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evoke - use in sentences
Object
- emotion: Poetry is the use of words to evoke emotions.
- memory: His voice evokes memories of days gone by, whilst staying true to the current music scene, in every form.
- feeling: Green manages to evoke a feeling of frustration in the chapters relating to King Douglas.
- mood: The Spanish Explorer case ( £ 54 ), meanwhile, will evoke a holiday mood.
- conjecture: Most sounds evoke conjectures of possible experiences differing from, and more important than, themselves.
Noun phrase with adjective complement
- such: The beer is only ever brewed in Rome and Padua, a provenance that evokes names such as Prada and Versace.
Adjective complement
- more: Do they evoke more than the films can deliver?
Modifying Another Word
- vividly: As a result the house and its contents combine to vividly evoke the innovative lifestyle of this influential group of émigré artists.
- perfectly: Moreover, Giles Croft perfectly evoked a sense of each epoch of the play.
- beautifully: Here, time, setting and atmosphere are beautifully evoked.
- somehow: The glazing in the undulating ribbon roof revealed London's billowing skyscape, a sight that somehow evoked the smell of the sea.
Used with why or when
- what: However, the ' Anglican Communion ' also evokes what Benedict Anderson describes as an ' imagined community ' .
Preposition: in
- play: As a result, the audience is able to experience many more emotions than normally are evoked in a single play.
Preposition: by
- event: Stress, evoked by traumatic events and experiences, was again linked to increased levels of smoking by the respondents.
The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.
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