Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Method products raise the possibility that, stylistically speaking, your dish liquid is not measuring up.
Seattle's "Norma" was a more dramatic affair, stylistically speaking.
Hip, that is; hot, stylistically speaking.
Stylistically speaking, in fact, most of the art seen in "Crowning Glory" had origins outside Portugal itself.
Men's tennis hasn't seen an upper body quite like Nadal's, but don't be fooled by the stone-cut look - it's remarkably deceiving, stylistically speaking.
The closest motif, stylistically speaking, appears in a mosaic from North Hill, Colchester (pI.
"The Crossley Baby" takes awhile to crank up, stylistically speaking - the opening pages are filled with workaday prose - but once it's rolling, Carey's dry voice hums along.
The fact that, stylistically speaking, any or all of them could have been made by Mr. Hamilton himself says something important about both the brilliance and the elusiveness of his art and career.
Stylistically speaking, Rose Van Vranken's bronze sculptures, "Budform No. 3" and "Ram," represent two vastly different sensibilities, but which led to the other is not made clear.
Far from sharing the easy camaraderie of "The Gilmore Girls," the television mother and daughter who, stylistically speaking, are on roughly equal footing, such pairs more closely resemble the Gastineau girls of the E!
So which, stylistically speaking, is the truer Warchus: the sensitive interpreter of a short, intermissionless comedy - the director prefers to think of "Art" as "a funny tragedy" - liberally flecked with wit and rue?
Stylistically speaking, the end comes with Janet Morgan's two-dimensional nudes made of paper pulp in brilliant colors and with Bill Downer's heads, also cast in the same material, that are identical except for their colors.
Stylistically speaking, Khan's closest kin may be neither kathak nor Martha Graham but the lyrical martial-arts-inspired choreography of global blockbusters like "Charlie's Angels," "The Matrix" and "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon."
The well-known road from Paris to New York or, stylistically speaking, from Cubism to Pop is traced not once but twice, in the upper galleries devoted to art and advertising and again in the lower ones, where art and graffiti, caricature and the comics are scrunched together.