Sparkling in a sentence as a noun

I finally got my own machine in the mid 90s, my sparkling little Performa 5200.

He's always seemed to have had a pretty sparkling reputation as well as the obvious talent.

It's a sparkling wine and there are a lot of sparkling wines that are equal or better than a mediocre champagne, but they're still champagne.

> wine market is a bubble itselfI believe the domain specific language is "sparkling"...

The second half is about mask work and trance, which I was expecting to be fascinating, but it fell short of the sparkling magic of the first half.

Are you someone identified by the mafia at age 15 as a person who will go to college, look sparkling clean, and then infiltrate the FBI?

Consider what the cost to your business might be if that new sparkling offering on the table is pulled away without notice or recourse.

The intricacies of his observations have a sparkling beauty.

Let’s admit that as a society we got tricked for about century into coveting sparkling pieces of carbon, but it’s time to end the nonsense.

Because right now each of us probably does not have a sparkling track record of amazing web apps or mobile apps that are not tied directly to the Flash platform.

The closer you were to sparkling algebraic brilliance, or getting on Jeopardy at age-eleven, the harder it is.

Sparkling in a sentence as an adjective

"Champagne-method sparkling wine" can come from California, "Champagne" has to come from a particular region of France.

Bad examples:* Champagne is a sparkling wine made with a specific method from a specific kind of grapes grown on a specific soil in a specific climate.

Why not a clothes line with text documents cleaned, pegged and sparkling in the sun?If you get some resistance in the HN feedback, IMO it is because the service seems slapped together.

As the machines doors opened and closed, jets of air puffing at the passengers ahead of me, I wondered about the shorts which I still had on. I looked down at the empty pockets and they were literally sparkling with gunpowder and other residue from the fireworks the night before.

They come out with their shiny diplomas and their sparkling academic records, which make them look very presentable at interviews, but render them largely useless on the ice.

On the strength of this article I downloaded the demo, and it was a long way away from "a visual lollipop of swirling color that leaves your eyes sparkling and pixelated for hours".

At the very least, the man could have sought out the Ultimate Toothbrushing Solution a three-second-a-day quick rinse that eliminates the need to brush your teeth, while also keeping them sparkling white.

By now, it should be sparkling clear that these organizations have no respect for the ideals that the constitution attempted to enshrine, namely personal freedom and a government subservient to the people, and they should be continually called out as the illegitimate charlatans they are.

Not one single cork dork is going to confuse a late harvest reisling with a dry sparkling wine with a chianti either and yet reliably once or twice a year some one brings up that oh hey look some people can be tricked into thinking an unspecific white is red, as if that were the only distinction between wines.

It's an understandable mistake, since we tend to view history with a sort of flattening perspective; the recent past is spread out before us in sparkling detail, then fields marching away we spy the industrial revolution, the enlightenment, the renaissance — but beyond that, as records are fewer and the major changes coming at longer intervals, history essentially disappears beyond the curvature of the landscape, and the horizon marks the moment when our understanding lapses, and time compresses, robbing centuries of their weight and duration.

Sparkling definitions

noun

a rapid change in brightness; a brief spark or flash

See also: twinkle scintillation

adjective

shining with brilliant points of light like stars; "sparkling snow"; "sparkling eyes"

adjective

used of wines and waters; charged naturally or artificially with carbon dioxide; "sparkling wines"; "sparkling water"

See also: effervescent