a flagrant bit of pathos, but without all that emoting and melancholy sprinkled throughout the story, the movie would regrettably fall apart and wind up as just another ruthless vampire B-movie. Rabid Rewind: Daybreakers
  • This is a king visibly burdened by the weight of his crown, who evokes real pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • As this cloistered, claustrophobic existence begins to give way to outside pressure, the pathos of Lamb and Doggo's stories is made pitifully real.
  • This is a king visibly burdened by the weight of his crown, who evokes real pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • Its humour and its pathos are both heavy-handed, but its exuberance carries it along. Times, Sunday Times
  • “A contrived sense of guiltiness,” wrote analyst Stephen Mitchell, “can serve as a psychological defense against a more genuine sense of pathos or sadness for oneself.” THE HUSBANDS AND WIVES CLUB
  • Ishiguro of course has always made a speciality of self-deceiving and emotionally constipated narrators, and Kath is no exception - but this serves to make the true pathos of the story hit home even harder. Questions About Humanity
  • Delight in the boy can only be sharpened by the pathos and irony of his condition of becomingness.
  • It's a juggling act between funny and grim For me the comedy and pathos is all intertwined. Times, Sunday Times
  • But it was not likely that he had reference to the kind of anguish that comes with destitution, that is so endlessly bitter and cruel, and yet so sordid and petty, so ugly, so humiliating -- unredeemed by the slightest touch of dignity or even of pathos. The Jungle
  • It was film noir one week, sentimental whimsy the next, sharp pathos the next, cheesecake the week after that.
  • Basically it's two hours of endless fun and hilarity capped off with about fifteen minutes of Baumbachian pathos and sincerity.
  • The play itself had some great lines of wit but also lines of great pathos.
  • The never-ending show of contrition, pathos, sadness and regret is more than reality drama.
  • We protested against the old manner of acting and against theatricality, against artificial pathos and declamation.
  • Comedians always seem to walk a tightrope between pathos and humour.
  • Known for the "dignity of movement and majesty of action" he brought to his acting, Wallack was nevertheless faulted for a lack of dramatic fervor and for an inability to sustain touching pathos. Cast and Characters
  • The term homeopathy comes from the Greek words homeo, meaning similar, and pathos, meaning suffering or disease. Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
  • The story of her recovery is ripe with drama and pathos.
  • He writes plays of incomparable depth and breadth, touching every chord of humour, tragedy and pathos; certain rather elaborate poems of a precieux type, and strange sonnets, revealing a singular poignancy of unconventional feelings. The Upton Letters
  • As was the case with Socrates, philosophy has sought to peel itself away from sophism by admitting to its ignorance, as if unknowing were a pathos to be confessed.
  • Situated on the steps leading from ground floor to the mezzanine, entitled Artist's Breath, the work is infused with pathos and mystery.
  • All the same, Polanski ably blends comedy and pathos in his portrayal of the nervous nebbish Trelkovsky, which is important since he's in every scene. -
  • The postmodern emphasis on sublimity has tended to stress the sublime as an unreachable beyond, contemplation of which induces a pathos of finitude in any human subject.
  • The subjects are full of charm, humour, pathos and a kind of triumphant dignity. Times, Sunday Times
  • He also assesses critically the corrosive ideology of transient troth and individual gratification that has driven a good deal of this contemporary pathos.
  • He leavens the show's political urgency with big doses of humor as well as a theatrical flamboyance that undercuts the pathos and the politics.
  • They dwelt with pathos upon those sacred rites desecrated by these "unsanctified" "young men" in their "miserable pamphlet. The Emancipation of Massachusetts
  • But the beauty of the descriptions in _Evangeline_ and the pathos -- somewhat too drawn out -- of the story made it dear to a multitude of readers who cared nothing about the technical disputes of Poe and other critics as to whether or not Longfellow's lines were sufficiently "spondaic" to truthfully represent the quantitative hexameters of Homer and Vergil. Brief History of English and American Literature
  • Each chapter is named after a food, and a memory is explored through each dish, with a heavy emphasis on Jewish humour and just a sprinkle of pathos.
  • Of all his poems, however, the loveliest and best is a little simple song, _There was a time when I was very little_, which every Dane, high or low, knows by heart, and which is matchless in its simplicity and pathos. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 3, Part 1, Slice 2 "Baconthorpe" to "Bankruptcy"
  • Secrets & Lies," is an expert at the kind of clammy pathos that epitomizes Gladys at her most trying. NYT > Home Page
  • The page-count also gives manga artists room to unfold their stories, shaking the last driblets of pathos from the often-overripe melodrama.
