How To Use Spoken In A Sentence

  • I'm currently enjoying the odd effect of chancing across spoken word excerpts in the original Italian.
  • Vibrations from instruments such as the talking drum or the didgeridoo, or even from foot-stomping dances, may have spoken volumes to distant, unshod listeners.
  • Vordul's verse is uninspiring and sounds much more like spoken word poetry, rather than a proper rap.
  • The term comprehended the whole nation, and no one will contend that the choice spoken of indicated that every Jew was safe for eternity. The Doctrines of Predestination, Reprobation, and Election
  • Not only was his analysis absolutely on target, he was tremendously self-assured, well spoken and telegenic.
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  • He has also spoken critically of the former President.
  • He has made a string of outspoken and sometimes provocative speeches in recent years.
  • 'If we hadn't cared for Hester for hersel', master, we should ha 'cared for her as being forespoken by yo'. Sylvia's Lovers — Complete
  • In stories the subject often comes after said, says or say when it follows the actual words spoken, unless it is a pronoun. Be quiet, I have something to say.
  • 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
  • He had spoken of being inspired by Sheffield's John and Sheila Sherwood winning medals in the Mexico Olympics, of joining their club and of being given his first pair of spikes by Sheila.
  • We have worked very hard in the last couple of years and the kind of maneuverability that we have just spoken about in the fourth quarter typifies the progress we've made. SeekingAlpha.com: Home Page
  • His comments need careful consideration, particularly given his deep understanding of commercial cases and his outspoken criticism in some serious fraud cases. Times, Sunday Times
  • I had refastened it in a simple bowknot, a sort of knot which on Gor, in certain contexts, as in the present context, is spoken of as a slave knot. Renegades Of Gor
  • Consequently, when characters share on-screen space, it is almost claustrophobic because of the heavy presence of repressed longings and unspoken desires.
  • I congratulated her on taking part in your elocution lessons, and she said you were helping them to be well-spoken tabloid editors. SUMMER OF SECRETS
  • In playing the diplomat, has he always spoken truth to power - including the powers within his own ecclesial community? The best path to peace | Savitri Hensman
  • A chatbot is a computer programme designed to hold a spoken or written coversation with a human. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • I must have more than 'intimated' -- I must have spoken plainly out the truth, if I do myself the barest justice, and told you long ago that the admiration at your works went _away_, quite another way and afar from the love of you. The Letters of Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Barrett, Vol. 1 (of 2) 1845-1846
  • An arson attack victim has spoken of her fear after finding that firebugs had set fire to her front door.
  • Arcade remains a funny, outspoken and seemingly unstoppable life force. Times, Sunday Times
  • Mind, it is about time that you proposed to Clara, but you ought at least have spoken with your father beforehand.
  • The opening vignette, ‘Lullaby for a Broken Dog’ is simple piano tinklings and a man's spoken words over the hiss and pop of a needle on an old record.
  • She burst into tears and said she hadn't spoken to her mother for three years. The Sun
  • Where else in Montreal can you see bands and spoken word acts, watch silent movies with live music, draw comix with your buddies, buy art from a vending machine or chow down on a tasty veggie sandwich?
  • He has always been an outspoken critic of the government.
  • While they are stringing popcorn and cranberries to hang on the tree, Beth tells Calvin and Conrad that she had spoken to Carole Lazenby, who had informed her of something that Con should have told them.
  • The phonological output lexicon stores pronunciations corresponding to all the spoken words known to the reader, also in the form of lexical entries.
  • Holly looked up at her boyfriend, nodding at his silent agreement to her unspoken request.
  • However, no sooner had the parliament spoken than there were attempts to unsay its words.
  • When the word ‘scientist’ was first spoken in 1833, it was meant as a joke: its coinage first drew laughs and later was attacked as ‘an American barbarous trisyllable.’
  • They are spoken in the Torres Strait, and among Aborigines in northern Australia.
  • While pictures often portray the man sneering down his nose at the camera, in person he is strikingly soft-spoken, almost courtly.
  • The article itself indicates that the author had spoken to Mr. Deedes, the managing director of DT; but there is no evidence from him.
  • Koinōnia idiōmatōn, — that communication of attributes in the person, whereby the properties of either nature are promiscuously spoken of the person of Christ, under what name soever, of God or man, he be spoken of, Acts xx. 28, iii. Of Communion with God the Father, Son and Holy Ghost
  • ` ` The style of his Grace (to say nothing here of his thought, of which others have spoken words of admiration certainly not too strong) often runs into poetry; and it has everywhere that indescribable not-too-muchness which is always the cachet of high-class work. '' Ginx's Baby. His Birth and other Misfortunes: A Satire
  • He is the outspoken and confident red-haired editor of the local newspaper.
