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Sentences with chronicle

chron·i·cle
C c
  • The series chronicles the everyday adventures of two eternal bachelors. [VERB noun]
  • ...this vast chronicle of Napoleonic times. [+ of]
  • Auder's video chronicles create the impression that he carries a camera with him everywhere and that the camera inevitably mediates his perception and experience.
  • It is true that war reporting has speeded up since AD 106, the year that Trajan commissioned the column offering a picture chronicle of his Romanian campaign.
  • ...the San Francisco Chronicle.
  • The programme is a valuable chronicle of television history, which asks challenging questions of both the audience and the television industry.
  • A British historian working in America produced a vast chronicle of the Revolution which argued that its very essence was violence and slaughter.
  • In my own defence I can only say that if, as Disraeli said, the best way to learn history is by reading biographies then the best obituaries are magnificent potted histories - a fabulous chronicle of the century just closed.
  • In fact, two of my favorite recent books chronicle bizarre gustatory adventures.
  • The scope and impact of extensive administrative change over more than a decade cannot be chronicled in detail in a short article.
  • The Parkside area also has a proud sporting tradition and it is chronicled in great detail in this publication.
  • For Novo, an urban chronicle must represent the city in its entirety and must include previously taboo and transgressive urban activities and spaces.
  • Her book is a compelling chronicle of her struggles immediately following the accident, throughout the acute recovery phase, and into the early stages of rehabilitation.
  • But in some ways, this feels more like a medieval chronicle than a modern history.
  • I felt I couldn't write a second chronicle of events, that only fiction could communicate what was happening to the city and its inhabitants.
  • He also wrote the Historia Anglorum, a chronicle from 1066 to 1253, and two shorter histories, the Abbreviatio chronicorum and the Flores historiarum.
  • Nevertheless, this deceptively insightful series offers a fascinating chronicle of love - and lust - in a cold climate.
  • Coogan wants his book to be a chronicle of remarkable success.
  • Nevertheless, the book is excellent as a chronicle of events.
  • He would talk of his major book, said Carpenter, ‘not as a work of fiction, but as a chronicle of actual events,’ seeing himself not so much its maker as its discoverer and historian.
  • The transition is short, alerting the reader that the news report is shifting to storytelling form and indicating the sources for the chronicle to come.
  • Through photographs each family constructs a portrait chronicle of itself - a portable kit of images that bears witness to its connectedness.
  • The book remains of chief importance as a chronicle of black achievement in the performing arts in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
  • I no longer say that I don't believe that the Torah is an accurate historical chronicle of the Jewish people.
  • This book is a chronicle of that period of history.
  • Ehrenreich's searing book chronicles her experiences as a cultural explorer among America's working poor.
  • And, since many of our records of this time come from monastic chronicles, we of course get a very vivid picture of this side of the Vikings.
  • Based on Mervyn Peake's novel, this new horror fantasy series chronicles the story of the Groan family.
  • They are rueful memory plays, bittersweet family chronicles, compassionate portraits of oddballs, losers, and rascals.
  • I'm happy that his life is no longer as he chronicled it, but I'm glad that he recorded it as it happened.
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