How to Use Rorschach test in a Sentence
Rorschach test
noun-
Its gleaming shell looks like a Rorschach test of ink black and golden orange.
— Rachel Carlson, NPR, 8 June 2024 -
Terminator 3 is a bit like a Rorschach test for fans of the franchise.
— Chris Snellgrove, EW.com, 10 Jan. 2023 -
The photo is a Rorschach test, a purposeful mixed message.
— Diane Winston, The Conversation, 31 May 2024 -
Now, the nation had a new Rorschach test on immigration.
— Neil Swidey, BostonGlobe.com, 16 Dec. 2022 -
The shiny candy is a bit like a Rorschach test, writes columnist Robin Abcarian.
— Laura Blasey, Los Angeles Times, 27 Mar. 2023 -
Beyond the health of the president himself, this moment offers a unique Rorschach test—for our country and for our politics.
— Abdul El-Sayed, The New Republic, 21 July 2022 -
But in a country where literary hits are a kind of Rorschach test, the popularity of his latest novel may be a sign of changing times.
— Constant Méheut, New York Times, 28 Aug. 2023 -
So, maybe Seinfeld gives us another answer to this Rorschach test of a riddle: that startups and their metrics, like the Olympics, can become games of inches.
— Byallie Garfinkle, Fortune, 6 June 2024 -
As soon as YouGov released the survey, the results circulated on social media and the reactions were a very Alabama sort of Rorschach test.
— Kyle Whitmire, al, 16 Apr. 2021 -
Dawn in this island village is a dissipating memory—a Rorschach test of clouds, backlit by the fiery rising sun that pours through the Moorish windows of my bedroom.
— Stephanie Rafanelli, Condé Nast Traveler, 8 May 2023 -
Soon videos of the trains were circulating all over; by January, the story had become international news and the images a kind of culture-war Rorschach test.
— Malia Wollan, New York Times, 23 Jan. 2024 -
But in truth, the WHO is like a Rorschach test, with each of its different constituents seeing in it a different agency that should prioritize different goals.
— Ashish Jha, Foreign Affairs, 16 Feb. 2021 -
Simpson was, and even in death, still is something of a Rorschach test — definitely for Angelenos, but really for all Americans.
— Erika D. Smith, Los Angeles Times, 11 Apr. 2024 -
But, as Chin’s story has become widely known, it’s also become a kind of political Rorschach test among Asian Americans.
— Hua Hsu, The New Yorker, 23 June 2022 -
Instead, like Nilsson’s photographs, the Birth Series serves today as a kind of Rorschach test, capable of conveying any number of meanings.
— Stephanie Gorton, Smithsonian Magazine, 24 July 2023 -
The frontman’s between-song jokes and spotty vocals ultimately led to the band’s US Festival performance becoming a Rorschach test that still divides fans to this day.
— Sean Burch, SPIN, 29 May 2023 -
The fight has become a Rorschach test for local tolerance of the tech industry’s new ideas: Are the driverless cars an interesting and safe transportation alternative?
— Yiwen Lu, New York Times, 9 Aug. 2023 -
The legislation is another example of how the Capitol riot has become a political Rorschach test in the country.
— Maysoon Khan, Hartford Courant, 22 Jan. 2023 -
Already, though, the roadmap is proving to be a political Rorschach test, with liberals and conservatives seeing opposite threats in its contours.
— NBC News, 28 May 2021 -
The collection acts as a Rorschach test of sorts, with some seeing in the distortions pregnant bellies, schoolgirl backpacks or even a sendup of the swaggering padded shoulders adopted by women who entered corporate America in the 1980s.
— Kin Woo, New York Times, 22 Sep. 2022 -
Now, as prosecutors continue to investigate the circumstances of Mr. Neely’s death, the case has become a political Rorschach test, dividing the city along long-simmering fault lines.
— Maria Cramer, New York Times, 4 May 2023 -
Machine is a deeply provocative and personal project, exemplifying artistic freedom, extending the boundaries for all things creative, reflecting back on all of us like a thoroughly thrilling Rorschach test.
— Liza Lentini, SPIN, 21 Apr. 2022 -
Its propaganda can carry multiple messages simultaneously and can serve as a type of Rorschach test for differing opinions.
— Michelle Ye Hee Lee, Washington Post, 21 Nov. 2022 -
Like Freudian analysis, or a linguistic Rorschach test, the puzzle creates meaning out of the chance encounters between words and images, proper and sometimes improper nouns, and acts as a window into our fantasies, tastes, and unyielding fixations.
— Anna Shechtman, The New Yorker, 20 Dec. 2021 -
The choice to praise or condemn him has become yet another Rorschach test of political team loyalty; the decision to stay silent has proved equally offensive and obituaries were immediately parsed for, depending on the parser, hypocrisy and bias.
— Mary McNamara, Star Tribune, 19 Feb. 2021 -
Expectations were so incredibly high with the No. 1 recruiting class — probably unrealistically so — that every loss has become a Rorschach test on Fisher’s progress in Year 5.
— Dallas News, 7 Oct. 2022 -
Emily the Criminal, a small, spikey, effective movie about a downwardly mobile Millennial art-school graduate turning to a life of crime, is a political and moral Rorschach test that gradually resolves itself into a meditation on the lure of sin.
— Ross Douthat, National Review, 25 Aug. 2022 -
Yet its arrival is a comfort, offering sounds that will ring familiar to longtime fans — and to everyone else serve as an atmospheric Rorschach test, alternately primitive and futuristic, beautiful and menacing, propulsive and ethereal.
— Todd Gilchrist, Variety, 28 July 2023
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'Rorschach test.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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