Sentences with phrase «ultimate embodiment»

The phrase "ultimate embodiment" means something or someone that is the perfect example or representation of a particular idea, concept, or quality. Full definition
David O'Reilly's ultimate embodiment simulator Everything was released on PS4 at the end of last month, and has just recently hit PC and Mac, and despite its obviously problematic SEO, it has nonetheless received pretty universal acclaim.
It's all been insanely delicious, but I've been missing one thing, the ultimate embodiment of summer: ice lollies!
Tara Stiles, co-founder of Strala Yoga, is the ultimate embodiment of go - with - the - flow.
I'm a huge fan of sweet and savory combos and this soup is the ultimate embodiment of just that.
On screen, the Harlow image would be created to define the ultimate embodiment of female sexual freedom.
This guy exudes passion and he is determined to create stunning cars that celebrate what many consider the ultimate embodiment of the 911 ethos, the 964 Series.
Adding premium appeal to the exterior and interior design, the 2015 Nissan GT - R delivers sophisticated driving pleasure and is the ultimate embodiment of Nissan's brand philosophy: «innovation that excites.»
This show car is the ultimate embodiment of a luxury dream automobile.
The basis for the new Maserati Coupe is the Quattroporte saloon — designed by the famous Pininfarina house — the ultimate embodiment of qualities for which is well known worldwide: respect of beauty and good living, style, sophisticated engineering, genuinely sporty temperament and alluring exclusivity.
The various clans come up with a plan to defend their homeland, summoning the ultimate embodiment of the nation; Saltire, a blue behemoth of a man with the saltire emblazoned upon his chest and a great mane and beard of ginger.
Immensely popular — and always commercially successful — at numerous points in his career, Buffet suffered long spells of vicious critical repudiation, when his work was considered the ultimate embodiment of poor taste.
With Stranger Study # 11, Ligon puts forth the ultimate embodiment of Baldwin's maxim that «Americans attempt until today to make an abstraction of the Negro» (James Baldwin, «Stranger in the Village», 1953, in James Baldwin, The Price of the Ticket: Collected Nonfiction, 1948 - 1985, New York, 1984, p. 87).
It endures today partly because the artists were able to synthesize essential qualities of modernism from late 19th and early 20th century European art into something that was truly new, achieving the ultimate embodiment of modern painting.
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