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How To Use Emphatically In A Sentence

  • Discuss emphatically on the process of electrostatics flocking of activated carbon fiber and its adsorbability.
  • The telescreen was emphatically not for entertainment.
  • But why is conscious experience emphatically positive?
  • Typically, this part of the film is edited so unemphatically that it appears to place equal emphasis on the little boy's bed-wetting and the death of his mother.
  • The spicy fruit conserve known as mostarda (most emphatically not mustard) is eaten with meat and game.
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  • ‘The persecution makes us strong’, said Vic emphatically.
  • The story unemphatically revolves around the main character, Chris Gardner, and his son, Christopher.
  • If both must be taken or rejected together, an alternative which we emphatically deny, what sincere and earnest thinker now, whose will is unterrifiedly consecrated to truth, can be expected to hesitate long? The Destiny of the Soul A Critical History of the Doctrine of a Future Life
  • There was a shade of meanness in her speech, and she spoke it so emphatically that for a moment he was not sure if she was telling the truth.
  • Where does chivalry at last become something more than a mere procession of plumes and armor, to be lamented by Burke, except in some of the less ambitious verses of the Trouvères, where we hear the canakin clink too emphatically, perhaps, but which at least paint living men and possible manners? The Writings of James Russell Lowell in Prose and Poetry, Volume V Political Essays
  • I say it and I say it emphatically, without wishing for one moment to defeat the ends of justice, accused was not accessory before the act and prosecutrix has not been tampered with. Ulysses
  • One day soon he will be confronted by a classmate on campus and he will be told emphatically: stop being such a douche.
  • A favourite rhetorical device is the appearance of emphatically real-world items in unexpected places. The Times Literary Supplement
  • When the future historian gives to another age his account of all that is included in German "frightfulness," there is no feature upon which he will dilate more emphatically than the extraordinary use made by the enemy of their Zeppelin fleet. Raemaekers' Cartoons With Accompanying Notes by Well-known English Writers
  • Felled by the ward of his intransigence, levelled and laid flat, sword brandished in denial – sword wafting words uttered emphatically in a trial of words by words, falling for the trap of his own rhetorical thirst, falling into the gap between those who run first and those who carp and cry in the pack – an empty husk cracked and ablated, an old fool trashed. Archive 2007-04-01
  • “Robert needs her papers,” Mark said unemphatically. Body of Evidence
  • Certainly, the movies are comedies, emphatically painful and sorrowful comedies, but they are comedies.
  • FREE MASONRY, CO-MASONRY, AND CATHOLICISM At the end of last month's lesson a few words were said about men and women practicing Mystic Masonry, and it might appear to some as if we en - dorse Co-Masonry, but this is emphatically not the case. Max Heindel's Letters to Students by The Rosicrucian Fellowship
  • That is, close up, shut up, or, as is said now, "bung up," -- emphatically, "We kept true time;" and the probability is, that in saying this, Sir Toby would accompany the words with the action of pushing an imaginary door; or _sneck up_. Notes and Queries, Number 29, May 18, 1850
  • 'Cleon' belongs to a grand group of poems, in which Browning shows himself to be, as I've said, the most essentially Christian of living poets -- the poet who, more emphatically than any of his contemporaries have done, has enforced the importance, the indispensableness of a new birth, the being born from above An Introduction to the Study of Robert Browning's Poetry
  • Ell emphatically denied making the statement, adding that he had nothing against white people.
  • WASHINGTON - Barack Obama moved emphatically Wednesday to erase the legacy of the past eight years by calling a bevy of Mideast leaders, circulating a not-yet-released executive order to close the Guantanamo prison and deliberately diminishing the powers of his own presidency. Top Stories - Google News
  • This paper analyzes on and probes into emphatically 14 kinds of rhetoric methods frequently used in advertising documents with the better effect including repeat, metaphor, dualization, etc.
