Poetic
in sentence
215 examples of Poetic in a sentence
I also began to investigate the vast possibilities of color: its emotional values, psychological impulse,
poetic
allure and a boundless capacity beyond the realm of meaning and logic.
And this is because the scientific worldview is so much more exciting, more poetic, more filled with sheer wonder than anything in the poverty-stricken arsenals of the religious imagination.
Now, every now and again, the rest of the world catches on, perhaps with Djo Munga's hard-hitting "Viva Riva!" with Newton Aduaka's intense "Ezra," or with Abderrahmane Sissako's
poetic "
Timbuktu."
You need to use that as your ending, in a very
poetic
and dramatic way.
You can see he starts with what is, moves back and forth between what is and what could be, and ends with a very
poetic
new bliss, which is the famous part we all know.
The next poem is called forgetfulness, and it's really just a kind of
poetic
essay on the subject of mental slippage.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge: I try to convey a semblance of truth in my writing to produce for these shadows of the imagination a willing suspension of disbelief that, for a moment, constitutes
poetic
faith.
But I think there's something really
poetic
about using nuclear power to propel us to the stars, because the stars are giant fusion reactors.
The energy that I'm able to talk to you today, while it was converted to chemical energy in my food, originally came from a nuclear reaction, and so there's something
poetic
about, in my opinion, perfecting nuclear fission and using it as a future source of innovative energy.
They are, in fact, the most diverse, evocative,
poetic
aspect of nature.
The original designer of the memorial, Michael Arad, had this image in his mind of all the names appearing undifferentiated, almost random, really a
poetic
reflection on top of the nature of a terrorism event itself, but it was a huge challenge for the families, for the foundation, certainly for the first responders, and there was a negotiation that went forth and a solution was found to actually create not an order in terms of chronology, or in terms of alphabetical, but through what's called meaningful adjacency.
Those three projects, they're based on very simple scientific phenomena, such as magnetism, the sound waves, or over here, the physical properties of a substance, and what I'm trying to do is I'm trying to use these phenomena and show them in a
poetic
and unseen way, and therefore invite the viewer to pause for a moment and think about all the beauty that is constantly surrounding us.
I mean, my generation, I grew up not just thinking about the Internet, but I grew up in the Internet, and although I never expected to have the chance to defend it in such a direct and practical manner and to embody it in this unusual, almost avatar manner, I think there's something
poetic
about the fact that one of the sons of the Internet has actually become close to the Internet as a result of their political expression.
It's really annoying, but also kind of
poetic.
It's what Coleridge called the willing suspension of disbelief or
poetic
faith, for those moments where a story, no matter how strange, has some semblance of the truth, and then you're able to believe it.
And we started to read, and we'd read one author, then another author, and by reading such short poems, they all began to realize that what the
poetic
language did was to break a certain logic, and create another system.
So a new system appeared, new rules that made them understand very quickly, - very quickly - that with
poetic
language they would be able to say absolutely whatever they wanted.
Often what I have found is that when there are resources that have not been made available to certain under-resourced cities or neighborhoods or communities, that sometimes culture is the thing that helps to ignite, and that I can't do everything, but I think that there's a way in which if you can start with culture and get people kind of reinvested in their place, other kinds of adjacent amenities start to grow, and then people can make a demand that's a
poetic
demand, and the political demands that are necessary to wake up our cities, they also become very
poetic.
How
poetic.
Fortunately for me, my parents were not
poetic.
It's extremely beautiful, very
poetic
and artistic.
So it's a rather elegant, almost
poetic
way of looking at the world, but it has one catastrophic problem.
Doesn't sound quite as poetic, does it?
I decided that the hurricane conferred
poetic
justice on Sandy and let the sentence stand.
This is almost
poetic.
If one were to read the poems simultaneously to hearing the music, one would find the
poetic
scenes synchronizing nicely with the musical imagery.
A
poetic
image for a story on Tolstoy, by Sam Abell.
And whether we are creating these revolving giant chess piece time tunnels for an opera by Richard Wagner or shark tanks and mountains for Kanye West, we're always seeking to create the most articulate sculpture, the most
poetic
instrument of communication to an audience.
When I say poetic, I just mean language at its most condensed, like a song lyric, a
poetic
puzzle to be unlocked and unpacked.
I can talk loudly and in a grandiose way or in a soft and
poetic
voice.
Next
Related words
Which
About
Movie
Story
There
Beautiful
Their
Could
Really
Script
Scene
Great
Think
Rather
Films
Young
Written
Would
World
Sound