  • The academy is long outspoken in support of animal research. Times, Sunday Times
  • For two women such as us, confirmed members of the jeans and T-shirt brigade, we were developing a surprising unspoken admiration for the seriously girly.
  • He has created a soft-spoken and gentle Barrie who is the boy who never grew up, yet never seems grotesque.
  • I imagine that an acupuncture session is fairly relaxing for the pet - the article indicates that the animal isthe center of attention during these exercises – they are petted, nuzzled, spoken to in calming adult-cooing baby language, placed on warm blankets with candle light and soft music, perhaps? Pet Acupunture – Grrrrr! Ruff! « Biodork
  • The word hovered in the air a moment after she’d spoken. Last Christmas
  • These are Bengali, Tamil, and Malay, spoken in south and southeast Asia.
  • Kidd makes much of a Miltonic allusion that he perceives in "woful" as spoken by Buck Mulligan. 'Making the Wrong Joyce': An Exchange
  • Everyone turned to see who had spoken, and there in the corner stood an elderly courtier, one of the king's most trusted advisers.
  • Contact you dream? you listen? spoken word? norbert blei | six found-poems in the words and paintings of andrew wyeth Norbert blei | six found-poems in the words and paintings of andrew wyeth « poetry dispatch & other notes from the underground
  • English is understood all over the world while Turkish is spoken by only a few people outside Turkey itself.
  • Everywhere an unspoken question seemed to hang heavily in the air: Would we have been better off without Home Rule?
  • The small, plain-spoken drama teeters, undecidable, between lightness and weight. The Times Literary Supplement
  • gentled" him all over his miserable frame, as he lay panting and overpowered on the sawdust, conquered and convinced at last, all his mistakes and misconceptions of other people came before him, as plainly as if Taffy himself had spoken them; so plainly, that he wondered at himself. Parables From Nature
  • Guaharibos, Spanish soldiers pretend to have found the fine kind of saussurite (Amazon-stone), of which we have spoken. Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America
  • There was mischief brewing among these hot-headed, short-spoken salts, but Captain Foley changed the subject to discuss the new ships which were being built in the French ports. Rodney stone
  • unspoken grief
  • You learn a language better if you visit the country where it is spoken.
  • The soft-spoken musician said he was also practising hard with his musician friends in Kabwe just to keep in shape musically.
  • The jigs were set to popular tunes of the day and, apart from the few short sections of spoken text, one can assume that most were through-sung. A New Start
  • Never before, except for a short period between 1947 and 1953, had an outspokenly anti-political movement acquired such a significant electoral success.
  • Labels: david bridie, my friend the chocolate cake, nigella lawson posted by Another Outspoken Female at 11: 41 AM Archive 2008-04-01
  • Many have spoken out to say the worst trolling comes not from misogynist men, but from fellow feminists. The Sun
  • Often in the past Ferguson has spoken of the importance goal difference might one day play in the title shake-up. ESPNsoccernet
  • Some initiation ceremony perhaps or unspoken betrothal?
  • She had not spoken to her parents in years and contact with her sisters was sporadic and infrequent.
  • Citing a "smarmy" letter that Washington wrote in 1757, bemoaning his lot to the commander in chief, Lord Loudoun, Mr. Clary highlights some especially outspoken, self-pitying and "whining" comments. War in the Wilderness
  • Unable to see who had spoken I addressed my remarks to the whole crowd.
  • Her aunt was well-spoken and had a pleasant manner.
  • Gambians tend to be soft-spoken and gentle in demeanor, seeking to avoid noisy conflicts and striving toward quiet settlement of disputes.
  • One of the fundamental bars to communication is the lack of a universally spoken, common language.
  • In the second verse, the ad leaves out some of the spoken word or background lyrics of the song.
  • Words had yet to be spoken, and Katherine found her apprehension returning in the silence.
  • By the lips of Sigurd spoken she remembereth overlate; The Story of Sigurd the Volsung and the Fall of the Niblungs
  • Other notable related Iranian languages include Persian, Kurdish, Balochi, Gilaki, spoken in the Middle East, and Ossetic, which is spoken in the Caucasus. Planet-x.com.au » Afghan
  • She is an outspoken critic of the school system in this city.
