Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: June 8, 2025
"You enunciate great truths, belle dame!" said Hector, "and your last sentence is the greatest of all 'The woman he happens to want." "Which brings us back to our muttons in this case only a defenceless baby lamb. Now tell me what you are here for, trying to cajole me with your good looks and mock humility."
She could scarcely enunciate. Her very tongue seemed stiff with the cold. The man turned and stared at her with sharp blue eyes under red brows frost-white between his cap and twice-wound red tippet. "Hey?" he said, in a muffled voice. "Can you tell me where Mr. Otis lives?" "Otis?" "Yes, sir." "Which Otis d'ye mean? There's two Otises. D'ye mean Calvin Otis or Jim Otis?"
If an actor essays the rôle of Hamlet, he must first of all speak distinctly and make himself clearly understood; otherwise all his study and characterization are in vain. The pianist must likewise make himself understood; he therefore must enunciate clearly. "You speak of velocity as difficult for some players to acquire.
One can of course control oneself, one can let no murmur of pain escape one, one can even enunciate deep and courageous maxims, because one would not trouble the peace of others, waiting patiently till the golden mood returns. But what if the desolate conviction forces itself upon the mind that sorrow is the truer thing?
To enunciate these demands categorically, a deputation of the estates-general came to Luxemburg. These gentlemen were received with courtesy by Don John, but their own demeanour was not conciliatory. A dislike to the Spanish government; a disloyalty to the monarch with whose brother and representative they were dealing, pierced through all their language.
He would say: Lord Rosebery whether intentionally or otherwise, we leave our readers to decide, or, with seeming conviction, or, doubtless giving rein to the playful humour which is characteristic of him, has expressed a sentiment, or, taken on himself to enunciate a theory, or, made himself responsible for a dictum, which,
Adister accepted her husband's proffered arm unhesitatingly at the appointed stroke of the clock. She said: 'Yes, in agreement with him, as if she had never heard him previously enunciate the formula, upon his pious vociferation that there should be no trifling with her hours of rest.
But the principle that life is an evil and annihilation a good lies at the root of the system, and this axiom I have never dared to enunciate in any general way, although I have admitted it here and there in individual cases. What I still like in the misanthrope of Frankfort, is his antipathy to current prejudice, to European hobbies, to western hypocrisies, to the successes of the day.
In so much as He is the universal, God is, for us, in relation to development, Being enclosed in itself, Being at unity with itself. When we say God is Being enclosed in itself, we enunciate a proposition which is bound to a development which we await.
By a similar train of reasoning, not only may the international tribunals of England enunciate new rules of law, as universal law, if founded and fairly deduced from ascertained modern, public, and international opinion; but they may refuse to alter settled rules, however much opposed by other nations, provided those rules are still deducible from that origin.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking