View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Expressiveness.
Expressiveness
Expressiveness meaning
The quality or degree of being expressive.
Synonyms of Expressiveness
Example sentences (14)
Wasn't the poetic expressiveness, the luxurious brush strokes, being applied to Day By Day equal to that of its greatest interpreter, Sarah Vaughan?
Dug’s sidekick swine Hognob possesses zero spoken lines but 10 times the charisma and expressiveness of his human companion.
I was drawn to the expressiveness of the former – I still cry singing “You’ll Never Walk Alone” – and was put off by what felt like the elitism of classical music.
As he got older his performances tended to be overlaid to a greater extent with a personal expressiveness which often divided critical opinion.
Besides using pieces to teac various elements of playing style, a good teacher also inspires more intangible qualities—such as expressiveness and musicianship.
Even though many theremin sounds can be approximated on many modern synthesizers, some musicians continue to appreciate the expressiveness, novelty, and uniqueness of using an actual theremin.
Expressiveness The Löwenheim–Skolem theorem shows that if a first-order theory has any infinite model, then it has infinite models of every cardinality.
Here he produced a long series of operas, remarkable chiefly for their fluency and expressiveness, as well as other music for state occasions.
He used the volume and expressiveness of the instrument as integral to his style.
His journalistic abilities became essential for him to make a living and he survived as a witty critic, emphasizing the importance of drama and expressiveness in musical entertainment.
His theory of schemes has become established as the best universal foundation for this field, because of its expressiveness as well as technical depth.
Runtime * Due to its unconstrained expressiveness, low level C++ language features (e.g. unchecked array access, raw pointers, type punning ) cannot be reliably checked at compile-time or without overhead at run-time.
The cost of this expressiveness is that second-order and higher-order logics have fewer attractive metalogical properties than first-order logic.
These include limitations on its expressiveness and limitations of the fragments of natural languages that it can describe.