  • So the pachydermic concept with the thunderous footfall is this: can a painter who veers back and forth between emphatically paint-as-paint abstractions (Richter squeegees the stuff across canvases on the studio floor) and a form of painstaking realism be taken seriously as a whole? Looking Back At Richter
  • It became an emphatically risk-averse society, partly because actions encouraged by the government could not fail, while those undertaken without central support could not succeed.
  • It may be equivalently priced, but it is emphatically not an equivalent product.
  • And nowhere upon the inspired pages of the fourth Evangelist, nor in that great Epistle to the Colossians, which is the very citadel and central fort of that doctrine in Scripture, is there more emphatically stated this truth than here, in these incidental allusions. Expositions of Holy Scripture Second Corinthians, Galatians, and Philippians Chapters I to End. Colossians, Thessalonians, and First Timothy.
  • The danger of war should be removed and peace safeguarded in the Korean peninsula," said the message, which was also emphatically read by a North Korean anchorwoman, wearing traditional Korean dress, in a state television broadcast monitored in Seoul. North Korea Calls For Better Ties With Warning
  • In his manner there was nothing of the supercilious apathy which characterizes the dandy introduced to some one whom he doubts if he can nod to from the bow-window at White's, -- none of such vulgar coxcombries had Lord Castleton; and yet a young gentleman more emphatically coxcomb it was impossible to see. The Caxtons — Volume 11
  • That the process involves the FCO in dishonesty, deviousness and dishonour is emphatically encapsulated in the apparent scheme whereby Brussels will delay proposals to scrap Britain's annual £3 billion rebate. Archive 2007-12-23
  • Although all its dishes are served from a communal "hot table", this handsome freehouse is emphatically not a carvery. Love is in the (open) air
  • Langs (1974 stated emphatically that the failure to share a preordained termination leads to “overintense, paranoid-like, rageful and vengeful fantasies, which are based on the sense of betrayal, “because the therapist has compromised himself and no longer invites trust” (p. Clinical Work with Adolescents
  • Words cannot express how emphatically this film withholds the pleasures of film-going.
  • The different faults in the area show up as vertical planes cutting emphatically through the crust. THE EARTH: An Intimate History
  • Yet because of their long-standing ideology — emphatically expressed by George W. Bush and Donald Rumsfeld in the year or two before 9/11 — that peacekeeping is not what America should be doing, they never really made the effort to revamp the American military and other institutions of American government that would allow America to do this peacekeeping successfully. Beinart Talks Back
  • The trooper ordered them to return to the camp and dress properly, adding emphatically that the stockingless craze must end, even if arrests had to be made to accomplish this end.
  • He has tried to reduce this latter tendency, of course, but emphatically not for reasons of image. Times, Sunday Times
  • This is emphatically not a religion of any single book, notwithstanding recent attempts to canonise works such as the Bhagavad Gita. The Hindus: An Alternative History by Wendy Doniger – review
  • SPECTER: Well, I say that the president might well have asked Arafat last Thursday to make the finite statement we've all been looking for for a long time, that is, to say in Arabic forcefully and emphatically that the suicide bombers should stop the suicide bombing. CNN Transcript Apr 7, 2002
  • She is emphatically not a modernist or postmodernist author. Times, Sunday Times
  • He himself cites no such accomplishments and concedes, as unemphatically as he can, that the U.N. “may be failing” in the Sudan, where its simulacrum of a “rules-based system” lets the government indulge in slaughter without penalty. Stromata Blog:
  • His protest, though exuberated, against leniency in dealing with atrocities, emphatically requisite in an age apt to ignore the rigour of justice, has been so far salutary, and may be more so.] Thomas Carlyle
  • Preston writes and speaks eloquently and emphatically — his responses to questions often best captured in interspersed italicizations. The Journalist and the Murderer
  • If you look at the atmosphere today, it turns out that it is emphatically nonsolar in composition," says Scientific American
  • With an inhibitive gesture to my friend, "Mr. Soames," I said emphatically to the devil, "is a Catholic diabolist"; but my poor friend did the devil's bidding, not mine; and now, with his master's eyes again fixed on him, he arose, he shuffled past me. Enoch Soames: A Memory of the Eighteen-nineties
  • The different faults in the area show up as vertical planes cutting emphatically through the crust. THE EARTH: An Intimate History
  • Tunbridge, and praising the German Spa, in cant words, emphatically and conceitedly pronounced, and brought round upon every occasion, and in every speech, with so precise an exclusion of all other terms, that their vocabulary scarce consisted of forty words in totality. Camilla
  • Homer, dreaded nothing more than water or drowning; probably upon the old opinion of the fiery substance of the soul, only extinguishable by that element; and therefore the poet emphatically implieth+ the total destruction in this kind of death, which happened to Ajax Oileus. Hydriotaphia, or Urn-burial
  • He would deny it emphatically (out of pride? Times, Sunday Times
  • Fending off a protesting Violet, Briar emphatically closed and locked the door before taking a seat on the sofa.
