| In donnish inquisitions, he would challenge every utterance to expose lazy thinking. |
| The measure of five syllables is almost always inconvenient in utterance and should be broken up, by a rest, into two portions. |
| Possible meanings of words contribute to the meaning of an utterance, which is an act by a speaker. |
| Here is what the Spanish Prime Minister-elect had to say in virtually his first public utterance following the election. |
| This utterance somehow relates to the all too concerned cinema audience as well. |
| The literary utterance too creates the state of affairs to which it refers, in several respects. |