Sentence examples for a very ominous message from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

Joe Hockey's first federal budget contained a "very ominous" message for ABC audiences in foreshadowing that the 1% cut to ABC funding for the next four years was just a "down payment" and there there would be more cuts to come.

Similar(59)

"It's a very ominous feeling," he added.

Terms like "pathological cortical reorganization" and "cellular pain memory" have a very ominous ring.

McCarthy closed the skit with a very ominous warning.

The IAEA's head, Mohamed ElBaradei, said: "It is pretty clear that the board is sending a very serious and ominous message that failures in the future will not be tolerated". Washington had hoped to send Iran to the security council for possible sanctions for "non-compliance" under the nuclear non-proliferation treaty, but Europe had opposed this.

"The board is sending a very serious and ominous message that failure in the future will not be tolerated," Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei, the director general of the agency, said after the measure was adopted by consensus by the 35 nations on the board.

Along with the deteriorating situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan, it sends a pretty ominous message to President Obama.

Peel off the outer layer of this phrase, and you detect a more ominous message: NATO is dead.

But Mr. Pascrell, not a mile away, was sounding a much more ominous message, as he quoted from Abraham Lincoln in 1862.

Mr Netanyahu said that he welcomed Britain's support and had an ominous message for those hoping for an immediate ceasefire.

And there's an ominous message for his cheerleader, the prime minister, too.

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