pronouncement

[ UK /pɹənˈa‍ʊnsmənt/ ]
[ US /pɹəˈnaʊnsmənt/ ]
NOUN
  1. an authoritative declaration
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How To Use pronouncement In A Sentence

  • The poor litigant will wait for the somnolescent process and leisurely pronouncement and the wealthy litigant will have his case speedily terminated. The Hindu - Front Page
  • Perhaps they would have but for the definite pronouncement of the mystagogue G.B. Shaw. Plum Pudding Of Divers Ingredients, Discreetly Blended & Seasoned
  • Nevertheless, one writer of independent means abstained from all public pronouncements and confined himself to acid criticisms of the government in his private diary.
  • Chips says that Wallis righteously refuses to make any pronouncement at all, but the King is dead set on a morganatic marriage. THE WHITE DOVE
  • Are such pronouncements context-specific in a way that renders them inapplicable today?
  • We get lots of grand events and the pronouncements of politicians, but very little of what was going on behind the scenes.
  • His pronouncements often counter his own stated commitment to reconciliation, and we don't need to repeat all of them to prove our point.
  • The judge would normally be expected to publish his verdict and sentence within a week of the trial but there has been no public pronouncement. Times, Sunday Times
  • Only a conciliar decision of the whole church can make such authoritative and binding pronouncements.
  • At the time, I did not question him on his contradiction of his earlier pronouncement.
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