  • But you must excuse me, my insufficient young lecturer, if I yawn over your imperfect sentences, your repeated phrases, your false pathos, your drawlings and denouncings, your humming and hawing, your ohing and ahing, your black gloves and your white handkerchief. Barchester Towers
  • Witness the pathos of the nation's first temple in its largest metropolis: a president, unencumbered by elections, wedded to perennial power locked in legal combat with a shadow board of trustees bent on her ouster.
  • Part of the pathos of Durcan's Richelieu lies in his obsessive awareness that if he ‘drops’ the talismanic biretta / crown, the game will be up and the show will be over.
  • There is a touch of pathos in the picture of the prim, methodistical English lady, who hated the dirt and slovenliness of her husband's people, was shocked at their jovial ways and free talk, looked upon all Papists as connections of Antichrist, and hoped for the salvation of mankind through the form of religion patronised by Little Memoirs of the Nineteenth Century
  • Sides expertly creates texture by weaving into his double narrative some more personal, more emotional vignettes that add color and pathos.
  • The blend of pathos and grandeur in the image might even be said to do justice to its subject.
  • And Linda Marlowe brings an incredible range of emotion, pathos and wit to a character bursting with energy and passion that is unrequited by her husband.
  • Locked inside this menagerie of failed comic bits are attempts at real anger, sadness, pathos, broad sight gags and genuine rock and roll metal moves.
  • It should be icky and yucky, but actually it's got bags of fun and loads of laughs, with a very cutely judged moment of pathos as Stuart has to drive home from school on his own in his little roadster, because no human kid wants to play with him.
  • The poise and pathos of the music remains the same, but its as if it's passed into another language.
  • The author's energetic, often tongue-in-cheek prose style, together with his ability to blend roguish satire, pathos, and picturesque description, had a profound influence upon the popular culture of his day.
  • There's a pathos in his performance which he never lets slide into sentimentality.
  • These, too, are clearly concerned with the deeper interests and regards of private life; they carry a homefelt energy and pathos, such as argue them to have had a far other origin than in trials of art; they speak of compelled absences from the object that inspired them, and are charged with regrets and confessions, such as could only have sprung from the Poet's own breast: Shakespeare His Life Art And Characters
  • There is pathos to be found in it in abundance, and images of love and great nobility of spirit.
  • The play is daring enough to address the story's deep pathos and also doesn't stint on the ugly emotional and intellectual subtext built into every similar family horror story.
  • When I'm called unprintable names merely for expressing my skepticism about the relevance of Darwin's theory to the practice of medicine, I've already won the 'ethos' and 'pathos' skirmishes. Evolution News & Views
  • Filled with pathos and grandeur, they demand to be seen in the flesh.
  • Slug's reputation, which Atmosphere's media coverage has eagerly perpetuated, is one of personal drama and pathos. Interview: Slug of Atmosphere (Music (For Robots))
  • With touching pathos he described the pangs of hunger.
  • It's tempting to dismiss them altogether as pushovers, but I also sympathize with their outsider pathos.
  • Yet the female element in Miami Blues brings an unlikely touch of humour and pathos. The Times Literary Supplement
  • So long as we have human hearts and await human destinies, so long as we are alive to the pathos, the dignity, the comedy of human life, so long shall we continue to rank above the philosopher, higher than the politician, the great artist, be he called dramatist or historian, who makes us conscious of the divine movement of events, and of our fathers who were before us. Obiter Dicta
  • It's a neatly judged mix of high comedy and pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • At the very least, he needs to have some pathos to show one or two human qualities.
  • Prep — a real novel, not the result of a sales-team brainstorm — derives much of its pathos from the fact that the main character is never sure whether the boy she loves so much, and has had so many sexual encounters with, might actually constitute that magical, bygone character: her “boyfriend.” What Girls Want
  • The pathos in the play struck the small group, which watched it with rapt attention.
  • No other show has sought, as its central mission, to mine comedy and pathos from the experience of aging baby boomers. September 2006
  • Humour pathos in equal measures. The Sun
  • He manages to touch on the book's humor, its pathos, why it isn't "guilty of 'cultural imbalance,'" and the debate still going on about the significance of the Indian Rebellion of 1857 (for more on the rebellion — or mutiny, or "first war of independence" — see William Dalrympole's history The Last Mughal.) Awards and honors
  • Expertly juggling pathos and humour, Baumbach has created a queasy tug-of-war between surface civility and subterranean resentment.
