Synonymer & Anagrams | Engelsk ordet TORPID


TORPID

7

1

Antall bokstaver

6

Er palindrome

Nei

10
ID
OR
ORP
PI
PID
RP
RPI
TO
TOR

6

3

9

186
DI
DIO
DIP
DIR
DIT
DO
DOI
DOP
DOR

Eksempler på bruk av TORPID i en setning

  • Times Richard Corliss panned the film, finding that "the comedy is slack, the song lyrics feeble, the pace torpid".
  • Bonjour Tristesse is an elegant, ice cold, charade of emotions, completely artificial and eventually torpid.
  • For the latter we are at present nobly exerting ourselves through all this extensive continent; and surely no one whose bosom feels the patriotic glow in behalf of civil liberty can remain torpid to the more ennobling flame of RELIGIOUS FREEDOM.
  • For the most part—indeed, for the sole part—Sirocco wafts a torpid tale of a slick, sneering gun-runner proving a painful thorn in a nice French colonel's side.
  • He has been described as "an unquiet conscience of humanity, a witness, sometimes sorrowfully torpid, of the great and small events of the Man, though often a rebellious one who never surrendered to those trying to silence him" (Alessio Lega).
  • In 2013, for the first time since 1903, the M1 Torpid maintained its Headship with female double Olympic gold medallist Caryn Davies at stroke.
  • Amongst the most widely admired works from his post-Darmstadt period are the Charles d'Orléans settings, Rondeaux per dieci (1963–64), which acquires a "torpid expressivity" through the juxtaposition of the coolness of an extremely high lyrical soprano voice and the resonance of the instrumental bass register.
  • The threshold is guarded by shady Quies/ ?Hesychia (Quiet) and dull Oblivio/ Lethe (Forgetfulness) and torpid Ignavia/ Aergia (Sloth) with ever drowsy countenance.
  • Animals that are distinguished by a body cold and generally naked; stern and expressive countenance; harsh voice; mostly lurid color; filthy odor; a few are furnished with a horrid poison; all have cartilaginous bones, slow circulation, exquisite sight and hearing, large pulmonary vessels, lobate liver, oblong thick stomach, and cystic, hepatic, and pancreatic ducts: they are deficient in diaphragm, do not transpire (sweat), can live a long time without food, are tenatious of life, and have the power of reproducing parts which have been destroyed or lost; some undergo a metamorphosis; some cast (shed) their skin; some appear to live promiscuously on land or in the water, and some are torpid during the winter.
  • The halting screenplay and Ralph Thomas' torpid, direction have drained the life out of Kevin Laffan's popular stage play, and no amount of back-up (Christmas for sentimentalists, John Cleese for sophisticates) can disguise the fact.
  • In following seasons he was, among other characters, Don Pedro in the "Wonder," the original Timothy Quaint in Howard Payne's "Soldier's Daughter," Pacheco in "Brother and Sister," the original Nimpedo in "Clari, or the Maid of Milan" (8 May 1823), Fainwou'd in "Raising the Wind," Baron Altradoff in the "Exile," Blaise in the "Forest of Bondy, or the Dog of Montargis," the original Spado in "Pride shall have a Fall," attributed to Croly (11 March 1824), Jaquez in the "Honeymoon," Sampson in "Isabella," Jeffrey in "Animal Magnetism," Launcelot Gobbo, Medium in "Inkle and Yarico," Stephen in "Every Man in his Humour," Baron Piffleberg in "Of Age Tomorrow," the original Robin in Poole's "Scapegoat" (25 November 1825), Simon Pure in "A Bold Stroke for a Wife," Shallow in the "Merry Wives of Windsor," Squire Richard in Cibber's "The Provoked Husband," the original Raubvogel in Planché's "Returned Killed" (31 October 1826), Apothecary in "Romeo and Juliet," the original Salewit, a poet, in Planché's "Merchant's Wedding" (5 February 1828), adapted from "A City Match" by Jasper Mayne, the original Oliver in Moncrieff's "Somnambulist" (19 February 1828), Heeltap in "The Mayor of Garratt," Marrall in "A New Way to pay Old Debts," Thomas Appletree in the "Recruiting Officer," the original Bronze in Pocock's "Home, Sweet Home" (19 March 1829), Tester in the "Suspicious Husband," the original Torpid in the "Night before the Wedding and the Wedding Night" (17 November 1829), and the original Jotham Riddel in "Wigwam, or the Men of the Wilderness," founded on the "Pioneers" of Cooper.
  • The Observer felt that the album was a retreat of the "chilly synths and affectless monotone in torpid, ever-decreasing circles without even the sparks of energy that livened up this year’s Warlord album".
  • " He cautioned that "At first it feels like torpid traipse through the doldrums, then all the dense fog suddenly fades and you find yourself in the centre of a vibrant coral reef, bursting with life and colour.
  • " Kellman stated that the album consists of "mostly downcast verses and boastful non-sequiturs over torpid booming rhythms.
  • The original Covent Garden cast included William Thomas Lewis as Sir Harry Torpid, Joseph Shepherd Munden as Paul Primitive, John Fawcett as Lackbrain, John Emery as Crafty, Charles Farley as Jack Clifford, Charles Murray as Marchmont, Frances Chapman as Mrs Belford, Catherine St Ledger as Mrs Decoy and Harriet Siddons as Rosa Marchmont.



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