Get Free Checker

How To Use Eloquent In A Sentence

  • I guess she would rather I expressed myself in a more ladylike manner, or at least a little more eloquently.
  • The ensemble playing is lock tight, the soloists are eloquent; the seven pieces (five of them composed by group members) are literate and stimulating.
  • His range of effects is unusually eloquent; there is something of the monoprint to them, as well as elements of the Surrealist techniques of decalcomania and frottage.
  • He remains an eloquent and witty portrait of self-delusion.
  • It is not merely that she is eloquent and articulate; she is also unusually shrewd and intelligent.
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
Fix common errors and boost your confidence in every sentence.
Get started
for free
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
  • Brilliant and eloquent, he was full of jokes and pranks. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is a world in which the grimace is often more eloquent than the phrase.
  • Though the guzzling gumshoes of the 30's and 40's evolved from those eloquent pipe-smoking dandies, they have as much in common as rotgut rye and Earl Grey tea.
  • Sister Aimee was a talented thespian as well as a legendarily eloquent preacher.
  • If he had kissed her with those uneloquent and untrained lips of his, impure in their purity, she would never have forgiven herself. Too Old for Dolls A Novel
  • Robert Price said it very eloquently: "Not only do the Gospels contain basic and irreconcilable differences in their accounts of Jesus, they have been put together according to a traditional Jewish practice known as "midrash", which involved reworking and enlarging on scripture. What Jesus Said and Did: 2) Divorce
  • He could be eloquent and lighthearted but also incisive and sarcastic with those who failed to live up to his high medical standards. Times, Sunday Times
  • Our literary editor has already offered her eloquent justification. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her inarticulateness made us believe we were eloquent.
  • It is grave, sometimes eloquent, responsive to sorrow, filled with deep questioning.
  • This is an ambitious 18-track programme piece redolent of the history, mystery, and eloquent loneliness in the Border hills of the composer's childhood.
  • He is the geologist who has most eloquently laid out the argument for higher oil prices.
  • He has written eloquently on American liberality and the excitement of American life.
  • Given his eloquent wordsmithery, even writing them down is no mean feat. Times, Sunday Times
  • With his eloquent amanuensis Chen Boda at his elbow, he cast back to China's wartime experience for a solution.
  • The consistency with which the reviews mention the poorness of the service is very eloquent, demonstrating the decalage between what this place thinks it is and what it actually is.
  • Porgy must be one of the longest and most physically demanding roles in the repertory, and Alvy Powell meets the challenge eloquently despite occasional traces of vocal strain.
  • At that time he was a popular priest -- mondain, clever and eloquent. On the Edge of the War Zone From the Battle of the Marne to the Entrance of the Stars and Stripes
  • I first saw this suggestion very eloquently expressed in a short column by Roger Ebert.
  • Further, his practical experience during a time of great economic stress made him an eloquent exponent of the idea that there are times when government has to play a leading role in solving economic problems.
  • The defence lawyer made an eloquent plea for his client's acquittal.
  • His writing is superbly articulate and eloquent, the essence of literary beauty.
  • I heard him make a very eloquent speech at that dinner.
  • But secret video of Milosevic being marched in handcuffs, head bowed, to his solitary cell spoke more eloquently: he no longer has the power to instill fear and exert total control over the nation he misruled for more than a decade.
  • He waxed eloquent about her talents as an actress.
  • He also eloquently captured the general ambiance of amazement. The Scientist
  • Released in 1981, as riots raged on Britain's streets, Ghost Town was one of the most searingly eloquent protest songs ever written.
  • The creation of works of art involves all degrees of intention, from the hut in the wilderness rudely thrown together, whose purpose was shelter, to a Gothic cathedral, in its multitudinousness eloquent of man's worship and aspiration. The Gate of Appreciation Studies in the Relation of Art to Life
  • That they do," she answered, with an eloquent and expressive glance; and thereupon ushered me into, not the kitchen, but the dining room -- a favour, I took it, in recompense for my grand manner. JOHNNY UPRIGHT
  • The eloquent orator far prefers to work from a few scribbled notes rather than stick to a pre-prepared speech.
  • Demosthenian eloquence," said Don Quixote, "means the eloquence of Demosthenes, as Ciceronian means that of Cicero, who were the two most eloquent orators in the world. Don Quixote
  • His voice was wonderful, his tale marvelous, and his choice of words eloquent and perfect.
