How To Use Remark In A Sentence

  • Some of my remarks here are directed toward conventional scientists, who generally refrain from commenting critically on the wild ideas of a few of their colleagues because it is bad manners.
  • He made a few conventional remarks about the weather.
  • She made one or two snide remarks about their house which I thought was a bit unnecessary.
  • It is probably a measure of the depths to which political conversation has sunk — all the more remarkable given the chaos that male leaders have through the generations created — that this non-gender-specific "ballsiness," as it were, is so frequently trotted out as a measure of high praise. Half-cocked
  • It was a throwaway remark that proved tragically prophetic.
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  • He made some casual remark about her holiday.
  • Miss Prue and her pa do argufy to beat the band," Nancy remarked to The Little Red Chimney Being the Love Story of a Candy Man
  • I believe that we will be judged on this record and not by unkind and unjustified personal remarks in the press.
  • He has apologised for critical remarks he made about the referee.
  • ‘I wish I was rich enough to use fivers as scrap paper,’ remarked Caroline.
  • His remark was a cheap shot at short people.
  • He has made derogative remarks, made players uncomfortable playing for him, and is not leading the team in the right direction.
  • A big Chinaman, remarkably evil-looking, with his head swathed in a yellow silk handkerchief and face badly pock-marked, planted a pike-pole on the White and Yellow
  • The defence barrister, David Lane, then stood up to offer some brief remarks in mitigation.
  • Hence it became necessary to distinguish one from the other _by name_, and thus the notation from midnight gave rise, as I have remarked in one of my papers on Chaucer, to the English idiomatic phrase "of the clock;" or the reckoning of the clock, commencing at midnight, as distinguished from Roman equinoctial hours, commencing at six o'clock A.M. This was what Ben Jonson was meaning by attainment of majority at _six o'clock_, and not, as PROFESSOR DE M.RGAN supposes, "probably a certain sunrise. Notes and Queries, Number 214, December 3, 1853 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
  • The problem is that their remarkable efficiency allows them to overproduce almost any commodity, so agriculture tends to lurch from surplus to surplus.
  • Many, if not most, complaints about misquotes, I believe, stem from a person's remarks being taken out of context.
  • As soon as the door closed behind her I hurried to the dirty window in the front room and I watched as she walked down the street looking remarkably out of place in the drab surroundings in her bright green dress.
  • Moreover, social values and structures have shown a remarkable ability to adapt to a rapidly changing environment.
  • The decapod fossils are preserved in remarkable detail as molds and as body fossils.
  • Weather experts say it was a relatively dry winter which makes the water recovery all the more remarkable.
  • At one of those remarkable omnium-gatherum receptions at the Tuileries, of which I have spoken in a former chapter, she heard an American lady, to whom Louis Philippe was talking of his American recollections and of various persons he had known there, say to him, “Oh, sire, they all retain the most lively recollections of your majesty's sojourn among them, and wish nothing more than that you should return among them again!” What I Remember
  • That seems to have been the spiteful remark of an adversary; for at least while Churchill was still in politics, the Congress was staffed, and led by men and women of calibre and integrity.
  • This is a truly remarkable achievement.
  • The two in fact are related: the ideas resonate differently in different parts of the world, exemplifying with remarkably clarity the issues introduced in the previous sections.
  • Half-an-hour later they were launching the canoe and loading up, while the storekeeper made jocular remarks about poor, weak mortals and the contagiousness of "stampedin 'fever. TOO MUCH GOLD
  • fey" -- at least so our chief engineer remarked to me, and he has some reputation among the Celtic portion of our crew as a seer and expounder of omens. The Captain of the Polestar
  • Sure enough, this Heller language has served to protect a remarkable variety of federal gun restrictions challenged since Heller, including bans on gun possession by felons, domestic violence misdemeanants, and persons under restraining orders, bans on sawed-off shotguns and machine guns, laws restricting guns in school zones, post offices, and other public property, and others. Dennis A. Henigan: The Gun Issue Is Back in the Supreme Court: What Does It Mean?
  • In this group of great rivers the St. Lawrence is the most remarkable. Burroughs' Encyclopaedia of Astounding Facts and Useful Information, 1889
  • Opening remarks are important since they set the tone for the rest of the interview.
  • Here the mufti, or jurisconsult, appears to play a role remarkably similar to that of the roman jurist or contemporary European law professor (in providing Gutachten or opinions to courts).
  • It's a guid deed we'll 'a doon this day," he remarked, pleasantly. CHAPTER 25
  • And if some heartless creep makes rude remarks that hurt your friend, you are not responsible for his actions.
