Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
It is true that my mother had a great sense of occasion.
It was difficult not to get caught up in the sense of occasion.
As each one came out, there was a powerful sense of occasion.
A dinner party should have a sense of occasion about it.
Also it is something they can do for you and gives the visit a sense of occasion.
A sense of occasion comes through, as if all involved knew that this recording would be significant.
Still, once you find your way into the complex, it is easy to get carried away with the sense of occasion.
But he bowed out with a grand sense of occasion.
That in itself lent a real sense of occasion to the evening.
That is not to say there wasn't a sense of occasion.
"Hamlet" usually calls to us with a sense of occasion.
The odd thing is how little sense of occasion emerges.
For a brief moment, we felt a sense of occasion, but that quickly faded.
The blizzard that hit the region just added to the sense of occasion.
The most noise and sense of occasion seemed to come from the Celtic area.
But there was also eagerness and pleasure in the music making, a sense of occasion.
Good old drums, they always add a real sense of occasion to a football match.
Another thing I missed was the sense of occasion.
Their they halted awed by the sense of occasion within.
Without such a sense of occasion, the play can be perceived as a viable theater piece or not.
There was a sense of occasion in the air, and he didn't disappoint.
He was trying to restore a sense of occasion to what he felt should have been a great moment.
Thatcher appears and it is as though the English have forgotten themselves, lost all sense of occasion.
"What we are trying to do is create more of a sense of occasion when you come to the theater," he said.
It just felt like there was a real sense of occasion, because everyone was so excited.