How To Use Poignancy In A Sentence

  • The crucifixion of the two robbers with Jesus was a sort of topstone of obloquy and disgrace contrived by His murderers with the double object of further humiliating Him in the eyes of the people, and of adding poignancy to His own agony. Our Master Thoughts for Salvationists about Their Lord
  • 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
  • The poem has a haunting poignancy.
  • I use harmonics for effect, colour and poignancy as well as their ethereal tone texture.
  • That poignancy cannot be recaptured now, and the choreography's mass yearnings and grievings feel uncomfortably religiose.
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  • a moment of extraordinary poignancy
  • The film veers in its perfectly-plotted course from absolute hilarity to extreme poignancy.
  • The melody is tender but not unduly saccharine and is played here with more concern for easeful relaxation than poignancy.
  • His public funeral and the later memorial evening of performances by the company are described with heartbreaking poignancy.
  • Though despair at his material sometimes makes him bellow, he gives a bravura performance that transmutes pointlessness into poignancy.
  • a moment of extraordinary poignancy.
  • I use harmonics for effect, colour and poignancy as well as their ethereal tone texture.
  • This has far more beauty and poetry and poignancy and soul than we were expecting from the property.
  • Featuring solo parts for horn, piccolo, and clarinet, this is the one movement in the work that thrives on poignancy and understatement.
  • An instant after the firm declaration was issued, an expression flickered across his features that invisibly reached out to her with an irresistible poignancy. Western Man
  • It may be a history lesson but it is sure to portray with poignancy the humour, hurt, heartbreak and pain that they didn't teach us in the classroom.
  • There is an aching poignancy about Dermot Bolger's wonderfully lyrical ninth novel, 'The Family on Paradise Pier'.
  • Although somewhat repetitious in its early moments, the dance achieved great poignancy as it depicted the infatuation of two young strangers at a dance - and the girl's death from a stray bullet.
  • It adds some retrospective poignancy to our story, I think, and possibly some connection to Emerson's universe.
  • She delivered the long despairing monologue that closes the work with great poignancy.
  • They have a perfect blend of humour, poignancy, pathos and a social message.
  • This year the lament and longing for the South, now standing so battered by Hurricane Katrina, strikes me with unusual poignancy.
  • Such images resonate with some poignancy, with the personal situation of many commentators.
  • How long those drawn-out minutes feel, as they seem to drag into hours, the poignancy of the story lost in the padding, the emotions dulled by the sheer boredom of so much of the text.
  • What gives this wretched episode extra poignancy is the fact that the bandit commander's life had been saved by the Red Cross a year earlier.
  • In lyrical roles, most notably the adagio movement of Symphony in C, her gangly body with its penchant for rakish angles softened into willow-tree pliancy and she achieved a poignancy that seemed to arise from the music and be one with it.
  • Although Senator Kennedy has been battling a brain malignancy, he is expected to return to the Senate next week to preside at Mr. Daschle’s hearing, which will add poignancy to the proceeding. Cabinet Confirmation Hearings Start Next Week - The Caucus Blog - NYTimes.com
  • The agony experienced by their loved ones in trying to locate their remains lends, in Neil Hanson's prose, the dark ceremonial of Remembrance Sunday an almost unbearable poignancy.
  • It gives such a poignancy to my usually humdrum life.
  • The writing is her usual blend of charming whimsy, heartbreaking poignancy and sometimes impenetrable surrealism.
  • Frankly, some foul language can convey such complex, multivalent ideas in single syllables it feels a shame to try to elaborate and risk losing one iota of poignancy in a heated moment.
  • There's a gratuitous poignancy provided by the fact that she's lame, which is no doubt to suggest that she won't be able to get another man - it fell a bit flat for me.
  • This figure's weak chin, hunched shoulders and humble demeanor contribute to the poignancy and humanity of the busts.
  • Her subjects may revolve around love, loss, and guilt but poignancy rarely tips over into plangency.
  • The film certainly provides stimuli in its first 10 minutes we get our title gang of renegade heroes, evil Bolivian drug lords and their drug-mule children, a smoking school bus, girls in bikinis, enough high-caliber firepower to light up La Paz, an exploding helicopter, poignancy, death, a thirst for revenge. Only Action Clich
  • Owen also provides plenty of poignancy, and does so with admirable unobtrusiveness.
  • The poignancy of the last words here remind us that whatever McKinley's politics might have been like (and I don't know anything about them), he was a person who, in extremis, cared about other people. Intertribal: And if my life is like the dust that hides the glow of a rose, what good am I
  • Eddie's failings are lent an almost intolerable poignancy by his former chauvinistic notions of patriotism.
  • The trouble with retrospection - especially the kind of hagiographical retrospection that comes with a box set - is that it lends everything added poignancy.
  • There was such poignancy as McQueen spoke about the adoration of his Scottish roots and duplicitously being a London boy. Tamie Adaya: Enjoying A Quick Stop In New York
  • Of particular poignancy was the photograph of their son with his sisters,(sentence dictionary) taken the day before he died.
  • 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
  • Like the Poco Allegretto of the composer's third symphony, the wistful melody of this movement gives the score poignancy that stamps it as one of the great creations of the romantic era.
  • But there can be clarity, something that Grace Hartigan and Frank O'Hara demonstrate with exuberance and alacritous poignancy. Daniel J. Kushner: "Text Painting": Grace Hartigan and Frank O'Hara at Tibor de Nagy Gallery
  • Imamura really proves himself a master at the unlikely blending of absurdity with a bit of neorealistic poignancy. DVD Times
  • Through a delicacy of shading, like the art of Bach himself for purity, poignancy, and clarity, he envelops us with the thrilling atmosphere of the most absolutely musical music in the world.
  • Wolfe's cast brings a buoyant freshness to the play: Preston's innocent, tomboyish Miranda; Ellis's balletically beautiful Ariel, Bougere's feral poignancy. Such Stuff As Dreams Are Made On
  • 'This offering doesn't pretend to subtlety at all, but the premise is so very intriguing, and so well-presented (in characteristically wry Pratchett fashion), that Johnny's cry for the essential humanity of all to be recognized, whether English, Iraqi or ScreeWee, loses none of its poignancy-or timeliness.' Only You Can Save Mankind by Terry Pratchett: Book summary
  • A deep poignancy in his voice made the expression childishly inadequate. The Film Mystery
  • Well, tone, for one thing: a talented anecdotalist puts on a performance in order to give his tale poignancy and point. Author! Author! » 2008 » February
  • What must increase the poignancy of his feelings upon the occasion remains to be stated -- that the seducer was his intimate friend, a young man, whom he had raised into notice in public life, and whom he had, with all that warmth and confidence of heart for which he is remarkable, introduced into his house, and trusted with his beloved wife. Tales and Novels — Volume 05
  • Clapton was captivated by the rhythm and poignancy of: ‘One more car, one more rider,’ as the barker tried to fill the last seat in the last car before the ride started and decided to use it for this scintillating album.
  • His deft portrayal of English stoicism and self-parody brings a welcome humour and poignancy to the production.
  • His music has none of the piercingness and poignancy and irony, none of the deep humility and grim resignation, so characteristic of Moussorgsky's. Musical Portraits Interpretations of Twenty Modern Composers
  • ‘I wanted to show the murrelet all alone in the wide wide sea and give it this feeling of poignancy and vulnerability and tininess,’ says Bateman.
  • The album isn't bad because it isn't distressing or painful, which one would expect from poignancy.

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