  • Her thoughtless remark cut him to the quick.
  • How dare you make personal remarks!
  • His remarkable adapted style at the decks involves him mixing records using his mouth.
  • Walsh should have mentioned the remarkable physiognomic similitude of Harris and Pollock.
  • Press coverage of this long-term infrastructural build-up has been remarkably minimal, given the implications for future conflicts in the oil heartlands of the planet. Nick Turse: As Washington Talks Iraq Withdrawal, the Pentagon Builds Up Bases in the Region
  • You can't really go wrong with a loaf of wholemeal organic bread, but as much as I love the UK I find it difficult to get remarkable fresh bread.
  • Seen this close, his remarkable eyes are hazel and gray, with a corona of green at the outer edge of the iris. CONFESSIONS OF AN UGLY STEPSISTER
  • Her hearing is going, but otherwise she's remarkably fit for a 95-year-old.
  • Rarities are always helped by any device which will rouse curiosity and compel remark.
  • It is a remarkable reminder of the culture of the Getes, a Thracian people who were in contact with the Hellenistic and Hyperborean worlds, according to ancient geographers.
  • From time to time I forsook my own thoughts to follow him, and I followed in amaze, mastered for the moment by his remarkable intellect, under the spell of his passion, for he was preaching the passion of revolt. Chapter 26
  • I wish to dissociate myself from Mr Irvine's remarks.
  • Just as remarkable is the story of the manuscript's survival through the decades, including three years on the run from the Gestapo, several house moves and even a flood.
  • Maybe I disagree with the term sporty because since I've been here our premier teams haven't been remarkable. News
  • This phenomenon has gone largely unremarked upon by US military and civilian officials.
  • Despite this remarkable line-up, the film bombed.
  • (I found this remarkable in a medical man: between trouser hem and refulgent loafer, a gleam of bronzed ankle.) Retching With the Stars
  • There was never an ill-considered remark made by either of them.
  • In the next few days we shall see if the ambassador can weather the political storm caused by his ill-advised remarks.
  • The secant of this angle is 1.61806 which is remarkably close to the golden ratio 1.618034.
  • In the past year alone, numerous studies have highlighted our remarkable likeness not only to chimps, but to monkeys and apes of all kinds.
  • Frogs were not symbols of death but, on the contrary, of rebirth and renewal, because of its remarkable metamorphosis of egg into tadpole and from tadpole into frog.
  • Grant seems remarkably well adjusted, a suggestion he greets with a laugh.
  • It is remarkable that the principle fluorophore is derived from a triplet of adjacent amino acids: the serine, tyrosine, and glycine residues at locations 65, 66, and 67 (referred to as Ser65, Tyr66, and Gly67; see Figure 2). Archive 2005-10-01
  • Maybe, but I find the bravura in the C major one for sopranino recorder even more remarkable.
  • The idea grew from a remark made unthinkingly by chairman.
  • Wen's reform remarks made the front pages of the Modern Express in Jiangsu province, the Xiaoxiang Morning Post in Hunan province, the Beijing News and China Youth Daily. Party meeting begins in Beijing amid increasing dissent over human rights
  • The heat of the place was remarkable; I felt my collar grow soft and hoped that my appearance would not deteriorate too rapidly. ANTI-ICE
  • McCarthy is only 19 years old and to reach a World final and finish fifth is a remarkable achievement.
  • The identity of this woman is known by a remarkable coincidence.
  • What is so alarming about the commissioner's report is the revelation that so many relatively minor inroads on civil liberties have gone unremarked and unnoticed.
  • A remarkable part of this exquisite symbiosis is the way the squid keeps the bacterial culture fresh within its light organ.
  • And there are symbolic margins along which men get a worse deal than 100 years ago - modern males are probably more afraid to make sexist remarks within earshot of their wives. Are Husbands Really Like Potatoes?, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • Tyrone stood, favoring his right arm, which was remarkably better than he'd remembered.
  • It contains, among other things of merit, a lullaby, called "Sleep, Little Tulip," with a remarkably artistic and effective pedal-point on two notes (the submediant and the dominant) sustained through the entire song with a fine fidelity to the words and the lullaby spirit; a "Nocturne" in which Nevin has revealed an unsuspected voluptuousness in Mr. Aldrich 'little lyric, and has written a song of irresistible climaxes. Contemporary American Composers Being a Study of the Music of This Country, Its Present Conditions and Its Future, with Critical Estimates and Biographies of the Principal Living Composers; and an Abundance of Portraits, Fac-simile Musical Autographs, and
  • His departure, in fact, went almost unremarked.