  • Finally, it indicated emphatically that combine cognitive psycology and nerval physiology, and will get progress in memory study.
  • BCP were chiefly trying to counteract when they insisted that "Holy Baptism" was "FULL initiation" into Christ's Body and when the formula that they settled on to accompany the newly restored chrismation in baptism stressed emphatically that the Spirit was given in baptism and not just in some later confirmation rite. Stand Firm
  • Creator, the realizing life to all things fair and true and good: and more especially would we revert to its spiritual purity, emphatically manifested through all its manifold operations, -- so impossible of alliance with any thing sordid, or false, or wicked, -- so unapprehensible, even, except for its own most sinless sake. Lectures on Art
  • How can they press ahead with something which has now been emphatically rejected THREE times? The Sun
  • It may seem astonishing that the tradition that most emphatically insists that there is no self (anatta) may routinely do a better job at transmitting the wise practice of self-care and than do Christian traditions which customarily insist on an eternal soul. John Thatamanil: The Religious Wisdom of Authentic Self-Love
  • He emphatically rejected any suggestion of caudle or broth for breakfast, and snapped irritably at me when I tried to check the dressings on his hand. Sick Cycle Carousel
  • Cheney emphatically reaffirms the pro-federalism position on the issue.
  • To do it so emphatically was probably not on the cards but an amazing feeling. The Sun
  • Note 65: The only reference I have found of medical writings linking women's monthly cycles with the Christian notion of original sin appears in the work of a woman, Hildegard of Bingen's Causae et curae (ed.P. Kaiser [Leipzig, 1903]), in which the author emphatically drew a parallel between Eve's actions in the Garden and menstrual cycles: Quare menstruum. A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
  • The entrance door and flanking windows are emphatically Gothic with pointed arches, the doorway framed in granite and the windows with granite sills and lintels.
  • How can Rothstein deny that Nisbett and Wilson would emphatically discount the confirmation which Freud claimed for his theory of parapraxes on the basis of introspective self-observations made by Storfer, himself, and Lou Andréas Salomé (S.E. 6, pp. 118, 162-163, 168)? How Valid Is Psychoanalysis? An Exchange
  • The Marriage Plot" is even more emphatically bibliophilic. Sense & Semiotics
  • Confidently perching or restoratively leaning on it, emphatically plunking it down or cannily relocating it, blithely ignoring it or stymiedly crumpling up over it, Stritch makes the high chair embody moods, objectify states of being.
  • But that emphatically did not mean all-powerful government. Times, Sunday Times
  • By using a vowel for each Quarter we are most emphatically not merely following orthodox religious use or occult teaching. Music and the Elemental Psyche: A Practical Guide to Music and Changing Consciousness
  • But Christian princes were not satisfied with the mere suspension of human justice during these days, which are so emphatically days of mercy: they would, moreover, pay homage, by an external act, to the fatherly goodness of God, who has deigned to pardon a guilty world, through the merits of the death of His Son. Gueranger: The History of Passiontide and Holy Week
  • Kennelly emphatically denied the claim made by some detainees in the Times article that the leaders of the hunger strike had been put into isolation or transferred to other, more distant detention centers. Glyn Vincent: The Right to Be Heard
  • Emphatically linear, the works are open, repeating forms that respond to the industrial landscape of northern Indiana, an area he drives through daily to reach Gary from his Chicago home.