  • For weeks the two men had not spoken, but at last Christian had appeared to relent. WHEN THE APRICOTS BLOOM
  • I merely need to soak it in, bathe in it, let it speak to me the way it has spoken to others.
  • We've spoken on the phone but never face-to-face.
  • MPs have also spoken out against the unfair adoption system and are campaigning for a public inquiry. Times, Sunday Times
  • But hearing himself forespoken so pleasantly, he came to a stand and peered at them through his gold-rimmed glasses. News from the Duchy
  • I take the opportunity to endorse the comments of others who have spoken with high regard of the pharmacy services that are provided by our pharmacy professionals here in New Zealand.
  • He had earlier spoken against the building of the new houses. The Sun
  • It was the first time in months that he'd spoken a sentence not consisting of one or two words, like yes, no or I need baccy.
  • The telecon was so hush hush that not a word was actually spoken while it was in progress, for fear of, what else, leaks.
  • He had left his church, spoken of Jesus as a human role model, and used biblical history and Christian dogmas simply as figures of speech, supportive exempla in his powerful rhetoric against the dead incarnations of past spirit.
  • Thomas Weir perched, like that of a man beheaded for treason, upon the apex of the gablet of the old tomb, as I was of hearing the wonderful playing of that husky old organ, of which I have spoken once before. Annals of a Quiet Neighbourhood
  • Their languages are part of a family that linguistic anthropologists call Siouan or Siouan-Catawban, which is still spoken on the Great Plains of the United States and parts of southern Canada. Saying goodbye to my "Fargo" accent
  • Sierra LeoneEnglish (official, regular use limited to literate minority), Mende (principal vernacular in the south), Temne (principal vernacular in the north), Krio (English-based Creole, spoken by the descendants of freed Jamaican slaves who were settled in the Freetown area, a lingua franca and a first language for 10% of the population but understood by 95%) Languages
  • EU members were unusually outspoken in appearances before the U.N. Human Rights Council, saying they were worried about preparations for a global racism conference to be held next month because attention was being diverted from the real problems of racial discrimination. EU countries oppose Muslim views on racism meeting
  • To give her her due, the headmistress wasn't too keen on league tables herself and has spoken out against government prescriptiveness.
  • And a minority of scientists, led by NASA's outspoken expert, James Hansen, say even that's not enough: they think the concentration limit is 350 ppm—and we're already at 387 ppm.
  • She identifies that spoken word poetry has its own qualities: dynamics, pitch, accentuation, rhythmic delivery, and tempo.
  • The Republican House members defenestrated the outspoken proponent of "moral values" then serving as speaker, and his would-be successor, too.
  • Cailleac Bheur!" the dwarf cried, the first words he had spoken since they had left his waterfall home. The Woods Out Back
  • Most designers share the unspoken belief that fashion is a valid form of visual art.
  • Concerned with the male-dominant discussions of Negritude, Sharpley-Whiting illuminates the path, which led to a significant black movement, taken by the outspoken and courageous Martinican women mentioned above.
  • She has often spoken fondly of the influence of her parents on her political career. Times, Sunday Times
  • The kind of thing you find in my esteemed ancestor's books - words that haven't been spoken round here in two hundred years. A TIME OF WAR
  • Amy had not been accustomed to hearing herself spoken of as a "person," and the word angered her. Reels and Spindles A Story of Mill Life
  • Yiddish is the primary language, with very little American spoken. “The Yiddish Policemen’s Union” by Michael Chabon (Harpercollins, 2007) « The BookBanter Blog
  • There are no outspoken cabinet critics of the rival scheme to expand Gatwick. Times, Sunday Times
  • In France patois was spoken in rural, less developed regions.
  • There were no conversations spoken, and none were needed: talk just sounded hollow and pointless in the big scheme of things.
  • Steve's unchanged expression showed that he didn't believe a word Miles had just spoken.
  • But having been appointed to the important offices of administering the government of the country in which these languages are spoken, they apply their acquisitions immediately to useful purpose; in distributing justice to the inhabitants; in transacting the business of the state, revenual and commercial; and in maintaining official intercourse with the people, in their own tongue, and not, as hitherto, by an interpreter. Life of William Carey
  • Rinaldo's men were lawless, and sometimes the supplies were not furnished in sufficient abundance, so that Rinaldo and his garrison got a bad name for taking by force what they could not obtain by gift; and we sometimes find Montalban spoken of as a nest of freebooters, and its defenders called a beggarly garrison. Legends of Charlemagne
  • She knew little about her siblings, as it had been years since she had seen or spoken to any of them.