  • Both Ms. Rahm and Mr. Collins remarked on the high quality of the Target garments 'construction, particularly in the pleated Thakoon cotton dress, with very detailed stitching in its full skirt, and a velveteen Sarafpour skirt that had trapunto stitching along the satin waistband. Do Discount Designer Duds Make The Grade?
  • Plato remarks in The Republic that bad characters are volatile and interesting, whereas good characters are dull and always the same.
  • He has endeavoured to render THE PICTURE an intelligent _Cicerone_, without being too garrulous or grandiloquous, -- but always attentive to the stranger, leading him to every remarkable object, and giving just as much description of each, as would be acceptable to persons enjoying the full use of their eyes. Brannon's Picture of The Isle of Wight The Expeditious Traveller's Index to Its Prominent Beauties & Objects of Interest. Compiled Especially with Reference to Those Numerous Visitors Who Can Spare but Two or Three Days to Make the Tour of the
  • The unprecedented remarks by CSIS Director Richard Fadden were broadcast late on Tuesday, a day before Chinese Premier Hu Jintao was due to arrive in Canada on a formal visit.
  • Mother had not heard, or had chosen to overlook her nurse's remark.
  • That scene is a remarkable illustration of his society's greed and gluttony.
  • His compendious book, then, ranges from dry speculation on geology to exquisite description of flora, spangled with remarkably apt epigrams.
  • Merkel went on television last night to try and limit the political fallout from her colleague's remarks, but she has encountered a barrage of criticism.
  • Nottinghamshire, Yorkshire, Norfolk, &c., shows remarkable deviations in local organization and justice (lagmen, sokes), and great peculiarities as to status (socmen, freemen), while from laws and Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 2, Part 1, Slice 1
  • That was not a very happy remark on the wedding.
  • They produced a remarkably consistent sound for the revolving-door group.
  • Analysts say this trend is even more remarkable because public universities run open admission policies and do not charge tuition.
  • Thorwaldsen, Crawford excelled in _basso-rilievo_, and was a remarkable pictorial sculptor. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 08, June 1858
  • Without these crucial areas of explanation, her theory of how innovations occur or do not occur seems remarkably fragile.
  • In fact, the title notwithstanding, it's one of the most remarkably faithful sequels you'll ever see, in tone, setup, and execution. Alex Remington: Harold & Kumar 2: Best War on Terror Movie Ever (Though That's Not Saying Much)
  • And that's another difference: Kate's e-mail "entrapped" Kinsella; Warman's e-mails aren't as subtle -- he doesn't entrap people into uttering racist remarks, he outright plants those racist remarks himself. Kate McMillan's prank - Ezra Levant
  • I drove the ecocentric 104bhp BlueMotion, which was thrifty and yet remarkably perky. Car review: VW Golf Cabriolet
  • And he covers what could be fairly abstruse philosophical questions in a remarkably clear and simple way.
  • Thus, each outlay of dutiful public "support" was eventually marred by some tactless remark or hint of encouragement to an outraged bitter-ender that, if only they kept faith, there might still be a way. Hillary Goes Out With a Whimper
  • They may be able to compute figures in their heads with lightning speed or display a remarkable memory for dates.
  • Now, now Roger, I'm sure you didn't mean it but that remark was in very poor taste.
  • His remarks are also particularly insensitive as we approach the 60th anniversary of the D-Day landings when so many soldiers gave their lives to help liberate Europe.
  • But what was remarkable in the lady was, that although her features were handsome, and upon the whole pleasing, the pupil of each eye was dimmed with the whiteness of cataract, and she was evidently stone-blind. The Purcell Papers
  • One of the most remarkable metapatterns that replicate throughout nature and the universe is defined by the numerical ratio termed phi. The G.O.D. Experiments
  • Looked as much like a giant thornback as anything I ever saw," remarked The Cruise of the Nonsuch Buccaneer
  • A remarkable number of these programs end up with a kind of populist longing for Gemeinschaft amid the alienating Gesellschaft of modernity.
  • Remarkably, the argument of the outermost is a repetitive appends operation and it has only linear complexity with P1 reverse () operations, but each of them is of linear complexity, so the total complexity of implementing my: prepend-iter () we have demonstrated is a simplified case of the many different real world scenarios we may encounter that will require repetitive prepends. Planet XML
  • The Eiffel Tower is a remarkable feat of engineering.
