Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
She's beautiful in her dark Irish way, so down to earth and complicatedly simple."
Now has many (more than ) complicatedly intersecting edges, but discrepancy zero.
The members are clearly, if complicatedly, committed to an underground punk scene that s still not dead, despite many pronouncements.
More participants produce more lines and more complicatedly shifty geometric patterns.
The Romagnuolos, who have been together for 13 years, are cautiously, and complicatedly, comfortable in the borough generally considered the city's most conservative.
A toilet flushes loudly and complicatedly.
Most systems of even modest complexity, he concludes, behave so complicatedly that they are beyond the grasp of mathematical formulas.
"The field geometry is complex, Clavain, and it depends complicatedly on the degree of inertial suppression.
Similarly but more complicatedly, any volume or measure in three dimensions may be partitioned into eight equal subsets by three planes.
She came down in a pair of his boxer shorts, with the topsheet complicatedly draped over her chest in a way that left her wings free.
As the novel unfolds, Nan, Hal and Marina are all so fully and complicatedly present that it is impossible not to become engrossed in their lives.
But as Eliot put it, complicatedly, in "The Sacred Wood," "we cannot say at what point 'technique' begins or where it ends."
While Mr. Corsaro insists that "the organization must move forward or die," Ms. Nathan retorts that the "business can be run as simply or as complicatedly as we make it."
Somewhat more efficiently, but more complicatedly, one can test whether a graph is claw-free by checking, for each vertex of the graph, that the complement graph of its neighbors does not contain a triangle.
"The Price of Heaven," directed by Peter Bogdanovich, is marred by a screenplay that makes its upper-class white characters - especially the mill owner's daughter who catches Jerry's eye - simply stupid rather than complicatedly so.
Perhaps no American actor besides Gene Hackman (who joined Mr. Eastwood and Mr. Freeman in "Unforgiven") has ripened with such relish, becoming more fully and complicatedly himself as he grows older.