  • She is intelligent, eloquent, attractive, modest, and a strong advocate for her positions.
  • Jess really excels himself here, in his evocation/evisceration of two videos we've also skewered at k-punk, though much less eloquently.
  • The most eloquent witness to this fact is Maxse's old ally Bridgeman.
  • At the beginning of the eighteenth century, Johann Mattheson, the great, stunningly eloquent peacock of Baroque musical literature, was in no doubt that the chalumeau the forerunner of the clarinet – with its “rather howling sound”, was not an appropriate instrument to be heard in sophisticated entertainments. Archive 2009-04-01
  • His eloquent, amusing, yet sad and sensitive writing raises many timely and important issues.
  • There is also an eloquent record of tribal history of the indigenous peoples of Alaska's ethnic Indian and Inuit population.
  • At which Bernal threw his head back, hair streaming like an oriflamme… and gave an address, eloquent, passionate masterly, prophetic, which lasted 45 minutes.
  • His blurred tone and urbane, eloquent solos are enjoyable enough, but the star here is the tenorist.
  • More unedited, unorganized, uneloquent notes on Readercon before I forget everything that happened.... Archive 2005-07-01
  • I heard him make a very eloquent speech at that dinner.
  • The passage eloquently describes the process: "Cumque volumus ut fascietur, nutrix eius membra suaviter tangere debet et quod dilatandum fuerit dilatare, et quod subtiliandum subtiliare, et omne membrum secundum convenientiorem figuram figurare, et hoc totum subtilit compressione cum extremitatibus digitorum, quod quidem multis faciendum erit vicibus." back A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
  • We're not interested in raw numbers, but ensuring that our valued customers enjoy and appreciate the curated news and the eloquent writers whom we employ, etc. etc.
  • At the conclusion of his installation homily, Benedict spoke eloquently of friendship in Christ, and how it opens the doors to mutual trust.
  • From the first few moments, however, the performance took on the feeling of a ceremony with the deep resonance of the cello in the sanctuary and the player's eloquent artistry.
  • Lewis had been very eloquent in explaining how things should be, even if he wasn't working with the whole story, while Mally had an offhand manner about her that gave her reasoning a little too much patness. Greenmantle
  • This is primarily due to its ferocious monologues: long, rolling thunderstorms of eloquent rage. Times, Sunday Times
  • These works, awkward and assertive, belong to the 'ineloquent' in his art. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Of china, of jewelry, of gold-headed canes, valuable arms, picturesque antiquities, with what eloquent entrainement might he not speak! The Fitz-Boodle Papers
  • They numbered some of the most powerful people in Scotland - judges, sheriffs and senior lawyers used to putting their case eloquently and with force.
  • You recall, perhaps, that eloquent passage in his noble defence of the poet Archias, wherein Cicero (not Kikero) refers to his own pursuit of literary studies: "Hæc studia adolescentiam alunt, senectutem oblectant; secundas res ornant, adversis perfugium ac solatium præbent; delectant domi, non impediunt foris; pernoctant nobiscum, peregrinantur, rusticantur! The Love Affairs of a Bibliomaniac
  • Your article starts wonderfully, propounding the sentiments that could have been expressed by a tree hugging commie like me, only you do it so much more eloquently.
  • Bringing home-baked goods or leaving a small gift with a note on someone's desk can sometimes have a greater impact than a thousand eloquent sermons.
  • Young (1681-1765), in his "Night Thoughts," produced a work eloquent rather than poetical, dissertative when true poetry would have been imaginative, but suggesting much of imagery and feeling as well as religious reflection. Handbook of Universal Literature From the Best and Latest Authorities
  • His elegant epistles, brilliant treatises, and eloquent protreptics for asceticism appeared to promise him great things.
  • He is eloquent at description, fastidious about mythic details, but reticent about his personal life.
  • The pictures were an eloquent reminder of the power of the volcano.
  • Thus there are some signs that we might get a week of eloquent dispute as opposed to small-minded and parochial bickering.
  • You watch his eloquent gestures and hear the intake of breath before stopping his next sentence. Christianity Today
  • ‘The Divine Comedy’ is an epic poem brimming with information and eloquent literary devices.
  • While the first clip features nervous Kurt, here's the more eloquent Aaron, who explains the financials behind gay-for-pay porn, and how he, uh, "readies" himself for work. Queerty
  • Their three books together make a powerful and eloquent case for the abolition of the death penalty.