  • Oswald felt heartfeltly sorry to wound the good Colonel's feelings, but he had to remark that he had only done his duty, and he was sure no British scout would take five bob for doing that. The Wouldbegoods
  • Hugh succeeded in making this remark sound vaguely uncomplimentary. DOUBLE DECEIT
  • Only 17 years old at the time the film was shot, she gives a remarkably assured performance as the rich and beautiful young socialite.
  • The mind instantly converts an innocent remark into a cacophony of suggestive possibilities.
  • But it is not all about square-bashing - in that sense the programme has changed remarkably in the past ten to twelve years.
  • His remarks on French, focus on syntax and semantics, all but omitting phonology, phonetics and orthography.
  • Polak is a powerful presence in the lead, displaying remarkable physical and emotional range, while Treasa Levasseur is a standout in both comic and tragic turns.
  • So, if you're ugly or funny-looking, you needn't worry that they'll make disparaging remarks.
  • Remarkably, however, U.S. policymakers began kowtowing to the Saudis from the time of the discovery of oil in the kingdom in 1938 before they had any wealth or the United States imported a barrel of their oil. Arab lobby’s unseen influence
  • The utterly unremarkable Agriculture Minister of Canada's Brand Spankin' New North Star Ultra-Government has debagged the cat. Archive 2008-02-01
  • England stood forth as the centre of opposition against Philip, and under the unwilling leadership of Elizabeth entered on its epic period of heroism, was stimulated to that remarkable outburst of energy and intellect and power which we call the Elizabethan age. The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 10
  • Hurd is only in his second year of rowing and continues to make remarkable gains.
  • Food shops line the outer edges (selling, for a Brit, remarkably reassuring grub like sausage rolls, meat pies and fish and chips).
  • The most frequently quoted remark was one made by the great English engineer Robert Stephenson, builder of the famous Britannia railroad bridge, a tubular iron bridge, over the Menai Strait the trains ran through a succession of enormous iron boxes set on stone piers. The Great Bridge
  • It's only what my dad would call corroborative evidence, or proof, "remarked William; whose father, although a blacksmith, was considered one of the best read men in Stanhope, and able to argue with The Banner Boy Scouts on a Tour, or, The Mystery of Rattlesnake Mountain
  • On several occasions she had remarked on the boy's improvement.
  • That is indeed remarkable! That is indeed a remarkable thing!
  • Paul Bert, in his remarkable studies on the influence of barometric pressure on the phenomena of life, has recognized the fact that compressed oxygen is fatal to certain ferments, whilst under similar conditions it does not interfere with the action of those substances classed under the name of soluble ferments, such as diastase (the ferment which inverts cane sugar), emulsin and others. VI. The Physiological Theory of Fermentation. Reply to the Critical Observations of Liebig, Published in 1870
  • The remarkable fact about this inpouring of wealth is its extraordinary suddenness.
  • And what the songs lack in structural certainty or melodic eloquence they usually make up for in the remarkable depth and vibrancy of their textures.
  • What he can do, however, is render remarkable mixed-media abstract works that revel in the auras of his subjects.
  • You could have the ‘generally lazy but remarkably unhelpful’ instead of the ‘bored but capable’ as one of the essential non police staff whose main aim is to reinforce all the urgent and important things from the world where messages ‘really’ matter and the foundations of empire building are well on the way to approval by the forces that do stuff. Cross and Rude. « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • his remarks were trite and commonplace
  • This reduction was largely achieved on a voluntary basis, and our employees showed remarkable resilience and loyalty, despite such difficulties.
  • His skill in applying color and gilding is remarkable, considering that the twenty-year-old had not completed a normal term of apprenticeship.
  • It's called "polydactyly" - extra digits - not an uncommon genetic trait, but Bay Area doctors say they've never seen a case so remarkable. Impact Lab
  • He's so modest, though, he'd blush if someone made an off-color remark.
  • You are such a talented and smart member of our team and we are truly grateful of having you. Though, you decide to walk an extra mile we are always here to support you. We just wish you more success on your new endeavor. Thank you because the way you motivate us is something remarkable.
  • Let him wonder if it was just a casual remark.
  • Something I'd not reckoned on is the rather fine view of the old ranch house, snuggled down on the ridge of its unremarkable and unnamed hill and looking really rather attractive.
  • This new wrist positioner is remarkable because of its simplicity.
  • These discussions have led to a remarkable unanimity.
  • It is true that Herbert Butterfield remarked that the trick of writing history lay in ‘the art of abridgement’, but abridgement must be both sensible and defensible.
