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be espoused
verb
To become/get married to.
Exact(12)
However, a number of candidates from onetime Qaeda-held areas express sentiments that could easily be espoused by insurgents.
OWN executives say Ms. Winfrey's worldview, "Live your best life," will be espoused by the dozen programs that will premiere in the channel's first few months.
QUESTION FROM BRANDON: What are your thoughts about the infallibility of the Founding Fathers that seems to be espoused in popular culture on a regular basis?
Yet with all that time spent deciding how some theory could be espoused on the stage, no thought seems to have been given to engaging the people in the seats.
Billy Graham was in the mix too – but for Preacher Herring, the cause to be espoused was that of Love – how to find it, how not to lose it, why not to lose it.
Although the principle of fair play has often come under attack in the decades since Hart fleetingly propounded it, the theory continues to be espoused by some present-day political philosophers.
Similar(48)
Nadas appears to be espousing a theory of the novel.
For some, that machine may also be espousing wrongheaded, even dangerous, views.
Mr. Sharon said Mr. Barak seemed to be espousing contradictory thoughts.
I also wouldn't mind Rick dying because the show constantly seems to be espousing his nihilistic worldview.
I might still be espousing the bizarrely reactionary beliefs I had previously held (which wouldn't be pretty).
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