  • Italian rabble, in another the improvisatore, by the pathos of his story, and the persuasive sensibility of his strains, was holding the attention of his auditors, as in the bands of magic. The Italian
  • Morrison nails the essential pathos from the get go. Archive 2006-02-01
  • Her work goes beyond pathos, and whilst it seems paradoxical to speak about beauty, or even to use an oxymoron like ‘terrible beauty’, her work has a disquieting elegance and poise.
  • The Hebrew word translated as “compassion,” rahamim, is related to rehem, “womb,” and is especially suitable for evoking maternal pathos. Two Prostitutes: Bible.
  • Every now and again they realize that they're not so different after all and there is a moment of pathos, broken by Ian Save farting, burping or doing something else crude.
  • He arranges a side-by-side comparison of Oedipus' irony and pathos with the wildness of his passion.
  • Taking full advantage, he produced an entire cliché-defying book — one that despite a built-in pathos had an overwhelmingly prankish tone. A Close Read
  • His work combines a wry humour with pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • The film hit all the notes from comedy to pathos and sharpened your hearing as it did so. Times, Sunday Times
  • Nevertheless, Plenderleith injects genuine pathos into his tales that, on the whole, are affiliated to the great game.
  • This gives clear expression to Durkheim's pathos, his sense of the inescapable fragility of society.
  • His work combines a wry humour with pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • Thus the book, in the oldest of journalistic traditions, is "A True Confession" given majesty by the gigantic sums of money expended upon it by Doubleday and Hollywood; pathos by Talese's indication in interviews that he is uncertain how Mr.. Talese will react to public discussion of what Talese and "Talese" got up to; and absurdity by the last lines of the book in which Talese says that "Talese" returned to his childhood haunts in New Jersey, stripped his clothes off in a nudist colony on the shores of the Great Egg Harbor River and, regarded by bourgeois mariners, "looked back," with Mr. P presumably pendent and unashamed. Mr. P, Mrs. V, and Mr. T
  • Nevertheless, Plenderleith injects genuine pathos into his tales that, on the whole, are affiliated to the great game.
  • But the beauty of the descriptions in _Evangeline_ and the pathos -- somewhat too drawn out -- of the story made it dear to a multitude of readers who cared nothing about the technical disputes of Poe and other critics as to whether or not Longfellow's lines were sufficiently "spondaic" to represent truthfully the quantitative hexameters of Homer and Vergil. Initial Studies in American Letters
  • All of those outbursts of passion and pathos are mostly showmanship, and it is truly amazing how easily these individuals can break off an attachment or relationship without shedding a tear.
  • The humour is broad and robust, but underneath the comedy is delicately balanced with pathos.
  • He described an initial, short-lasting episode of motor symptoms characterized by immobility, posturing, and waxy flexibility that ended in a hyperkinetic state; a second stage of melancholia often with stupor; a third stage of “exaltation and rapid and pressured speech” “a certain pathos-filled ‘ecstasy’ this entrains a compulsion to talk in oratorical style”; and, finally, after recurrent exacerbations and remissions of states of passivity and exaltation, an end stage of dementia. The Neuropsychiatric Guide to Modern Everyday Psychiatry
  • There was pathos in the evocatively dovetailed dialogues with the strings; left-hand chords emerged inconspicuously from tuttis, the melody poised evanescently above.
  • ‘Steinbeck's potent blend of empathy and moral outrage was perfectly matched by the photographs of Dorothea Lange, who had caught the whole saga with her camera - the tents, the jalopies, the bindlestiffs, the pathos and courage of uprooted mothers and children. ‘
  • Certainly, it has moments of the most intense drama and pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • For some, the inexorable march of years and the pathos of mortality bring an inward, deep resentment. Christianity Today
  • Menand suggests that the author's avoidance of such metaphysical pathos was what made much of his writing awkward and dry.
  • His observations would not have the poignancy they do, there would not be the tragedy or pathos he leaves as a ghost after his poem if the assumptions of materialism were not juxtaposed with his intuitions of immateriality. The Poet Thomas Hardy « Unknowing
  • This play strikes a balance between comedy and pathos which rings true of life's mixed blessings.