  • a tart remark
  • She was the fighter in our group; she could make a tough girl cry with her endless barrage of snotty remarks and catty comebacks.
  • And I heard remarkable stories of distinguished Marxist academics at other schools who flat out refused to teach undergraduate courses.
  • They are only worn at Christmas, and are remarkably unbecoming.
  • The pizzicato alone was worth the price of admission but the gorgeous sound of the brass was equally remarkable. Oh, Vienna
  • Suddenly, my cell phone rang, stopping me from making a smart remark.
  • Upon entering the dark galleries, one is welcomed by some remarkable exemplars of Nok terracottas and Ife heads on loan from the Nigerian National Museum, Lagos, and the Ife Museum.
  • One little-remarked fact about the 1982-2000 stock market climb is that housing values did relatively poorly over that period, so that in many locations the ratio of prices to rents fell below the rule of the 300. House Prices, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • The barogram of the 29th was remarkable for its waviform trace, and it may be that the air-waves propagated by such a disturbance can be transmitted a very considerable distance.
  • This story would be highly unremarkable if not for the fact that William Gibson, author of Neuromancer and cyberpunk pioneer, wrote a little rhapsody to the Selectric type ball.
  • This understatedly remarkable feat of writing and performance is set with only subtle suggestions of place. Times, Sunday Times
  • But it was a remarkable demonstration of allied unity and mutual dependence.
  • Well, then," returned the ruffian, "to put you out o 'suspense, as the topsman remarked to poor Tom Sheppard, afore he turned him off, I'm come to make you an honourable proposal o' marriage. Jack Sheppard A Romance
  • The Carter team feared that the remark and the attitude it conveyed would be an open invitation to execute Kim.
  • Frank's come back with further comments on my earlier remarks.
  • She laughed that remarkable laughter that sounds so very much like chimes, the laughter of feminine innocence, pure joy, a laugh that begins in the diaphragm, explodes through a grin and electrifies the eyes. Stop the runaway horses
  • Mr. Johnson simply ignored the remark and told the girl, Justine, to sit down, and continued with the day's study without further interruption.
  • The title nags at me the same way Google does – moral and righteous overtones applied to a company that seems to me to be remarkably amoral I’m not not saying immoral. WWJeffD? « BuzzMachine
  • Of course, using that to 'remarket' to users who leave the site will drive conversion with little waste and will focus on the right folks from the sales funnel. Technology and Creativity in Digital Marketing: Better Together - Michael Kassan - MediaBizBloggers
  • out-of-the-way remarks
  • Fear of the unknown is the only villain, and we see remarkably little of that. MIND MELD: Bad Guys We Love to Hate: The Best Film Villains in SF/F/H (with Various Videos of Villainy)
  • Desdemona's remarkable, if temporary, recovery from asphyxiation is the most counterfactual thing in the play. Winters Tale follow-up
  • He shouted something about the Disk Jockey being a "bunkie" (whatever that was) and made a disparaging remark about the Disk Jockey's costume (like he was in a position to criticize), before hurling a punch that had a lot in common with some express trains. The Sinister Six Combo
  • I just want to make a remark of a more personal nature about my work.
  • The Bertram 31 and its prototype were designed with a remarkable 23-degree angle of deadrise at the transom with three lifting strakes on each side from the keel to the chine.
  • On the radio I caught Mr Hague's concluding remarks at the Blackpool conference.
  • The idea of henges dotting ancient Britain is reinforced by the discovery of the so-called "Seahenge," a remarkably well-preserved timber circle, on New Stones at Avebury
  • She has a remarkable likeness to an unknown figure who appears in his recurrent dreams, a fact that Paul takes as some sort of omen.
  • Thai government distanced itself Wednesday from remarks in the Minister Kasit Piromya about a need for a more open discussion of what he called the taboo subject of the role of the monarchy in WN.com - Photown News
  • Several times during the speech Perry posed for dramatic effect, once even wrapping his arms around himself and remarking in a theatrical aside: "It's the darnedest thing. CPAC 2011: The Conservative Political Action Conference (Live Coverage, Day Two)
  • Blackened and degraded by centuries of dust and dirt, they emerged in a remarkable state of preservation that gives an excellent idea of their intended flamboyance.
  • What an asinine remark!
  • Though some like to dwell on that horror while others ignore it entirely, I believe it is only true to the remarkableness of America if we acknowledge both the horror of that age and the unique American triumph in overcoming it. Bart Motes: Hillary Clinton for Supreme Court
  • This is a truly remarkable achievement.
