Sentences with phrase «literary sense»

In literary sense, letter brings you closer to the person you are referring to, gives him an idea about you as a person in a significant way.
I don't think Kundera is a college football fan — though he'd probably appreciate Bobby Petrino — but I hear that quote and I wonder if the reason I was so drawn to college football in the first place was because of these conundrums: because it has, for so long, trafficked in an almost literary sense of ambiguity.
Lost in the Forest is a comedy in the exact and best literary sense, for it stresses beautifully the continuation of the social unit with which it is concerned.»
Megiddo made literary sense; as a metaphor, it gelled.
That the Epistle of James was written to be thus published, however, that is, that it is an «epistle» in the literary sense of the word, is very improbable in view of its contents, which relate to no single subject or situation.
«Murder on the Orient Express» is a classic in the literary sense, but this 21st century retelling offers nothing new.
This consistency of character (in the ethical, rather than literary sense) is about all the third film retains from the first two.
And because this film runs into these themes of love and loss — and because Juno Temple's character is a young poet — we really liked the idea of having the song be this simple little poem that's very plaintive and full of yearning — both for the friend's loss and death as well as for her romantic yearning in the most conventional and literary sense.
Drawing and playing with toys sharpened my literary senses.
Our reviewer writes, «Fiercely independent, frequently awkward and quite witty, Addie is simply fun to hang out with, in a literary sense.
I really don't care if my works are distributed either way on any other online publishing network, as far as I'm concern it all boils down to content and essence of wordplay in a literary sense of the book we make.
Do something that scares you in a literary sense.
As such, in a literary sense, I know it's not perfect - but I wasn't aiming for that.
Metal Gear Solid V is a game destined to fail at bringing the series full circle, so why not end it at a point where the story at least feels complete in a literary sense?
is a game destined to fail at bringing the series full circle, so why not end it at a point where the story at least feels complete in a literary sense?
It is adventure in the literary sense.
I've realized that the many delays you encountered in waiting for people or products to show up amounted in a literary sense to SUSPENSE.
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