Mark Twain coined
the evocative name for this era.
Pink slime is the unfortunately
evocative name for ground - up beef scraps, fat and connective tissue that is heated and spritzed with ammonia before making its way to our plates.
Not exact matches
A blood sample from a single Bactrian camel with the
evocative name of «Mozart» provided the genetic raw material
for the work, which was undertaken by Pamela Burger at the Institute of Population Genetics.
AnastasiaDate's
evocative name is based on the long - running legend of Russia's historical figure Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna, famed
for her rumored escape abroad after the Russian Revolution of 1917.
Call Me by Your
Name is a fairly straightforward coming - of - age story that's at its finest in moments when the relationships — between Elio and Oliver, but just as crucially between Elio and his archeologist father — take on larger meanings than their literal context implies, and Guadagnino finds
evocative aesthetic expressions
for them.
Based on Kōbō Abe's novel of the same
name, Woman in the Dunes is in one way the best, most insightful and
evocative adaptation of T.S. Eliot's «The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock» there ever was, from Eliot's winsome protagonist looking to escape regret into experience to, literally, these lines about entomology as a metaphor
for being seen clearly and judged wanting:
It follows the recently announced return of the
evocative Azure
name for Bentley's Arnage - derived flagship four - seater convertible.
«Veloce» (Italian
for «fast») is an
evocative name from Alfa Romeo's glorious tradition, devised in 1956 together with the Giulietta.
Alternatively, you could wait
for Microsoft to come up with a more
evocative colour
naming scheme.
A powerful white beast serves in each case as the focus
for human passions and obsessions, but Pollock's readiness to change the
name of the painting indicates that he intended his titles to be loosely
evocative and not descriptive.