  • The substance of the interview was telegraphed," said Stamfordham, "but not the map -- _not the map_," he said emphatically. The Arbiter A Novel
  • Tara, not wanting to let one of her hands go from her ears, started nodding emphatically to the door.
  • Thus in the word calenture, nobody will deny that the first syllable is pronounced more emphatically than the others; but many will deny that it is longer in pronunciation. Miscellany
  • The moral power of Fussell's narrative is all the greater for being so unemphatically delivered.
  • This paper proposes the concept of Internet Smart Card, describes its architecture, and emphatically analyzes the protocol hierarchy of the Smart Card Protocol Stack.
  • To her credit, Bennhold later admits that perineal therapy in France is, in fact, for incontinence and organ descent -- though she still adds emphatically "and to improve sex," as if this side benefit were salacious enough to discredit the legitimacy of perineal therapy as a health benefit worthy of social coverage. Debra Ollivier: What's Wrong with the (Fighting) French?
  • This paper proposes the concept of Internet Smart Card, describes its architecture, and emphatically analyzes the protocol hierarchy of the Smart Card Protocol Stack.
  • This paper introduces the developments of wheat beer and research levels in domestic and foreign countries. The wheat malting, mashing and fermentation processes are emphatically concerned.
  • It emphatically denies it misuses information or acts unethically. Times, Sunday Times
  • What we know as a "carnation" is named for the fact that it is the color of (Caucasian) skin (carne-); it's therefore emphatically not a red *flower* - although the clovey scent can certainly be thought of as red. Perfume Review: Neil Morris Dark Earth
  • The idea that the World Cup should be restricted to an elite is emphatically rejected here. Times, Sunday Times
  • Lastly, we research on supplier selection system emphatically.
  • John McCain has not commented on Rep. King's remarks, but I will say that this has been an issue that both - that both Sen. Obama and his wife have addressed on the campaign trail before, Michelle Obama most emphatically, saying that his name, the name Hussein, has been invoked to stir fear and anxiety about "foreignness," "otherness," and it's something that the Democratic party should not tolerate in this election season. CNN Transcript Mar 9, 2008
  • The whole process is emphatically led by the cytoplasm-which continues to divide whether DNA replication is completed or not.
  • Felled by the ward of his intransigence, levelled and laid flat, sword brandished in denial – sword wafting words uttered emphatically in a trial of words by wards, falling for the trap of his own rhetorical thirst, falling into the gap between those who run first and those who carp and cry in the pack – an empty husk cracked and ablated, an old fool utterly trashed. Rhetorical Thirst (rev)
  • It goes without saying (and around the Holy Week of each year the several forms of mainstream media say it loudly, often, and emphatically) that Jesus was an ordinary man, a wacko apocalyptist, or a failed political revolutionary. The American Spectator
  • Andreas swung his arm emphatically with a little bobble of his head.
  • The article provides emphatically a method of classification and indexing of Chinese words:logical semantic analysis of literal similarity.
  • This drought broke emphatically in February 1973, with exceptional rainfall over South Australia and the eastern states.
  • I hope those of you who are at all interested in the techier side of my writing here — emphatically including privacy issues — will pop over and check it out. An Announcement
  • Soldiers interviewed in Kosovo emphatically expressed their support for nationbuilding.
