How To Use Sentimentally In A Sentence

  • Here you will find a room of elegantly erotic mosaics, and sentimentally carnal ceramics.
  • It is a novel which looks unsentimentally at those activist families to whom everything was sacrificed for the cause; "their love life, their children, their parents; everything had to come second.
  • We are never sentimentally attached and wander at applause and never hesitate.
  • Childhood had less freedom and joy than we sentimentally attribute to it.
  • Here you will find a room of elegantly erotic mosaics, and sentimentally carnal ceramics.
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  • Black color is sentimentally bad but, every black board makes the students life bright. A. P. J. Abdul Kalam 
  • The film-makers have clung sentimentally to the sweet, silly formula that made the original series an enduring favorite for more than 33 years after its debut.
  • We deny woman her fair share of training, of encouragement, of remuneration, and then talk fine nonsense about her instincts and her intuitions, -- say sentimentally, with the Oriental proverbialist, "Every book of knowledge is implanted by nature in the heart of woman," and make the compliment a substitute for the alphabet. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 03, No. 16, February, 1859
  • Childhood had less freedom and joy than we sentimentally attribute to it.
  • They remain true to character, with Nixon sentimentally reminiscing about flipping burgers in the Pacific and Mao pugnaciously recalling riding eastward to conquer Beijing. Titans Shaking Hands, But Still Worlds Apart
  • The attic had been abused by years of shoving boxes full of stuff into it - stuff that was cluttering up the living spaces downstairs but was too valuable, sentimentally to throw out.
  • But the proposition per se has certain sentimentally dramatic aspects which lend it to propaganda manipulation, even in the face of the currently accepted strong counterproposition. The Past Through Tomorrow
  • I did not mind leaving that particular house, though I ran through it sentimentally on the last day and blessed each bare scrubbed room for the happy times I'd known there.
  • The fact is that if your parents root for a certain team and "encourage" their children to root for that team -- and that is either sentimentally awesome or the worst kind of overbearing -- chances are the kid is going to turn out to be a fan of that team. Dan Shanoff: Introducing My Son to MLB, Wrigley Field and His Fan DNA
  • The enclave remained politically and sentimentally attached to Portuguese Timor, but not geographically.
  • I love Mahler but the adagio from the 5th symphony is used ad nauseum and sentimentally, almost in a Max Steiner Warner. GreenCine Daily: Visconti @ 100.
  • Childhood had less freedom and joy than we sentimentally attribute to it.
  • Childhood had less freedom and joy than we sentimentally attribute to it.
  • Such an abounding, affectionate, friendly, loving feeling did this avocation beget; that at last I was continually squeezing their hands, and looking up into their eyes sentimentally; as much as to say, — Oh! my dear fellow beings, why should we longer cherish any social acerbities, or know the slightest ill-humor or envy! Moby Dick; or the Whale
  • unsentimentally, she threw out her dead son's toys
  • We are never sentimentally attached and wander at applause and never hesitate.
  • Childhood had less freedom and joy than we sentimentally attribute to it.
  • Its attitudes are a Hare-brained mixture: both principled and progressive – not many dramatists make a woman representative of an era – and sentimentally flawed, since that woman, sensitive, volatile, beguiling, is aflutter with traditional femininity. The Children's Hour; Plenty; The Heretic – review
  • `I miss the good old days,' she added sentimentally
  • The boys simply praise their companions' qualities and unsentimentally lament their death, which in their cosmology was mainly just a big gyp.
  • These creatures, rather sentimentally modeled on popular notions of Native American and African tribes, are presented as being wholly in tune with nature -- as preagricultural hunter-gatherers who subsist on the flesh of the animals they kill by means of their remarkable skill at archery. 'Avatar's' Debt To 'The Wizard Of Oz'
  • He had a manner of adoring the handsome, insolent queen of his affections (I will explain in a moment why I call her insolent); indeed, he looked up to her literally as well as sentimentally; for she was the least bit the taller of the two. Georgina's Reasons
  • Black color is sentimentally bad but, every black board makes the students life bright. A. P. J. Abdul Kalam 
  • She suggested that she and her sister would go over and clear out the apartment as I was to sentimentally attached to be doing it.
  • a red heart on it, pierced by a dagger that was dropping red drops very sentimentally; and it said would she not hasten to take her vast beauty out in the moonlight, to walk with Herman under the quiet trees while the nightingale warbled and the snee, or sidehill mooney, called to its lovemate? Ma Pettengill
  • After this quintessence of the buffo style, La Cenerentola, while not lacking in comic situations, is more sentimentally inclined, and in the remaining years of his Italian career Rossini produced no comedy at all.
  • It is exactly in such a situation that any suggestion to consider the game sportively rather than sentimentally becomes a heresy.
  • You must know that there is great odds in passengers; one set eating and jollifying, from the hour we sail till the hour we get in, while another takes the ocean as it might be sentimentally. Homeward Bound or, the Chase
  • For Bill was a man after her own heart; and she often said that "with fair play she sentimentally allowed her Bill could lick ary a man in the 'varsal world, and his weight in wild cats to boot. The Wit and Humor of America, Volume VII. (of X.)
  • The term kitsch was invented in pre-Hitler Czechoslovakia to describe artifacts created with great technical polish in which everyone was always ridiculously happy or sentimentally sad, but lacking any real emotion. 'The Bourne Ultimatum' success is not about the action

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