  • Simple objects speak eloquently of the havoc wrought. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Canterbury Tales bear eloquent witness to the fact that for centuries Becket's tomb in the cathedral was the greatest pilgrimage shrine in England.
  • I consider the sanctity of settlements to be of the utmost importance for the policy reasons more eloquently discussed elsewhere.
  • With his piercing eyes, his eloquent and hypnotic manner of speaking, his neck and wrists covered in Santa Muerte scapulars and Santería-like beads, the self-anointed priest had developed an enthusiastic following in the northern suburbs of the city. Down and Delirious in Mexico City
  • During the Q&A, following last Thursday's WGAe preview screening, Sorkin eloquently delineated the various materials with which he crafted his character arcs: Aristotle. Susanna Speier: The Social Network Politiku
  • The Danza Tedesca featured skewed and arhythmical sections delivered with eloquent athleticism.
  • Lady Winsleigh studied the lovely face, eloquent with love and truth, for some moments in silence; -- a kind of compunction pricked her conscience. Thelma
  • Brilliant and eloquent, he was full of jokes and pranks. Times, Sunday Times
  • I'm sure he phrased it rather more eloquently.
  • Did he think he could appease her with flatteries, by calling her graceful and beautiful, which she was not, and by putting eloquent lies in her mouth? Wildfire
  • In addition, Wagner is also quite explicit in describing his eloquent orchestra as having a role, in its commentary on the action, as equivalent to that of the chorus in Greek drama.
  • The material is clearly presented and written in a lucid and eloquent manner.
  • Thank you for once again eloquently expressing the angst we all feel. by A World in Conflict
  • Indeed, one of the interesting aspects of the work is the eloquent witness that he provides for precisely these pre-scientific ways of thinking.
  • True, the opera can seem talky despite Mussorgsky's eloquent song-speech techniques, but with the right singing actors, a gallery of fascinating characters comes vividly to life.
  • She made an eloquent appeal for action before it was too late.
  • The citizens are presented as eloquent and well-organised with a reasoned political strategy.
  • The holes in the plasterboard walls of his hall bear eloquent testimony to his frustrations. DEAD BEAT
  • He looked over at the older boy, whose expression eloquently declaimed that the whole world had conspired against him since the day of his birth. A Call to Arms
  • She was an eloquent speaker, able to move and inspire audiences.
  • He was an eloquent opponent of the exercise of arbitrary power by governments the world over.
  • Gamini Dissanayake made a charismatic case for Sri Lanka cricket on that day in June 1981, winning over the fustiest of cricket administrators with an eloquent plea for them to be granted Test status. The speech that set free Sri Lanka cricket and glued a troubled nation | David Hopps
  • Don't make eloquent speeches; be concise. Christianity Today
  • When the convocation met there were a great many sermons preached by various learned and eloquent divines, but nothing was produced which was pronounced by the general voice a satisfactory answer to the doctrines of the heresiarch.
  • Preston writes and speaks eloquently and emphatically — his responses to questions often best captured in interspersed italicizations. The Journalist and the Murderer
  • Never foul your own nest was Lionel, Sr.'s, most eloquent advice to his sons. MIDDLE AGE: A ROMANCE
  • They are given a fitting memorial in these eloquent pages. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Jenkins, is eloquent exceedingly upon the _narcotine_ of fashionable life: declares that its soothing influences were unequalled by vapour of purest mundungus, or acetate of morphia, or even pill of opium, blended intimately with glass of _eau-de-vie_. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 53, No. 327, January, 1843
  • Picturesque ruins become eloquent backdrops for biblical dramas, daydreams of shepherds and bacchantes, or meditations on the pettiness of modern life. Museums: The Romance of Ruins
  • It's a simple, eloquent biography that records both its subject's talent and his good-heartedness. Times, Sunday Times
  • Sound design and cinematography tell the story as eloquently as what is said. Times, Sunday Times
  • There sang the nightingale, whose chant arouses the sleeper, and the merle with his note like the voice of man and the cushat and the ring-dove, whilst the parrot with its eloquent tongue answered the twain. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Very soon father and son resumed their old relations of sudden tempers and mutual admiration, and a strange, rather pathetic, quite uneloquent love that was none the less real because it was, on either side, completely selfish. The Cathedral
  • Mr Keyes, a former radio talk-show host and Reagan administration diplomat, is the most eloquent of the Republican candidates.
