Her locutions seem to have neither introductions nor conclusions but begin from a place of inquiry and intimacy. |
|
In one of the courtrooms here, the air is thick with quaint-sounding British courtroom locutions. |
|
His earliest plays were political, ridiculing the wooden locutions of communist rhetoric. |
|
For our paraphrastic procedure to be comprehensive, it must work with contexts containing explicitly comparative locutions. |
|
It is easy to paraphrase another author's ideas or incorporate his or her locutions without crediting the source. |
|
Even the most resistive of these locutions, however, do not explicitly embrace feminism or seek any larger political context. |
|
We are not using locutions of that kind in this case for reasons found in the history of the argument. |
|
But these artful locutions raise more questions than they answer. |
|
The surface grammar of power locutions can be misleading in numerous ways. |
|
For these reasons, we try to help our students understand the pejorative implications of such stereotypical locutions and believe that what they say matters. |
|
While it is not easy to fathom the chairman's involuted public locutions, he appears to have had more than one reason for his interest rate manipulations. |
|
What is chilling is that Mullen's masterfully deformed locutions sound more like clarifying paraphrases than like parodies. |
|
The television show host is widely recognized for his all-too-common locutions. |
|
While the president may seem comfortable with his malapropisms and strange locutions, they nonetheless put his backers on edge. |
|
However, the CXR often fails in determining the presence of locutions or septations within the effusion or in the detection of pleural thickening and fibrosis. |
|