Sentences with phrase «deep kinship»

"Deep kinship" refers to a strong bond or connection between people who feel a sense of closeness, understanding, and shared values. It implies a deep understanding and emotional connection with someone, like the feeling of being part of the same family. Full definition
Dano is the studio savant who finds deeper kinship with session musicians than he does with his own family members; Cusack is the tic - ridden, over-medicated shell left behind by years of emotional, psychological, and substance abuse.
If Bulliet is right (and on this he surely is) that there is a deep kinship between Islam and Christianity characterized by exchange of ideas as much as by clash of arms, Islam should be particularly well situated to absorb Western, Christian modernity on specifically Muslim terms.
My father was born in Oslo, so I have a deep kinship to the Norwegian people.
But since «the best» of the villagers are «thrown back» into the sea, one wonders if perhaps some deeper kinship, unacknowledged or even resented, is implied between the people and their environment.
So on that February night in Miami, when Brees took a knee to finish the Super Bowl, Tomlinson felt a deep kinship.
Oftentimes it seems there is a war going on between drivers and bicyclists, but professional drivers such as Westphal have discovered the deep kinship between the two sports.
That same day, I had started my own inverted self - portrait, so seeing her glowing on the wall made me feel a deep kinship with the work.
They were key figures that I think we both felt a deep kinship with.
His innovations, interests and themes have been widely influential on his own generation and younger artists, due partly to his approach to digital manipulation and cultural flux, in which a deep kinship with technology meets skepticism towards these advances.
The pairing of these two artists, instigated by Green Gallery co-owner Jake Palmert, acknowledges that while the artists have, on the surface, a divergent aesthetic they share a deeper kinship in their use of language, humor, color and a shared attraction to (and ironic suspicion of) abstraction.
In 1950, at Pollock's suggestion, Ossorio traveled to Paris to meet Dubuffet, an artist with whom he developed a deep kinship and engaged in a rich correspondence.
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