  • Felled by the ward of his intransigence, levelled and laid flat, sword brandished in denial – sword wafting words uttered emphatically in a trial of words by words, falling for the trap of his own rhetorical thirst, falling into the gap between those who run first and those who carp and cry in the pack – an empty husk cracked and ablated, an old fool trashed. Archive 2007-04-01
  • Remain contrite and humble when talking to the desk clerk who has just emphatically told you that no pets are allowed. Pet-Friendly Mexico Lodgings, dogs and cats
  • He concluded by asserting emphatically that if it had not been for his foresight in providing himself with field-glasses, the steer would have been running over the flat with Aunt Lizzie empaled on its horns like a naturalist's butterfly, before any one could have prevented it. The Dude Wrangler
  • Even then, the maximum penalty that can be wrought is the forfeiture of the boat and her cargo (but emphatically not imprisonment of thecrew). The Volokh Conspiracy » What’s Going on With Turkey
  • Some staff nod emphatically at the request; others find ways to convey their surprise at my asking. Times, Sunday Times
  • He also emphatically rejected that the Princess had been pregnant. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their general election performance, though impressive, was emphatically not a vote on independence. Times, Sunday Times
  • The conditions of the covenant have been violated by the reservation of spoil from the doomed city; wickedness, emphatically called folly, has been committed in Israel (Ps 14: 1), and dissimulation, with other aggravations of the crime, continues to be practised. Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • ‘You make me feel good about myself,’ he explains emphatically to his lip-quivering amour.
  • For Evans, the Minoans were emphatically not pure Greek, and he would have been irritated to learn that the "Linear B" tablets, which he excavated at Knossos (and which remained undeciphered in his lifetime), were actually written in an early form of the Greek language. Knossos: Fakes, Facts, and Mystery
  • The genius of prose rejects the cheville no less emphatically than the laws of verse; and the cheville, I should perhaps explain to some of my readers, is any meaningless or very watered phrase employed to strike a balance in the sound. Essays in the Art of Writing
  • No fast food"(Sentencedict), she said emphatically.
  • (McDonald was referring to the politics of the 1830s and 1840s, when "good issues ... included protective tariffs and the recharter of the Bank of the United States; emphatically not good issues, because they were genuinely moral and potentially explosive, were slavery and Indian policy.") Close Up: The Mind of George W. Bush
  • Now it is much more about making money,' she says emphatically. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ecocentrism is either partly or emphatically non-anthropocentric.
  • The first business of this part of the tongue is, therefore, to warn us emphatically against caustic substances and corrosive acids, against vitriol and kerosene, spirits of wine and ether, capsicums and burning leaves or roots, such as those of the common English lords-and-ladies. Falling in Love With Other Essays on More Exact Branches of Science
  • Both houses are emphatically vertical, two-story, side-hall town houses of plastered brick.
  • The whole process is emphatically led by the cytoplasm-which continues to divide whether DNA replication is completed or not.
  • The drought loosened its grip in the southeastern States in November, and more emphatically so in January 1941, when heavy rains fell.
  • He speaks emphatically, does Robert Bruck, his bald head bobbing atop a thickset frame.
  • Even then, the maximum penalty that can be wrought is the forfeiture of the boat and her cargo (but emphatically not imprisonment of the crew). The Volokh Conspiracy » What’s Going on With Turkey
  • The two first were themselves emphatically "eccentrics" -- one an apostle of dandyism (he actually wrote a book about Brummel, whom he had met early), a disdainful critic of rather untrustworthy vigour, and a stalwart reactionary to Catholicism and Royalism; the other a devotee of the exact opposite of dandyism, as the title of his best-known book, _Les A History of the French Novel, Vol. 2 To the Close of the 19th Century
  • Salandra and I emphatically pointed out to von Flotow that Austria had no right, according to the spirit of the treaty of the Triple New York Times Current History; The European War, Vol 2, No. 4, July, 1915 April-September, 1915
  • In this case the Court emphatically confirmed the direct effect of regulations and criticized any attempt by a Member State to alter or dilute the requirements of a Community regulation.
  • During the inquiry the then Metropolitan Police commissioner had also emphatically opposed any suggestion of institutional racism and declared that he would resign if any such conclusion was drawn.