  • WOODRUFF: And just as important, he is hoping to win over you, the voters in the United States, with what he calls plain-spoken words about his priorities. CNN Transcript - Special Event: President Bush Addresses Congress and the Democrats Respond - February 27, 2001
  • Although basically a noble failure from the sound of it, good things have come of the attempt—for example, "The Colbert Report," where the gentle, soft-spoken Brit rose hyperactively to the occasion. Perfecting The Toaster
  • His spoken word bit about being on a plane bound for Manila and asking for curried chicken as the pilots lose control is delivered in a series of herky-jerky inflections and with enormous relish.
  • Their language is known as Cahita, being the same as that spoken, with dialectic differences, by their neighbours, the Tehueco, and Yaqui, and belonging to the Piman branch of the great Shoshonean stock. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
  • We sometimes encounter people, even perfect strangers, who begin to interest us at first sight, somehow suddenly, all at once, before a word has been spoken. Fyodor Dostoyevsky 
  • Contact you dream? you listen? spoken word? joan jobe smith | 3 poems Joan jobe smith | 3 poems « poetry dispatch & other notes from the underground
  • A look of vexation or a word coldly spoken, or a little help thoughtlessly withheld, may produce long issues of regret. Architects of Fate or, Steps to Success and Power
  • She was portrayed as a bit of a lad, very brash, by music journalists, but really she is very quietly spoken, doesn't shoot her mouth off, very intelligent and - she'll hate me for saying this - just very nice.
  • There were quite a few good modern authors, including some in English; Maigret assumed the solicitor had spoken the language fluently. Maigret and Monsieur Charles
  • These techniques allow governments and corporations the freedom to promote ideas that would appear repulsive, discordant or even downright stupid if spoken in plain English.
  • He is full of little jokes, poshly spoken but slyly funny, indiscreet and competitive too. Times, Sunday Times
  • Moreover, when words are spoken in continuous speech they often sound different from when spoken in isolation.
  • Julia Stiles is a lovely and determined Viola, but monotonously and unpoetically spoken.
  • Yet much was spoken of a new cannonier, lately come to aid the men of Orleans, and how he and John of Lorraine slew many of the hardiest of the English with their couleuvrines. A Monk of Fife
  • Second was the failure of the recent Truman Doctrine – an outspoken scheme to help Greece and Turkey fight Soviet pressures – to indicate a constructive way forward for all.
  • Wired into the way we are forced to live there are silent imperatives, unspoken propositions about the world.
  • It was a suffix that didn't need to be spoken, and Vinh knew how to stick his needle into a sensitive place. WITHOUT REMORSE
  • He is assured and confident in his movement up there, softly spoken and more self-conscious when he returns to the ground. Times, Sunday Times
  • The winning language was the langue d' oil spoken by the Francs, which evolved into modern French.
  • Wherefore, such opinions and persuasions are gradually insinuated into the mind, and are admitted insensibly without opposition or reluctancy, being never accompanied at their first admission with any secular disadvantage; -- but these divine convictions by the word befall men, some when they think of nothing less and desire nothing less; some when they design other things, as the pleasing of their ears or the entertainment of their company; and some that go on purpose to deride and scoff at what should be spoken unto them from it. Pneumatologia
  • Tea Party Express lost favor with many activists when its outspoken chairman, talk-radio host Mark Williams, wrote a "satirical" letter from the "colored people" of America to Abraham Lincoln, in which he extolled slavery. November elections will be big test of tea party's staying power
  • The spoken word, even in the colonial period, had a peculiarly prominent place in America.
  • I was brought up to believe my body is disgusting, bodily functions should not be spoken about, and sex is an animal instinct.
  • Gaelic is still spoken in Ireland by a tiny minority.
  • She said: ‘I have spoken to managers at the station and they are quite happy for trainspotters to continue their hobby.’
  • Where I am at now I need Mexican Spanish, phrases that are commonly spoken in las calles. Developing An Ear for Spanish
  • In person she is thoughtful and quietly spoken. Times, Sunday Times
  • Verse such as this would permit of every rhythmical variation known in English prosody, and through the appeal of its rhythm would offer the dramatist opportunities for emotional effect that prose would not allow him; but at the same time it could be spoken with entire naturalness by actors as ultra-modern as Mme. Nazimova. The Theory of the Theatre
  • Mr. Laurents has also been outspoken throughtout the festival as a supporter of liberal causes, usually finding a way during his talks to make pointed references to the "mendacities" of the current administration. April 2004
  • The two of us had reached an unspoken agreement. Times, Sunday Times
  • He has spoken sharply to Mr Dach about it and has received his assurance that such a thing will never happen again.