  • The Mennonite Church in Canada expresses such concern in eloquent, thoughtful terms.
  • A self-imposed career hiatus has kept this eloquent, loquacious and unpretentious street-style guy from touring around these parts since the late '90s.
  • There he spoke eloquently ‘of cultivating general friendship, and of bringing collisions of interest to the umpirage of reason rather than of force.’
  • Mr Keyes, a former radio talk-show host and Reagan administration diplomat, is the most eloquent of the Republican candidates.
  • By moving beyond the divisions that often segregate both people and art forms, Diakite eloquently demonstrates the interconnectedness that animates the universe.
  • Where is now the enthusiastic Gironde, where the volcanic mountain, the fiery, and eloquent Mirabeau, the wily Brissot, the atheistic Lequinios, the remorseless Marat, the bloody St. Just, and the chief of the deplumed and fallen legions of equality? The Stranger in France or, a Tour from Devonshire to Paris Illustrated by Engravings in Aqua Tint of Sketches Taken on the Spot.
  • Nec loquaces autem convivas nec mutos legere oportet; quia eloquentia in foro et apud subsellia; silentium vero non in convivio sed in cubiculo esse debet. The History of Roman Literature From the earliest period to the death of Marcus Aurelius
  • Though he was eloquent for a Sakuntala, Jemunu-jah knew his own terranglo could not equal that of his companion. Drowning World
  • Chances are, it would be more eloquently and insightfully written as well. Times, Sunday Times
  • Susan Zakin is the most perceptive and eloquent political columnist in print in Tucson and probably in the whole damn state.
  • As David Yeago has noted in a critique of Gerhard Forde, the most eloquent American proponent of such an interpretation of Luther, in this scheme Lutheranism is reduced to a kind of gnostic sect.
  • For here is drivel that is profound; doggerel that is eloquent; simplemindedness that is deep.
  • It conjures so eloquently the pain, vengeance and retribution that war brings. Times, Sunday Times
  • And the stridency of those who argue otherwise bears eloquent testimony to that fact.
  • He smears the hues and tears the forms and scribbles across the surface in a kind of eloquent frenzy.
  • This is an eloquent testimony to her determination, indomitable spirit and steadfast commitment to the cause.
  • This positive value was most eloquently summed up in a placard carried by a pregnant demonstrator in New York City on February 15th, 2003.
  • Our victories in the culture wars, eloquently recapitulated by Ethan Porter in Democracy last summer "V-Day in the Culture Wars," Issue #17, have perhaps made us lax. Elbert Ventura: Making History
  • The Quartet is a cyclic composition full of fine music ranging from the eloquent to the virtuosic.
  • He eloquently regrets the sororicide and uxoricide he committed before his sentence is carried out.
  • Nupen scrupulously avoids any mention of the controversies in his newly filmed introductions, which he speaks simply and eloquently to camera.
  • Jenkins, is eloquent exceedingly upon the _narcotine_ of fashionable life: declares that its soothing influences were unequalled by vapour of purest mundungus, or acetate of morphia, or even pill of opium, blended intimately with glass of _eau-de-vie_. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 53, No. 327, January, 1843
  • At this moment, that which fills my mind is not eloquent words of glory and exaltation, but rather, weighty thoughts of bigger responsibility, greater humility, and deeper self-reflection.
  • ‘When the heart and thoughts are whole, the tongue speaketh eloquently from the secret recesses of the soul. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Travellers from India brought me copies of underground newsletters, cyclostyled or badly printed on cheap paper, their ink smudged but their message clear, eloquent testimony both to the people's despair and their defiance.
  • What Barsamian's questions provoke is an eloquent and desperate plea for direct, instantaneous action.
  • It was an eloquent speech that went unheard, except for the few of us present that day.
  • In the south, pasta bakes tend to be more tomato-based, like the Abruzzi dish with lamb or the famous timballo described so eloquently in Giuseppe di Lampedusa's novel The Leopard.
  • Shostakovich's slow movements always represent the composer at his most eloquent and deeply personal.
  • Mr. Griffiths I could not pay a more eloquent testimony to the doctor than my hon. Friend has just paid.
  • Moreover, the Romantic painter's impulsion to take risks, eloquently discussed in Anita Brookner's Romanticism and its discontents, throws valuable light on Berlioz's use of rhetoric.
  • Each face is conjured from eloquent pencil lines and blurs of paint against a virginal white swath of satin, hung vertically like an iconic banner.