  • He drew tears from them with the pathos of his picture of the bereaved widow Mabey and her three starving, destitute children -- "orphaned to avenge the death of a pheasant" -- and the bereaved mother of that M. de Vilmorin, a student of Rennes, known here to many of them, who had met his death in a noble endeavour to champion the cause of an esurient member of their afflicted order. Scaramouche
  • Full of wisdom, humour and pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • This is a king visibly burdened by the weight of his crown, who evokes real pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • Beyond this pathos concerning the relation of political and theological liberalism, we encounter another paradox. The Times Literary Supplement
  • A quiet, deep pathos surrounds the story of each Aboriginal language in its individual encounter with the modern world.
  • Although Canova made his name in the 1780s with heroic sculptures, it was the pathos and sentiment of his later pieces that so endeared him to a new generation of patrons.
  • He had an epicene beauty and his iconic character was the ‘thing in itself,’ comedy and pathos in the same figure.
  • Leda" is still one of my all-time favorite Rickert stories because, with its multiple POVs and formats, it displays the full range of her voice and her deftness in turning from sharp humor to pathos on a dime. Free Fiction Tuesday
  • It's a pretty basic assignment that asks only that one read fairly carefully; the key is that our culture tends to use Christic imagery that's either pathos-filled (the pieta and suffering/crucifixion imagery) or pastoral (the Jesus hanging out with little children or teaching imagery), while the poem's imagery is more heroic: Archive 2007-01-01
  • He combines the right amount of pathos, surrealism and humour to make the script work.
  • There is a touch of pathos in the picture of the prim, methodistical English lady, who hated the dirt and slovenliness of her husband's people, was shocked at their jovial ways and free talk, looked upon all Papists as connections of Antichrist, and hoped for the salvation of mankind through the form of religion patronised by Lady Huntington. Little Memoirs of the Nineteenth Century
  • There was about Hazlitt's wooing of Rachel the pathos which might distinguish the love affair of a Baptist angel and the hamadryad daughter of a Babayaga. Erik Dorn
  • : transients attempt to succumb to pathos, and triumph as sad clowns in velvet. there's an oxymoron or two in there, i think. and unseen in the infinite depths of black velvet is the weight of indelible viciousness shouldered by the garish penitents. or maybe Xtreme Hobo Stick. Hobo Stick
  • The nobility, sublimity, depth, pathos and exuberance of his concerts remain esoteric and reveal his scholarship, authority and authenticity.
  • With the sea flowing around it and finally quenching its flames, the simple cairn takes on a metaphorical significance linking mankind to the elemental with a real sense of pathos and mutability.
  • The splendour and the sordor is side by side, the audacity and the grubbiness, the pathos and bathos.
  • My central contention with regard to these writers 'pessimistic conceptions of freedom and their overall anti-modern pathos is that we ought to read them less as a separate current opposing the dominant narrative of nineteenth-century liberalism and its identification with rights, institutions, and the competitive individualism they foster than as a The Melancholic Gift: Freedom in Nineteenth-Century Philosophy and Fiction
  • The works often delve into the lives of the quirky, the eccentric, and the just plain daffy with comic precision and a certain amount of heartwarming pathos.
  • Some one who annoyed with her need for sympathy, who irritated with her shameless display of pathos.
  • But I kept thinking of how Oshii incorporates the right amount of pathos and comedy (yes, comedy - Oshii can be a funny guy when he wants to) into this futuristic techno-thriller and I kept coming back to this second film in the Patlabor franchise. MIND MELD: Anime Film Favorites (+ The Top 14 Anime Films of All Time!)
  • The term allopathy is derived from two Greek words: allo meaning opposite and pathos meaning suffering. Undefined
  • It had laughs and characters, and moments of what could almost be called pathos.
  • The longest story is so full of pathos that the joke lines elicit only sympathy, not laughter.
  • Bergman for once forgoes some of his more inaccessible leanings to tell a straight tale with great humour and pathos.
  • And one does not find in old people, whose memory of the past is clear, while their recollection of the present grows dim, any sense of pathos, but rather of pride and eagerness about recalling the minutest details of the vanished days. Joyous Gard
  • Regarded simply on its literary merits, there is nothing I know of to excel it in vividness, in pathos, in a burning earnestness, in a glow of conviction that fires from the heart to the heart.
  • Some one who annoyed with her need for sympathy, who irritated with her shameless display of pathos.
