How To Use Rephrase In A Sentence

  • Let me rephrase that: One day after chess club, I got stuffed into a trash can.
  • If, however, he/she rephrases the question and asks, ‘Are there any concepts with similar implications?’
  • He rephrased the report in order to clear the essential points.
  • We can rephrase Jenkin's argument in a more neutral analogy.
  • The basic claim is that all problems can be rephrased as prediction problems.
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  • No, wait a minute - hang on, just let me rephrase that- ' `Please do. ABSOLUTE TRUTHS
  • The instructor may have to repeat or rephrase this thorough explanation many times during guided practice.
  • Not infrequently, the ideological premise is rephrased as an objective definition, as when gender theory is substituted for feminist theory.
  • But anyways every single time I use that word ahora, I always hear it rephrased ... M�s con un/una
  • I'll rephrase the question: You know anyone normal who doesn't see a doctor? EVERY SECRET THING
  • Here, it is slightly rephrased, ‘When every part of a city has been rebuilt and replaced, is it still the same city?’
  • Again, the executive rephrased the question.
  • This forced the judge to intervene and rephrase the question in plain comprehensible English.
  • He clicks it on and off in a gruff, ominous way; then says -- And I nonetheless would advise you to rephrase the question. THE CHEEK PERFORATION DANCE
  • OK. Let me rephrase the question .
  • He clicks it on and off in a gruff, ominous way; then says -- And I nonetheless would advise you to rephrase the question. THE CHEEK PERFORATION DANCE
  • She rephrased the letter to give it more formality.
  • To rephrase the question, does the presence of a superhero in our city promote supervillains?
  • I did not, and I would rephrase the question: Should the international community use force to compel the two-state solution?
  • Seeing the blank look on Bessie's face, Mary rephrased her question. ‘He gets the dead to speak through him?’
  • OK, so, to rephrase -- I was a draftnik when it was ESPECIALLY uncool to be one. SI.com
  • It is permissible, even desirable, to edit and rephrase the statement so that it is clear and well structured.
  • This word cannot express my idea accurately, so I'll rephrase.
  • To slightly rephrase Hal in his next play, Henry V, ‘And gentlefolk in New York now abed / Shall think themselves accursed they were not here.’
  • And this subprogram, which was never officially ratified or published, just rephrased the 1979 document. Strategic Management in Developing Countries Case Studies
  • At seminars or meetings, it was often he alone who saw the point of a question, and he would not hesitate to rephrase it, if he thought it unclear.
  • I'll rephrase the question: You know anyone normal who doesn't see a doctor? EVERY SECRET THING
  • With the advent of post-structuralism in the later 1970s, the attack on the idea of the self was rephrased in terms borrowed from Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida and Jacques Lacan.
  • No, wait a minute - hang on, just let me rephrase that- ' `Please do. ABSOLUTE TRUTHS
  • No, let me rephrase that, since I'm sure `minor" gives you problems. THE ENDLESS GAME
  • Afraid that the wounds had reopened Kumma rephrased his question in a softer tone.
  • The interviewer, in a vain attempt to give St Clair another opportunity to repair the damage done by his earlier answer, rephrased the question.
  • Or, to rephrase this, divinity is inherent in man.
  • He heard rejection after rejection until he oh-so-slightly rephrased his sales pitch.
  • With the advent of post-structuralism in the later 1970s, the attack on the idea of the self was rephrased in terms borrowed from Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida and Jacques Lacan.
  • This may have helpfully covered up some of the (to rephrase Proust) intermittences of the art, but it also increased the sense of hugger-mugger.
  • She also disliked it when he rephrased his questions like that.
  • Why leave a phrase intact when it could be with profit rephrased? News - latimes.com
  • No, let me rephrase that, since I'm sure `minor" gives you problems. THE ENDLESS GAME
  • Instead he rephrases it without emotion as a ‘truth test.’
  • This may have helpfully covered up some of the (to rephrase Proust) intermittences of the art, but it also increased the sense of hugger-mugger.
  • Shane rephrased the question as he inched his remaining bishop close to her queen.
  • OK. Let me rephrase the question .

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