  • As a junior, she was concerned when playing her pals because she feared that if she beat them too emphatically, it could end the friendship. Times, Sunday Times
  • In appearance, the RV is not much different from what a pair of footloose retirees might drive to Yellowstone but for the words ‘Asthma Van’ emblazoned emphatically in black on each side.
  • He brought in stacks of plain and emphatically rhymed popular poems copied from newspaper columns and asked us what we thought of them.
  • Elsewhere I have discussed the importance and volatility of the figure of the body in aesthetic discourse (see Redfield, ch. 2); for present purposes it will suffice to note the emphatically aesthetic vocabulary with which Victor seeks to "delineate" his creature’s monstrosity. _Frankenstein_'s Cinematic Dream
  • Both have a sense of the venture's stupidity, a view the fellowship emphatically rejects. Times, Sunday Times
  • He argues the shallowness in the use of military power in the past administration and then emphatically debunks the 'casualty myth'.
  • Here the resulting effect is to emphatically assert a present state.
  • Hope, by a metonymy, is put for the thing hoped for, namely, heaven and the felicities thereof, called emphatically that hope, because it is the great thing we look and long and wait for; and a blessed hope, because, when attained, we shall be completely happy for ever. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume VI (Acts to Revelation)
  • A spokesman for the London-based group says: ‘We emphatically deny any impropriety whatsoever.’
  • I say something about Mormons and she nods emphatically. Times, Sunday Times
  • Likewise, in thermochemistry, one has always stuck to the thermal effect, that is, to energy differences, until Wilhelm Ostwald in particular emphatically showed that many detailed considerations could be significantly abbreviated if one dealt with energy itself instead of with calorimetric numbers. Max Planck - Nobel Lecture
  • By using a vowel for each Quarter we are most emphatically not merely following orthodox religious use or occult teaching. Music and the Elemental Psyche: A Practical Guide to Music and Changing Consciousness
  • Most emphatically warn against taking the drug, given the limited knowledge of its long-term effects.
  • This is more or less the theory adopted by the majority of modern scientists, either unemphatically or emphatically.
  • He rejects the allegation emphatically and, it sounds, sincerely. Times, Sunday Times
  • His brown eyes finally fixed unemphatically on me. POSTMORTEM
  • A favourite rhetorical device is the appearance of emphatically real-world items in unexpected places. The Times Literary Supplement
  • And Stepan Arkadyevitch was not merely an honest man — unemphatically — in the common acceptation of the words, he was an honest man — emphatically — in that special sense which the word has in Moscow, when they talk of an Anna Karenina
  • This is emphatically not a car for enthusiasts. Times, Sunday Times
  • She is emphatically opposed to the proposals.
  • He has a self-assured manner that borders on smugness, and his deep voice fills the sanctuary authoritatively as he emphatically delivers his sermon. American Grace
  • On the other end of the spectrum there is sacrificial worship, which doesn't seem to have been offered to Jesus - perhaps not surprisingly, but if there had been Christians who emphatically wanted to broaden monolatry to include Jesus within God, using sacrificial worship to make the point would have been clear and unambiguous. Larry Hurtado: How Did Jesus Become A God?
  • These are emphatically the Japhetic nations, nominally Christians, but armed at this moment to the teeth to destroy one another in defiance of the Gospel which they profess to believe Men of Maryland
  • n. - removal, especially crime of removing property. assentaneous adj. - acquiescent. adj. willing to assent. assentator, n. flatterer; one assenting insincerely or conniving. assentatory, v. - to state positively, emphatically Xml's Blinklist.com
  • My secretary has confirmed emphatically that no such letter or request was delivered to my office.
  • It emphatically expounds the method by with to realize the alternate design, optimize the design result and integrate the design drafting.
