How To Use euphemise In A Sentence
- But could this form of soft corruption - or ‘deep lobbying’, as it is euphemised - come to Britain?
- Thus, 'a bit of all right' could be conveniently euphemised to 'a bit of how's your father'. Times, Sunday Times
- Instead the newspaper euphemises, referring to ‘unrest’ and ‘violence’ and ‘events.’
- The region relapsed into months of police crackdowns, extreme violence and the re-emergence of the Republican movement - euphemised simply as ‘The Troubles.’
- They come to us all, the aches and irritations of age such as backpain, arthritis, children and ads where emollient voiceovers pussyfoot around a condition they euphemise as ‘blocked wind’.
- Frustrations, particularly those created by what he perceives as unjust treatment from match officials, can induce paranoid reactions that are too riddled with foul-mouthed bitterness to be euphemised as boyish petulance.
- Thus, 'a bit of all right' could be conveniently euphemised to 'a bit of how's your father'. Times, Sunday Times
- For example, I will never buy floor coverings from any company who euphemise their product's stain proof qualities buy making a small puppy sit very still on their quality wool carpet.
- Frustrations, particularly those created by what he perceives as unjust treatment from match officials, can induce paranoid reactions that are too riddled with foul-mouthed bitterness to be euphemised as boyish petulance.