The flowers are similar, but often have so little white about them that they are yellow in general effect, and are sometimes specked with crimson at the base of the petals.
The entablature seems somewhat disproportioned to the columns and the pediment; and, owing to this cause, there is a general effect of heaviness.
The sharp angles of these vestibules afford a contrast to the simplicity of the main building, while their clustered cupolas assist the general effect of roundness aimed at by the architect.
The fresco of the 'Magi' is less notable in detail, and in general effect is more spoiled by obtrusive blues.
He sees two or three unpromising churches, and looks into the chief of them, a building of strange and mixed style, but not without a certain stateliness of general effect.
As wholes, of course no one can compare the two in general effect.
Swing doors all about, constructed of horizontal slats, and in general effect bearing a picturesque resemblance to the doors of the old-time saloon.
They varied only in this: some were rich and haughty in general effect, others simple and perhaps dingy in appearance.
Her face was in the shadow, and he could make out nothing of its expression, save that there was a general effect of gravity about it.
There is nothing weak and attenuated about it, and its transepts and apses make up in general effect what it lacks in actual area.
The great palace designed by Weinbrunner branches out like the leaves of a fan, and, if not the equal of Versailles or Fontainebleau, suggests them not a little in general effect.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "general effect" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.