Quality of being active or spirited or alive and vigorous.
Sinónimos
Examples for "animation"
Examples for "animation"
1Jim was interested in new technology and certainly embraced early computer animation.
2The problem is that animation is far more expensive than talking-head interviews.
3The use of animation recognises that different people have different learning styles.
4Anderson's second stop-motion animation is set in Japan in the near future.
5But, again, these are good problems to have for an animation series.
1The delicious scent seemed to bring invigoration in at the windows.
2The sense of vitality that suddenly flooded into her, the invigoration, were overwhelming.
3For invigoration or revitalizing, resort must be made to its primitive blood cause.
4Thus the runner feels wave upon wave of exhaustion followed by waves of invigoration.
5How few men have this gift of discharging intellectual invigoration.
1No other woman had the free spiritedness and maturity that she embodied.
2The fiscal crisis that New York finds itself in demands more than mean-spiritedness.
3Her natural spiritedness detested the monotony, her craven soul fawned for the comfort.
4The General modestly furnished an instance or two of her spiritedness.
5There is a free-spiritedness about Shane Lowry that is compulsively engaging.
1Thus, when Christ rose, the whole humankind partook in his vivification.
2Without this vivification and sustenance, man would be an animal, nay, rather, dead.
3Does this not look like a vivification of a fossil seed?
4Still, it was but a pencil sketch, and wanted the vivification of color.
5Every other description of food was in the same state of transition into vivification.
1Bringuier and the APO matched him in terms of energy and brio.
2Exciting Times is an impressive, cerebral debut written with brio and humour.
3Pop music has embraced this enthusiasm for lists with brio and gusto.
4With typical brio, he compares it to Chuck Yeager breaking the sound barrier.
5Even generic cellular poisons, dosed with adequate brio, could thus eventually obliterate cancer.
6It's still wide-eyed and sharp, a great modish clatter with emotion, spirit and brio.
7The brio with which the oil is stolen on a larger scale is breathtaking.
8These Italian performances have a brio and immediacy that's entirely apt for the music.
9They don't look like a name but at least they are done with brio.
10Wilde sang with requisite brio, and the young man, with a sweetly coquettish lilt.
11That recognisable handwriting, textural play and brio is very evident in this 100-piece collection.
12It's a life recalled with brio in A Reluctant Memoir, his newly published autobiography.
13The blend of German drive and Italian brio has proved an enduring recipe for success.
14In Beethoven's case, the Allegro con brio bounces along in a mood of light-hearted conviviality.
15But it's an awful disappointment after the power and brio of Gangs of New York.
16Johnson himself directs, with flourish, rushing over the gaps in his dialogue with bad-taste brio.