  • If I don't know the truth or the person being spoken about, I usually do not ever repeat what was said by the gossipper unless it is directly to that person. Pretty/Scary
  • I've had this script spoken "to" me -- and I found that I didn't rise up in defensiveness because it didn't attack me in any way. Tearing Down
  • The transformative part is that political operatives have not traditionally spoken to this young, more acculturated segment. Roberto Ramos: Full Latino Impact in 2012 Elections Will Depend on Its Youth
  • Williams notes that semasiology as an anthropological viewpoint assumes that human action includes both spoken sign systems and action sign systems and that human action, in being agentic, is therefore not ‘behavior’.
  • Her manners and behaviour were very charming and she was one good looking and well spoken woman.
  • (Soundbite of music) Mr. ABDULLAH IBRAHIM (Composer, Pianist, Flutist): (Foreign language Spoken) (Singing) ELLIOTT: Today, Ibrahim again makes his home in South Africa in the hills outside of Cape Town. Abdullah Ibrahim Stays Rooted to His Homeland
  • Having good intentions, not harming others, avoiding evil actions and making the heart and mind pure in thought were among the truths spoken by the Buddha.
  • The weather is glorious, English is spoken and the currency has parity with the pound. Times, Sunday Times
  • I think almost everyone that has spoken this afternoon has highlighted the importance of ceasing the fighting.
  • It was sometime after midnight—after four hours in that shit-hole—when a senior officer showed up, said he had spoken with the regatta organizers, and he was letting us go as an exception to the rule. Fallin’ Up
  • A word spoken is past recalling. 
  • Ask your cleck, Sir Ralph, if I have not spoken correct. John Halifax, Gentleman
  • Another word returns from the deepest recesses of childhood: “Moscovite,” the word spoken by my parents with special contempt, in reference to those Hungarian Communists who returned to Budapest with the Red Army. Enemies of the People
  • Labor leaders and social progressives were among the most outspoken opponents of the World War I draft.
  • The script is peppered with dialogue that will make you howl for days, most of it being spoken by the Inspector.
  • The Philippines lacks a common language and about eighty languages and dialects are spoken in the islands.
  • He put out his ready-mades, his glass brides and chocolate-machine bachelors, his urinal, and so on; art could no longer speak as it had spoken before.
  • The different groups speak their own languages, but the language spoken across ethnic lines is a form of pidgin English called Creole.
  • “Hooray” adds a certain levity to a written sentence and literally brings a smile to any face when spoken (just say and word and the pronunciation will literally cause your mouth to form a smile-like shape). Blog – syllable studio
  • I've always spoken quickly, and though I still do, now I merely give you a mild case of windburn rather than lift your scalp right off when I'm excited about something.
  • No weapon was brandished nor was any word spoken to suggest that there was a weapon.
  • His belated admission to the ranks of the tenjo-bito provoked some derision and he was commonly spoken of as Gen-sammi (the Minamoto third rank). A History of the Japanese People From the Earliest Times to the End of the Meiji Era
  • He was a very free-spoken man (the gentry of those days were much prouder than at present), and used to say to me in his haughty easy way, The Memoires of Barry Lyndon
  • The Obama administration and its new Council on Jobs and Competitiveness should outspokenly promote EPA regulation as a part of its jobs program and start dispelling the myths propagated by the EPA's opponents. Brendan Smith: Obama Needs a Just Transition Taskforce
  • These words were spoken by important dignitaries and by ordinary men and women.
  • Jeanie knew that there was a kind of persiflage – though she did not know the word nor yet what it meant – in which marriage was spoken of as bondage, and it was said of a man that he was going up for execution on his marriage-day. Kirsteen: The Story of a Scotch Family Seventy Years Ago
  • He had an innate egalitarianism, a plain-spoken American way of talking, a directness, and a lack of airs.
  • Here was no blue-jacketed, weather-beaten son of the sea, but a soft-spoken gentleman, for all the world the type of successful business man one meets in all the clubs. CHAPTER I
  • Ourkam is the Menes of Chaldæa, and his date is put long before that Susian conquest of which we have spoken above. A History of Art in Chaldæa & Assyria, v. 1
  • He had spoken rather forcefully and now fell back on his pillow, aching in the cancered prostate, in his failing kidneys and in each of his four broken bones. Hawaii
  • Kenworthy hated him for his spoken English, his meticulous vowels so cloyingly off-beam. DISPLACED PERSON
  • Moreover, there is a wide range of phenomena (ranging from anacolutha to disfluencies) which are in fact specific to spoken language only.