  • As expressions of unrequited love go, Ellie Goulding's new song "The Writer" is afine – raw, eloquent, generally gorgeous – effort. Ellie Goulding's summer of love
  • In "Baptizing," from Lives of Girls and Women (1971), Munro wrote eloquently of two young lovers, one of whom has almost drowned the other (men and water again: in Ovid water fuses a couple's sexuality; in Munro it distinguishes and separates). Leave Them and Love Them
  • She highlighted very eloquently the pain and loss of personal grief.
  • Not the most eloquent of summaries but succinct if nothing else.
  • But when Mr. Obama delivered his stunningly eloquent and inspiring address at midday on Jan. 20, he provided a powerful hint of what "bipartisan," a term hollowed out by habitual and insincere misuse, means to him now. True Blue Liberal
  • This is an eloquent, passionate, inspiring book.
  • Leaders improvised eloquent orations referring to the usual civic virtues.
  • Manon gave her brother a long look, eyebrows upraised, head lowered, which said eloquently, Oh, and what is going on here?
  • My mother waxed eloquent on the theme of wifely duty.
  • The pastor delivered an eloquent eulogy for Ryan and then softly shut his book.
  • Who that has known a man quick and shrewd to see dispassionately the inner history, the reason and the ends, of the combinations of society, and at the same time eloquent to tell of them, with a hold on the attention gained by a certain quaint force and sagacity resident in no other man, can find it difficult to understand why men still resort to Montesquieu? How Books Become Immortal
  • Simple objects speak eloquently of the havoc wrought. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then did the mother's rage burst forth without restraint, eloquent, horrisonous. Denzil Quarrier
  • When the referee mercifully signalled a conclusion, the short burst of booing from the supporters became the most eloquent action of a pitiful fixture.
  • The ineloquent coherence of the book gladdened and surprised me. Times, Sunday Times
  • Biden's eloquent acceptance speech in Springfield, Illinois, while deliberately "veep" in tone, maintained a fireside rootsiness that played well; he and Obama looked good together. Dakis Hagen: But Has Joe Biden Ever Punched a Voter?
  • He was eloquent which I define as the ability to take complex things and make them simple to understand to a jury of your peers. Edwards Coins New Phrase For Escalation: "The McCain Doctrine"
  • For most, non-attendance was not even an option, and the evening's master of ceremonies, Sal Masakela, summed up this sentiment eloquently as he made his way upstairs from the red carpet.
  • According to M. Guizot, “Tacite a peint les Germains comme Montaigne et Rousseau les sauvages, dans un acces d’humeur contre sa patrie: son livre est une satire des moeurs Romaines, l’eloquente boutade d’un patriote philosophe qui veut voir la vertu la, ou il ne rencontre pas la mollesse honteuse et la depravation savante d’une vielle societe.” The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • Eloquent leaders with strong voices of unmediated outrage have emerged.
  • One image in the series eloquently conveys this movement.
  • Malcolm X was eloquently militant, sophisticated, and his speeches finely crafted.
  • Great comedians don't necessarily make eloquent presenters. Times, Sunday Times
  • But used responsibly, emotional resonance is the appeal of every speaker who is eloquent rather than simply articulate.
  • The defence lawyer made an eloquent plea for his client's acquittal.
  • Twenty-six names, on two sheets of Downing Street notepaper: a more eloquent and concise statement of the Prime Minister's standing than any number of opinion polls and election results could ever provide.
  • It was a genuine pleasure to hear a master talk so eloquently about his work.
  • He will need to prove he is as tough as he is eloquent and as level-headed as he is inspiring.
  • The mountaintop offers eloquent testimony on all of this, for nothing there grows for ever.
  • It basically justified, as it always does, Israeli killing of Arabs, but wants Israel to be careful in its killing, not out of concern for the civilian Arabs that Israel habitually kills, but out of concern for "the soul of Israel," as Michael Lerner would put it in his most uneloquent way. Monday, July 31, 2006
  • Giving us a backrub is a far more eloquent way of asking. Esquire.com Article Feed
  • I was mad when I read about your testing, and... sometimes I back off from saying stuff because as Lene so eloquently put, it is *your* life and I don't want to feel the right to barge in just because I care. So was it worth it?
  • She was eloquent, vocal and strong when she championed the cause of her students and her teacher colleagues.
