Sentence examples for attributing words from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

We don't need no stinking badges!" The boldest form of misquotation is the wholesale fabrication, attributing words to movies in which nothing like them appeared.

Similar(59)

These stories, pieced together from other news organizations that were on the ground in Tucson, reported the shootings and other basic facts, attributing word of the shooting to the congresswoman's spokesman, C. J. Karamargin.

Mr. Cameron said the headline attributed words to him that he had never spoken.

When Margaret Thatcher arrived in Downing Street in 1979, she famously addressed "all the British people – howsoever they voted", with the attributed words of St Francis of Assisi: "Where there is discord, may we bring harmony.

Yet the media attributed words to Trump that he never actually said, even after Trump clarified that when he said "wherever," he meant nose.

Charges that he had actually written salacious comments for the site under the pseudonym "Brock Landers," the name of a fictional porn star in the movie "Boogie Nights," have now made it into an 11th hour attack ad released by opponent Steve Moak over the weekend, a spot that attributes words written by "Landers" directly to Quayle.

Following compilation of the product and service attribute word frequency count (WFC), individual attributes were tallied based on frequency.

Turn the clock back to the 1970s when the art of "verballing" – attributing incriminating words to a defendant – was endemic.

"I've heard this from my reliable sources," the newspaper said, attributing the words to Mr. Berlusconi through an omniscient narrator approach common in Italian journalism.

This has relevance to the computing frequency count of occurrences of intersect-subset of attributes words in the merged record as has been described in "Problem statement and solution" section.

The dignity and power of God cannot be grasped by human reason and so we cannot even conceive of God sufficiently to accurately impose words that name divine attributes: "words imposed for human use are used metaphorically for speaking about God" [ad loquendum de Deo transferuntur] (Sen 236.46).

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