  • The music and the dialogue spoken by the German and French were dubbed in afterwards.
  • Mr de Klerk said he had spoken "cursorily" to Mr Mandela and Mr Mandela had given him certain assurances about details "which convinces me we will be able to reach some kind of consensus on this issue". ANC Daily News Briefing
  • When that happens, it ceases to be a living, spoken language, as happened to Sanskrit.
  • Linguistically most of Pakistan's languages are spoken in other parts of the South Asian subcontinent -- Punjabi, Sindhi and Urdu and before the separation of Bangladesh, Bengali. Aparna Pande: Is Pakistan Part of South Asia? Yes!
  • From the wittiest zinger to the most heartfelt speech, I believed every word spoken.
  • Those who met him for the first time were surprised to find a charming, soft-spoken man with a ready smile and a courteous manner. Times, Sunday Times
  • I saw the peltast who had not spoken glance at the other as if to say he means it, and then at the crowd. The Shadow of the Torturer
  • The demonstrators shouted slogans against new culture minister Angeles González-Sinde [right], a former president of the Spanish Cinema Academy who has often spoken out against Internet piracy. Spanish surfers protest anti-P2P restrictions
  • As I did so the funeral bell rang out, and it came to me, as though the One above had spoken, that peace would be slain and His name insulted by all of you -- by all of you, Catholic and Protestant. The World for Sale, Volume 2.
  • And, indeed, so long as relative age only is spoken of, correspondence in succession _is_ correspondence in age; it is _relative_ contemporaneity. Lay Sermons, Addresses and Reviews
  • The human information processing system generally has few problems with spoken or written language, even when the stimulus is noisy or ambiguous.
  • There was little frolic left in them when night came; they were short-spoken, prone to grow fierce over trifles. The Desert Valley
  • Hoyle and Bruce were spoken to by the referee after an altercation in midfield, but following the free kick Bruce kicked out at Hoyle in the penalty area.
  • We've spoken to hundreds of people over the last few months, including many people who identify as non-binary.
  • Maybe I would have never spoken to you, but that's because you don't speak to anyone.
  • Or will they say here's a plain spoken, direct, blunt guy who may make his way in politics.
  • Butler is softly spoken with a trace of an Edinburgh burr still discernible in her gentle Canadian accent.
  • Anyway, I just photocopied 52 programme zines for the spoken word thing I'm organising.
  • Into the stunned silence that followed this outburst from short-spoken, reticent Olive, there came a new voice; such a sweet, lovely voice with Six Girls A Home Story
  • Manolson considers it striking that some young women with whom she has spoken and who are average looking and even "Rubenesque" in figure consider themselves beautiful, even sexy. Articles
  • At the tobacco company he was outspoken in saying that the Government should not restrict people's liberty to smoke. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her voice did not resound in a booming echo, as it did when she had first spoken from her electronic home.
  • He is softly spoken, painfully shy, deeply introverted. Times, Sunday Times
  • So there you have it: the great high priest of Darwinian Dogma has spoken; all nonsense perhaps, but atheists, please genuflect. 2010 April « Anglican Samizdat
  • Then he reached in his sack for a pressie but those left were all spoken for.
  • And the outspoken expert took the bait - selecting the couple to perform an encore before stripping off to join them. The Sun
  • About these spoken and unspoken assumptions Jackson has only a little to say.
  • Even as he'd spoken, there had been an admonitory voice in the back of his head, warning that he was saying far too much. THE LAST TEMPTATION
  • Most of the hunt officials I have spoken to concede that hunting in Scotland today is a pale imitation of the sport they once knew.
  • (aba akaki kOrOmObO kOnOmibumu, 'I like red clothes'); you can hear it spoken here (mpg file). May 28th, 2006
  • I've spoken to plenty of supporters who think he'll have a bright future if he recommits himself to LA. Villaraigosa won't run for governor
  • The two leading contenders for the Democratic nomination, Hillary Clinton and Barak Obama have very distinct positions but it has been a rare occasion when the word Kurd has ever been spoken by them. SENATOR CLINTON WRITES KURDS OUT OF HER SCRIPT
  • He was an outspoken advocate of law reform, a pugnacious critic of established political doctrines like natural law and contractarianism, and the first to produce a utilitarian justification for democracy.

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