  • a letter which he wrote to the _Spectator_, repeating emphatically that the book is not one "written after the investigation was completed, but the _investigation_ itself. Occasional Papers Selected from the Guardian, the Times, and the Saturday Review, 1846-1890
  • He hastened to say that he emphatically regarded the EU as a success. Times, Sunday Times
  • I know, I know: this is most emphatically not how we generally hear the term objectivity bandied about. Author! Author! » 2006 » April
  • He glanced unemphatically at my bloodstained scrubs and observed, “You were wearing gloves while doing the post.” POSTMORTEM
  • Felled by the ward of his intransigence, levelled and laid flat, sword brandished in denial – sword wafting words uttered emphatically in a trial of words by wards, falling for the trap of his own rhetorical thirst, falling into the gap between those who run first and those who carp and cry in the pack – an empty husk cracked and ablated, an old fool utterly trashed. Rhetorical Thirst (rev)
  • ‘We can't prescribe that way of thinking,’ Andrew says emphatically.
  • It's really not human — perhaps it's sciurine, for the flying squirrel landed it emphatically. Times, Sunday Times
  • Yet when I asked Sherry if she would consider moving elsewhere, she emphatically answered ‘No.’
  • I pile on some faintly garlicked guac and make short work of a yummy ground-beef enchilada, although I know the enchilada gravy could taste more emphatically of red chilis.
  • His pose was that of the dandy and the aesthete, emphatically not that of the angry young man.
  • n. - removal, especially crime of removing property. assentaneous adj. - acquiescent. adj. willing to assent. assentator, n. flatterer; one assenting insincerely or conniving. assentatory, v. - to state positively, emphatically Xml's Blinklist.com
  • He speaks emphatically, does Robert Bruck, his bald head bobbing atop a thickset frame.
  • Italy is the land to which we must look for great men; that it is not merely the country of singers, fiddlers, _improvisatori_, and linguists, but of men, of beings who may emphatically be called men. A Bibliography of the writings in Prose and Verse of George Henry Borrow
  • With huge square towers linked by thick walkways, it stands on a slight eminence and is emphatically hellish.
  • The affable John Southworth registers his discontent mildly yet emphatically, his soft British accent shading the offending phrase with the damning taint of dismissiveness.
  • The Städel Museum's exhibition differs from past projects by emphatically focusing on the portraiture of musicians and brothel scenes and by directly confronting works by Caravaggio with paintings by the Utrecht artists Terbrugghen, Honthorst, and Baburen. Art Knowledge News
  • We believe that sociability is an essential element of both a pleasant and a digestible meal; and we protest emphatically against the habits which we, as a nation, have contracted. A Manual of Etiquette with Hints on Politeness and Good Breeding
  • However, when contacted by The Sunday Business Post last Friday, the witness emphatically denied the statement attributed to him.
  • This 'working within' is stated in the original of my text most emphatically, for it is literally 'the inworking which inworketh in me mightily.' Expositions of Holy Scripture Second Corinthians, Galatians, and Philippians Chapters I to End. Colossians, Thessalonians, and First Timothy.
  • I cannot pass v. 15 without taking notice how often, and how emphatically, the word ungodly is repeated in it, no fewer than four times: ungodly men, ungodly sinners, ungodly deeds, and, as to the manner, ungodly committed. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume VI (Acts to Revelation)
  • The suburban commuter station was emphatically a male preserve at certain times of day.
  • For instance, about AD 400, the great St. Chrysostom very emphatically insists that the Spirit is given through the water rite, even though he also makes a great deal out of the importance of the later chrismation that follows. Stand Firm
  • Both the District Court judge and the High Court judge emphatically stood behind the principle that the ability to pay money ought not to influence the outcome of the case.
  • I hammer two-fisted block chords emphatically, keeping time with the bold and innovative rhythms by swinging my head and shoulders, experiencing intense levels of emotion, bordering on a delicious madness. Mercury Unbound - 6
  • It is far more emphatically about the contemporary scene. Times, Sunday Times
  • Kate Winslet, the emphatically English rose of British cinema, is a trouper, a ruddy good sport, a thumping great head prefect of common sense and hockey-sticks jollity.
  • As Somerset have demonstrated so emphatically down at Taunton, the Australians bring out the beast in everyone.
