Eponymous
in sentence
61 examples of Eponymous in a sentence
In Peter O'Toole they found a much more striking
eponymous
villain than Derrick de Marney but in every other sense it is the monochrome 'forties version that gives me the stronger pleasure.
"Land of the Lost" is a movie with a plot similar in ways to the
eponymous
1970's TV show on which it is supposedly based.
It is rare to watch a movie where the makers do not attempt to soften the ending, especially if the main character is as utterly repellant as is the
eponymous
individual of this film played by Paul Bettany and Malcolm McDowell.
In the cast were lovely red- haired Greer Garson as Irene Forsyte, and Errol Flynn as Soames Forsyte, the
eponymous
new-money tycoon of the "The Man of property"s" original title.
In another major plot change Catriona, the
eponymous
heroine of the sequel, appears a book early as the feisty daughter of the noble James of the Glens (rather than of the villainous James More MacGregor).
The
eponymous
Dekko, with a bullet reposing in his skull, and with a proclivity for extreme self-abuse, ostensibly has also an iron constitution, as he struts along his path of vengeance with unalloyed intensity.
It's based on one of those derivative novels - this time Stevenson's classic novella "Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde" as seen by his parlourmaid(!) the
eponymous
Mary Reilly.
"The World" is set in the tacky
eponymous
Beijing theme park and details the lives of the alienated young workers who are spiritually and physically trapped there.
Naturally, she wins the admiration of the
eponymous
character.
Thomas tips his symbolic glove in an early scene when a collapsing mine triggers falling plaster and cracks in the walls of the 'big house' in the mining village, which is home to the
eponymous
sisters, who pledge to rebuild the homes in the mining village destroyed by the collapse.
Petronius' Satyricon, the inspiration for Fellini's masterful, albeit non-linear,
eponymous
film, has a good claim on being the first novel ever written.
With Mao Zedong being the only previous Chinese leader to have his
eponymous
“Thought” constitutionalized, some now argue that Xi is now the most powerful leader since Mao.
In short, the paradox of choice (as elegantly described in an
eponymous
book by Barry Schwartz) is that too many choices confuse us and raise the possibility of regret; how can we be sure that we are getting just what we want, and that something else would not be better?
Beyond choosing the next Politburo Standing Committee, the 19th Party Congress reelected President Xi Jinping as the CCP’s leader and added his
eponymous
ideology – “Xi Jinping Thought” – to the Party’s charter.
Now that Xi’s
eponymous
political ideology, which proposes an alternative to liberal democracy, is part of the school of thought around which the CPC coalesces, challenging Xi is tantamount to challenging the Party’s very belief system.
The film, “Padmavati,” tells the story of an
eponymous
Rajput queen believed to have died, together with 16,000 other women of the Rajput warrior caste, by self-immolation in 1301, in order to avoid being captured alive by the invading Delhi Sultan Alauddin Khilji.
Jack Nicholson asks, as he walks through his psychiatrist’s waiting room in the
eponymous
film.
Last month, Nihalni’s reign of cultural terror came to a head, with the review board demanding 72 cuts from the big-budget Bollywood film Udta Punjab (“Flying Punjab”), a gritty tale centered on the drug culture that is prevalent in the
eponymous
northwestern Indian state.
As the billionaire Steve Forbes recently wrote in his
eponymous
magazine, “Outsiders are amazed that much of India resembles pre-revolutionary France, with many internal barriers standing in the way of economic efficiency and growth.”
The country is also criss-crossed by its
eponymous
river and various other waterways.
By enshrining so-called Xi Jinping Thought in the CPC charter, Party members established Xi alongside the People’s Republic’s two historical giants, Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping – the only other Chinese leaders with officially recognized
eponymous
ideologies.
Like the crumbling “Majestic” hotel in J. G. Farrell’s novel Troubles, about the end of British rule in southern Ireland, the
eponymous
apartment block was a metaphor for the state, and its inhabitants are figures representative of different aspects of Mubarak’s Egypt.
Irving Fisher called this fixation on nominal price growth the “money illusion” in an
eponymous
1928 book.
CHICAGO – Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, in their excellent,
eponymous
book on debt crises, argue that the most dangerous words in any language are “This time is different.”
Ponzi’s
eponymous
scheme was essentially a way to enable businesses to rack up debt forever.
The attention devoted to Johannes Steele’s 1934 book The Second World War, which predicted that
eponymous
event, indicates that fear of war must have been talked about enough to underpin some hesitation.
The ECB conducts a forum every June in Sintra, a town in the foothills of the
eponymous
Portuguese mountain range.
In debt-restructuring negotiations this year, Argentina used the new fine print to debut a “Pac-Man strategy” (so named for the classic arcade game where the
eponymous
hero must pick off dots one by one).
Putin’s
eponymous
ideology is less the brainchild of the president himself than of his close aide Vladislav Surkov.
The White Swans of 2020NEW YORK – In my 2010 book, Crisis Economics, I defined financial crises not as the “black swan” events that Nassim Nicholas Taleb described in his
eponymous
bestseller, but as “white swans.”
Back
Related words
Which
Other
Novel
Movie
Character
Through
Century
After
About
Thought
Played
Original
Ideology
Heroine
Great
Being
Would
Words
Where
Warrior