Sentence examples for meaning suggested from inspiring English sources

Exact(8)

Then there is the larger meaning suggested by the reader's discussion guide included with "Pride and Prejudice and Zombies" — which may explain the new popularity of mashups of this kind.

The meaning suggested is "land on the boundary" which may make sense if the developer of each block left sufficient land undeveloped on the edge of his plot to provide for a rear access – these soon developing into public footways.

The name of the project closes the circle by compressing all the phases within a meaning suggested by a name.

Retro style dwellings pointing to anamnesis, meaning suggested recollection with nostalgia and pastiche [2] are dominant building styles throughout Sippy Downs, thus based on the preferences of respondents the community is already integrated on that particular level.

Heidegger's most famous presentation of Van Gogh's painting pivots again on an ambiguous use of "nothing," to which Heidegger now adds an elliptical, intimating locution ("And yet…") in order to encourage his audience to hear a subtle shift and so notice the meaning suggested by his otherwise superfluous addition, "and nothing more".

The second level of meaning suggested the responsibilities and privileges that Jews had as citizens of a trans-national Jewish people.

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Similar(52)

Answer While the sense of "fulsome" and "fulsomely" has shifted over time, the primary meaning suggests something offensively excessive.

Mr. Obama went on to clarify his meaning, suggesting that white Americans have been shaped by common experience with race, but the sound bite was ugly.

The word "nation" comes from the Latin word for "birth," and its English-language meaning suggests a people defined by ties of blood, ethnicity, or culture.

Richter's compulsive eschewal of cliché — little concerned with results, which stutter on uncrossed verges of meaning suggests desiccated existentialist anguish: Giacometti without tears.

Just as the term once used to describe victims of domestic violence as "battered wives" had a useful (to abusers) double meaning, suggesting someone worn out rather than beaten up, so child-hitters have their own special word: "smack" is designed to dissociate thumping a child from other forms of violence.

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