  • Emphatically framed by the terrace walls, the Inland Sea looks painted, while Sugimoto's black-and-white photos are so reductive that they evoke abstract paintings.
  • ‘The book doesn't bother me at all whatsoever,’ declared Hunter emphatically, before going on to sound very bothered indeed.
  • “Think you need to come along,” he added unemphatically. POSTMORTEM
  • Making people feel foolish is emphatically not my strategy.
  • He is a man who speaks forcefully, emphatically and, yes, sometimes controversially from the pulpit at First Baptist Church.
  • With an emphatically worried expression, he blustered about the common tasks involved in ‘defending Western values’.
  • Buddhism and made it practically the state religion: a few others were definitely hostile either from conviction or political circumstances, but probably most sovereigns regarded it as the average British official regards education, as something that one can't help having, that one must belaud on certain public occasions, that may now and then be useful, but still emphatically something to be kept within limits. Hinduism and Buddhism, An Historical Sketch, Vol. 3
  • No," he said, shaking his head emphatically, "the men refuse to sneak out of the country before they have what they call redressed the wrong done those poor villagers. Two Daring Young Patriots or, Outwitting the Huns
  • Thus far it has been established that even under the most favorable conditions the country's indebtedness is absolutely and emphatically unsustainable during the next two decades.
  • This paper probes emphatically into the accuracy uncertainty of LSMM from atmospheric condition and terrain undulation by taking unmixing vegetation abundance based on LSMM as an example.
  • He leaned forward from the back seat so he could gesture emphatically in front of the gear shift.
  • And earlier this month a public referendum emphatically rejected the proposed congestion charge in Manchester. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘The notion that the women's movement denigrates women who choose the traditional roles of wife and mother is arrant nonsense,’ columnist Molly Ivins writes emphatically.
  • In this way, one would see the characters not only as simple dupes, but one would recognize his or her own potential to be duped, the latter point being made even more emphatically for the first-time viewer of the play.
  • Toward the end of the song, when I emphatically sang the last chorus, Sarah finally opened her door and quickly dragged me inside.
  • I consider myself unemphatically to be a Conservative Republican and no longer will I apologize for it.
  • And both papers answer that second question clearly and emphatically: it's about freedom.
  • This paper analyzes on and probes into emphatically 14 kinds of rhetoric methods frequently used in advertising documents with the better effect including repeat, metaphor, dualization, etc.
  • At just a few months short of his 70th birthday, Caine is definitely and emphatically in fashion.
  • If Mesches's compositional devices are often classical, his palette is emphatically expressionist.
  • White's, -- none of such vulgar coxcombries had Lord Castleton; and yet a young gentleman more emphatically coxcomb it was impossible to see. The Caxtons — Complete
  • The entrance door and flanking windows are emphatically Gothic with pointed arches, the doorway framed in granite and the windows with granite sills and lintels.
  • The expression, and style, and love, intimate that the penman was the same with that of the foregoing epistle; he is now the elder, emphatically and eminently so; possibly the oldest apostle now living, the chief elder in the church of God. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume VI (Acts to Revelation)
  • Kate Winslet, the emphatically English rose of British cinema, is a trouper, a ruddy good sport, a thumping great head prefect of common sense and hockey-sticks jollity.
  • The different faults in the area show up as vertical planes cutting emphatically through the crust. THE EARTH: An Intimate History
  • This was emphatically reinforced when we saw a demo behind closed doors and spoke with some of the developers in May.
  • The latest technical advance of 1, 3 - propanediol for PTT raw materials production technique were introduced emphatically.
  • The answer emphatically being - No - the standard was the then current Silver Spanish Dollar known as Pieces of Eight, coupled with a bimetallic system of coinage using both silver and gold.
  • Even in the opening situation of the poem, then, generic self-contradiction makes itself emphatically apparent.
  • That the case of Mary Jones may speak the more emphatically for itself, I subjoin it, as related by SIR WILLIAM MEREDITH in a speech in Parliament, ‘on Frequent Executions’, made in Barnaby Rudge

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