  • Hi, I'm a bit wary of commenting here, 'cos what I've to share about John Fowles is nowhere as eloquent as what you've put -- so I won't:) Fowles Play
  • As is the wont with all our film heroes who wax eloquent on the plague of video piracy only when their films are slated for a release, Chiranjeevi too was no exception.
  • But his eloquently argued position that film-makers have a social responsibility also strikes a chord with me.
  • The performance is a remarkable example of the maestro's eloquent stick technique and ear for instrumental balance.
  • The constitutional debates at Philadelphia had been eloquent and profound.
  • She draws some truly eloquent sounds from the organ, which though relatively young, is an instrument of incomparable celestial beauty.
  • I'd like to thank the authors who signed their names to the very eloquent letter.
  • Celeste is an articulate, eloquent speaker with an electrifying style coming straight out of her deep pain and anger.
  • The arguments from both sides were eloquent and persuasive, and for some time it seemed that the verdict could go either way.
  • Therefore music about this subject is extremely eloquent: visions people sometimes get in anabiosis excite and carry them to the very edge of the universe, the place you have never planned to go to ... but will these visions return our consciousness back? Undefined
  • Tall, dark, handsome and eloquent, our hero cuts a dashing figure in the little city with big ambitions.
  • I can understand why he may not want to wax eloquent on the past 12 months. Times, Sunday Times
  • Drawing his cimeter, and pressing forward, he was about to deal a left-handed blow that might have been fatal to, at least, one of the gazers, when the princesses crowded round him, and implored mercy for the prisoners; even the timid Zorahayda forgot her shyness, and became eloquent in their behalf. The Alhambra
  • Mr Keyes, a former radio talk-show host and Reagan administration diplomat, is the most eloquent of the Republican candidates.
  • As was the case with his predecessor, the most eloquent image of Leo X is his portrait by Raphael.
  • The exceptionally high turn out at the presidential elections was an eloquent affirmation of the importance that the voters attached to the office. The Government and Politics of France
  • He is a passionate and eloquent defender of field sports and his argument that hare coursing and bullfighting are both in the general interest of the species is persuasive.
  • In 2005, her unmistakable timbre was still glorious and lustrously beautiful, and she sang eloquently in Spanish. Times, Sunday Times
  • Even the most reasoned and eloquent theological discourse will not reconcile viewpoints that are rooted in incompatible assumptions about the nature and purpose of our faith and community.
  • Luciana appears near incoherent (based on Giovanni's side of the conversation) and her debonair, eloquent lover a frazzled and henpecked rube.
  • Mistress _Joyce_, the Queen's Bench lost an eloquent advocate in you. Joyce Morrell's Harvest The Annals of Selwick Hall
  • There is ample evidence that the centralized way of organizing and managing frustrates the elementary quest for freedom Tolstoy describes so eloquently.
  • In the years since, Atlas has carved a name for himself as one of the most eloquent orators on the sport.
  • The words of the driver as he sailed away were -- "Go home and die, you moonstruck, gibbering, wobbling omadhaun," and she had thought that his description was apt and eloquent. Here are Ladies
  • Emily searched her mind for something eloquent and meaningful to say in response, but the plain and simple truth rolled off the tip of her tongue instead.
  • Alan Keyes, an eloquent black talk-show host who fervently opposes abortion, has never officially abandoned the race.
  • Peter Mandelson delivered an extraordinary, barnstorming speech that (I never thought I'd write this) eloquently expressed the views of the left - or the Israeli left, at least.
  • Your condencending racial comments are some of the most uneloquent words I have read in awhile. Obama vs. Keyes
  • At the UN, it doesn't matter whether you speak only French and the orator is waxing eloquent in Chinese.
  • Candy et compagnie: I don't remember the exact words that I used, but they surely were not as eloquent as my children's. Mamie - French Word-A-Day
  • In their fascinating and eloquent valetudinarian correspondence, Adams and Jefferson had a great deal to say about religion.
  • So dearly do we love our own voice that we cannot bear to hear it mixed with that of others -- perhaps drowned; and then our bashfulness tongue-ties us in the hush expectant of our "golden opinions," when all eyes are turned to the speechless "old man eloquent," and you might hear a tangle dishevelling itself in Neæra's hair. Recreations of Christopher North, Volume 2
  • market to wellness and girandola a gratefulness of ineloquently factitious galen koch chalkboard they unattributable it or not. Rational Review

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):