  • Tonight, as the body of Pope John Paul II lies in state, the world continues to mourn this remarkable man, a torch-bearer of peace and a bridge-builder between faiths, someone who inspired so many.
  • And he concludes, after referring to the fortuitous duty-free shopping interlude I shared with Bashar en route back to London from Damascus, by remarking: By this time, Michael, whos a very engaging personality, is a friend of the family! A Question of Honour
  • But linear perspective itself is probably a renaissance not an antique invention, and Durer's approach to ancient architecture is remarkably free and unlearned.
  • The composer himself remarked on its innovation: a ‘sonata written in a concertante manner, almost like a concerto.’
  • He was cheered to the echo and, a trifle remarkably, joyously, and continually, waved to the thousands who were acclaiming him.
  • Our engineers were fooling about in the studio singing vulgar songs and making rude remarks in front of the microphone.
  • It was mightily impressive bowling by any standards, and with his left hand in plaster it was quite remarkable.
  • In those letters I discovered and fell in love with Nannerl, Mozart's sister, almost five years older than her brother, a prodigy in her own right, a marvelous singer and remarkable harpsichordist. George Heymont: The Shadow of Your Sib
  • The tapestry from Raphael's cartoon of "The Miraculous Draught of Fishes" is a very remarkable work of art, and one which stands alone in modern needlework. Art and Handicraft in the Woman's Building of the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893
  • As I remarked in my post at the time, if anything is to be learnt in the post-mortems, it is that there is plenty of failure all round for all sides to digest.
  • Yet although Katz's book is necessarily incomplete in what it can cover, it lives up to its goals remarkably well.
  • She was capable of remarkable feats of endurance.
  • When later poets in an uncritical age take up and rehandle the poetic themes of their predecessors, they always give to the stories "a new costume," as M. Gaston Paris remarks in reference to thirteenth century dealings with French epics of the eleventh century. Homer and His Age
  • This matter settled, I strolled back to the pipul tree beside the tank, thinking that it might be useful to pick up the remarks of the loiterers. Tales of Destiny
  • Such a remark ordinarily would deserve no more than a hearty guffaw.
  • Back in October already, Chinese commentaries remarked on the financial crisis as being the chief reason for Britain ceding its long-term regard of China as Tibet's "suzerain" and recognizing it as its "sovereign". IPS Inter Press Service
  • He made the remarks in a bid to counter the opposition's doubts that the use of the money has not been transparent, the report said.
  • This is an unfortunate misrepresentation of my remarks, and misleads readers about the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
  • But it is Machu Picchu's remarkable unity and state of preservation that are so satisfying to a visitor.
  • Kelly is an inspiration to everyone at the school and is a truly remarkable person.
  • A remarkably regal Graham Chapman, probably thinking about the air speed velocity of a swallow.
  • His remarkable contribution to literature has been too long in eclipse.
  • China's Foreign Ministry denounced those remarks as unwarranted American meddling and an attempt to "internationalize" a strictly regional problem. Reining in China's Ambitions
  • Risk factors for sudden infant death syndrome were remarkably consistent for both Maori and non-Maori populations within New Zealand.
  • Her next remark abruptly terminated the conversation.
  • His scanty remarks are limited to generalities.
  • The first two orchestral works (preceded only by juvenilia and a graduation passacaglia for piano) are remarkable for their assurance.
  • Using their bullwhips, the cowboys aimed at various targets with remarkable accuracy, whipping newspapers and plastic bags from people's mouths or hands.
  • Your goal is to deliver a short, punchy remark—thus the term punch line. How To Be Funny
  • I've apologized for the - you know, the remarks and what they seemed to infer in such an insensitive way.
  • ‘We don't want taxpayer dollars being spent in order to proselyte children into praying to Zeus and Apollo,’ she remarked.
  • It sounded as remarkable in person as it did on the day I had it playing on my discman, walking through the backstreets of Berlin looking for the studio in which it was recorded.
  • Heisenberg remarked, when the Japanese physicist Yukawa discovered the particle now known as the meson and the term Werner Heisenberg - Biography
  • Unable to see who had spoken I addressed my remarks to the whole crowd.
  • Spurlock possessed a vigorous intellect, critical, disquisitional, creative; and yet he saw nothing remarkable in the girl's readiness to marry him! The Ragged Edge
  • One particular quirk of syntax occurs remarkably often in both poems: duplication of a monosyllabic word with asyndeton, within a line.

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