  • Not by them are impaired the dignity and infinite pathos of the Lost Cause.
  • If there is pathos in this, there is bathos in his apostrophe to the millipede, beginning "Poor sowbug!" and eulogizing the healing virtues of that odious little beast; of which he tells us to take "half a pound, putt 'em alive into a quart or two of wine," with saffron and other drugs, and take two ounces twice a day. Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works
  • As the Mantle of Mannanan enfolded her, no human words could tell the love, the exultation, the pathos, the wild passion of surrender, the music of divine and human life interblending. AE in the Irish Theosophist
  • We may doubt, in spite of one or two charming and graceful passages, whether Rousseau was of a nature to have any feeling for the pathos of infancy, the bright blank eye, the eager unpurposed straining of the hand, the many turns and changes in murmurings that yet can tell us nothing. Rousseau
  • His work combines a wry humour with pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • Antin's ability to imbue this bodiless amalgam with pathos is remarkable, a hint of what was to come in her various personae.
  • Though I am of course at odds with the Imperial government and the Force-persuasion of you and your Emperor, the insight into your actions is at once humanising and inducing of pathos. I Am Surrounded By Idiots
  • Albertson exaggerates the palsied contortions of his figures, imbuing them with a curious pathos.
  • It is a highly accomplished drawing, full of pathos and the grief of the artist.
  • The balance between splenetic, foul-mouthed comedy and real pathos is exquisitely maintained throughout, making 50/50 as funny and wise about impending death as Knocked Up was about impending birth. New film 50/50 shows that death can get a lot of laughs
  • It was another highly touching moment on an afternoon of huge pathos. The Sun
  • His talk took on a sort of autumnal richness of colour, and assumed a new width of range; he now used pathos as well as humour and generally brought in a story or apologue to lend variety to the entertainment. Oscar Wilde, His Life and Confessions
  • The pathos of the Satrean autodidact resides in the nature of his ‘appeal’, the gaze for which he stages his behaviour, the symbolic Big Other to which he submits his uncomplaining travail.
  • He revived but in part, and knowing that his moments were fast passing, he called the incensed captain, and before he had time to speak or strike, poured upon him such a flood of sublime and holy rebuke, rising to the grandeur of prophetic denunciation, and mingled with such melting pathos of entreaty, that the crime-steeped man was overwhelmed and fled from the scene. The Martyrs, and the Fugitive; or a Narrative of the Captivity, Sufferings, and Death of an African Family, and the Slavery and Escape of Their Son
  • His playing of Sarah the Cook - ruddy of cheek, in need of a fashion makeover from Trinny and Susannah - is full of pathos, mock shock and motherly fluster and concern.
  • It should be icky and yucky, but actually it's got bags of fun and loads of laughs, with a very cutely judged moment of pathos as Stuart has to drive home from school on his own in his little roadster, because no human kid wants to play with him.
  • Nineteenth-century novelized versions of the story continue to add depth to the character's psychology and use Shore's life to revisit a popular theme of the Victorian novel: the plight and pathos of the fallen woman.
  • Bernini also brought the more modest bust and half-length portrait figures in wall niches to new heights of pathos which were widely imitated in Catholic northern Europe, especially Flanders.
  • This is a king visibly burdened by the weight of his crown, who evokes real pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • He is a master of dry straight-faced witty delivery and he brings a subtle sense of pathos to a script that has a tendency to milk its gags to death.
  • Postle has a knack for combining slapstick comedy and pathos, which is very effective in this instance.
  • She is somehow too robustly formidable, and the idea of killing her doesn't have the right mixture of pathos and horror.
  • The pathos of this account is well complemented by a robust sense of humour and perceptive insights into human nature.
  • De Manian rigor is of course, for Guillory, a sham, an excuse for the pathos and the lurid figures it generates; 14 but the de Manian master-trope of rigor "facilitates an imaginary reduction of the social totality to the structure of trope," allowing "rhetorical reading to function as a political theory just by virtue of being no more than a theory of literature Professing Literature: John Guillory's Misreading of Paul de Man
  • This is a king visibly burdened by the weight of his crown, who evokes real pathos. Times, Sunday Times
  • Shot in four weeks for a modest $4m, it is also a triumph of minute observation, bittersweet pathos and wry culture-clash humour over brash Hollywood excess.
  • But these moments of pathos are redundant in what is probably the most breathlessly exuberant movie yet made.

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