It's all too ethereal with not nearly enough changes in tempo or ideas.
The ethereal nature of her questions made them more suitable for a philosophy or English class, but the science teacher answered them as best he could.
No, the word 'ethereal' is an adjective used to describe a noun as extremely delicate and light in a way that seems too perfect for this world; for example an ethereal gown, an ethereal scene.
DNA is the basic substances of life, but at the same time it is almost ethereal, or unearthly, because of its minute size.
ethereal
Your question is itself a sentence which uses the word "could".
The ethereal glow of the moonlight illuminated the garden. Her ethereal beauty captivated everyone in the room. The music had an ethereal quality that transported listeners to another world. The mist rising from the lake created an ethereal atmosphere at dawn.
The word ethereal is pronounce i-theer-ee-uhl. It means light, airy, or tenuous.
As I walked through the forest, a gentle mist hung in the air, creating a mysterious and ethereal atmosphere.
(diaphanous : translucent, see-through, or ethereal) "The diaphanous material of her dress left little to the imagination." "The diaphanous mist was fading away very quickly."
You could write the sentence with the word torrent like this: I don't know how to use the word torrent in a sentence.
I sit there awhile taking in the ethereal beauty around me. The echoes added an ethereal, otherworldly feeling to the music.
Ethereal