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    Use "enunciator" in a sentence

    enunciator example sentences

    enunciator


    1. Small wonder that Prempeh was livid with fear, and trembling in every limb as he heard the furious cries, and saw the denunciatory gesticulations of the angry multitude that spread around him on every side


    2. The ‘liberals’ baleful but repetitive denunciatory charge against tax reductions, regardless of how many people benefit, is that they are “tax cuts for the rich


    3. Revenuluv, who had accidentally joined the group of seekers, renunciators, and abolitionists, eagerly recruited LB


    4. "And who thinks of using him ill? Certainly neither I nor Fernand," said Danglars, rising and looking at the young man, who still remained seated, but whose eye was fixed on the denunciatory sheet of paper flung into the corner


    5. foreigners," the last of the Corbelans uttered in a deep, denunciatory tone


    6. The denunciator of success is the only legitimate executioner of the fall


    7. And, whatever view of the accident be taken, whether the moralist shall use it to point the text of a solemn or denunciatory warning, or whether the materialist, swinging to the other extreme, scouts any other theory than that of the "fortuitous concurrence of atoms," there is scarcely a thinking mortal who has heard of what happened who has not been deeply stirred, in the sense of a personal bereavement, to a profound humility and the conviction of his own insignificance in the greater universal scheme


    8. It was not without reason that the only harsh and denunciatory words that Christ uttered were addressed to hypocrites


    9. I often hear the questions of good young men who sympathize with the renunciatory part of my writings, and who ask, “Well, and what then shall I do? What am I to do, now that I have finished my course in the university, or in some other institution, in order that I may be of use?” Young men ask this, and in the depths of their soul it is already decided that the education which they have received constitutes their privilege and that they desire to serve the people precisely by means of thus superiority


    10. Love of the second kind—renunciatory love—consists in a yearning to undergo self-sacrifice for the object beloved, regardless of any consideration whether such self-sacrifice will benefit or injure the object in question

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