• She was limping, she explained, because of liposuction, moving tenderly and somewhat unsteadily on stilettos.

    NEWYORKER: Shauntrelle

  • Their romantic and artistic partnership is depicted tenderly, unstintingly, and in surprisingly intimate detail by the director Marie Losier, who spent plenty of time in their company and unfurls the remarkable range of their activity, in public and in private.

    NEWYORKER: The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye

  • She put her hand on the back of his neck and touched his hair tenderly with her fingers.

    NEWYORKER: Fiction

  • But Adams enlivens the proceedings with some of his most adventurous music, by turns tenderly melodic and harshly dissonant.

    WSJ: John Adams' staged 'Gospel' has NY premiere

  • She is all the family that Sam has but far more than he wants, and the movie watches tenderly over their time together.

    NEWYORKER: Laurel Canyon

  • The urban landscape is, of course, much changed from the era the hotel so tenderly evokes, and ever transformed by the jolting absence of the Twin Towers.

    BBC: Brand new old New York

  • I've always prided myself on being part of a marriage of equals, where we are both the breadwinners and, as I like to tenderly remind the South American gentleman to whom I am wed, we are both responsible for the housework.

    WSJ: In a Marriage, One Person Sometimes Needs to Take Charge

  • And although he is comprehended, sometimes tenderly, that ill, that terror, is squarely seen in this book.

    NEWYORKER: Invitation to a Beheading

  • Filming in suave, charcoal-matte black-and-white, he frames the poignant mini-melodramas of daily life with a calmly analytical yet tenderly un-ironic eye.

    NEWYORKER: Tabu

  • The limner always felt tenderly toward children: for themselves, for the grateful fact that they overlooked his defect, and also because he had no issue himself.

    NEWYORKER: The Limner

  • The joke is told tenderly by Paul Reiser, urbanely by Martin Mull, seductively by the sublime Sarah Silverman, gravely and with much loving, superfluous detail by George Carlin, and shrilly, with an emotion bordering on hysteria, by the inspired pixie Gilbert Gottfried.

    NEWYORKER: The Aristocrats

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