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writ

[ US /ˈɹɪt/ ]
[ UK /ɹˈɪt/ ]
NOUN
  1. (law) a legal document issued by a court or judicial officer

How To Use writ In A Sentence

  • Intellectual Dublin seemed no longer to consist of writers, but of folk singers, bearded or otherwise.
  • If we have spent several class periods introducing conventions of reasoned evidence in argumentative writing, we usually look for such features in student papers.
  • In 1984, he started Oh Boy as an outlet for his songwriting.
  • I'm still in contact with her - we write a couple of times a year.
  • Before we did anything we wrote and rewrote the script until we felt what we had got written down was a really good story.
  • I had written quite a lot of orchestral music in my student days.
  • For a very long time I loved the idea of writing but did very little - I published a few stories, and workshopped myself into submission.
  • A few talented writers en dowed with originality and exceptional animation, a few brilliant efforts, isolated, without following, interrupted and recommenced, did not suffice to endow a nation with a solid and imposing basis of literary wealth. Literary and Philosophical Essays: French, German and Italian
  • Though Jane tells herself stories, listens to stories told by others, and reads, she never writes anything other than a few letters-misaddressed and undelivered letters, at that.
  • Listen to our astronomers talk about the magnitudes and disunites and composition of the stars, and compare with their story that which was written in the astronomy of a few centuries ago. The World's Great Sermons, Volume 10 Drummond to Jowett, and General Index
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