Sentence examples for notorious remark from inspiring English sources

Exact(9)

Mr Kaczynski's notorious remark about "no free media in Poland", he says mildly, was an exaggeration to make a point.

The review misstated the year and occasion on which a notorious remark by the former Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich, caught on an F.B.I. wiretap, was made public.

At times, he had been accused of inciting violence, and last July, after the coup, he made a notorious remark on camera about a recent series of terrorist attacks in the Sinai Peninsula.

There's nothing inherently wrong about this, though it does conjure up, perhaps intentionally, Heidegger's notorious remark equating the death camps with the battery farms of the modern food industry.

Michael Kranish and Scott Helman, the authors of a new biography, "The Real Romney," tell this story: During the 1968 Republican primary, after George Romney made his notorious remark about getting "the greatest brainwashing that anybody can get" on Vietnam, The Detroit News, ordinarily a supporter, blasted his "blurt and retreat habits" and urged him to get out of the race.

"I can give you one example where I would no longer support Donald Trump," he told reporters, before referring to a notorious remark Trump made earlier this year: "If, for example, he were to go out on Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody, I would not be willing to support Donald Trump".

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Similar(51)

Unfortunately, in spite of his best efforts and those of his supporters, this is not what Obama said last Friday in his now notorious remarks in San Francisco.

The work poses the esoteric question "what is race?" and part of it, we're told, examines Anne Robinson's notorious remarks about the Welsh on Room 101 ("What are they for?" she asked "I never did like them").

Groucho, a highly cultivated man whose greatest regret in life was that he had become an entertainer rather than a literary man — he published some of his first humor pieces in the inaugural issues of this magazine — could not have been unaware of Eliot's notorious remarks about Jews.

And in answer to the final question of the night, which gave him a chance to correct any misperceptions about his character, he invoked his notorious remarks about "the forty-seven per cent" by saying, "I care about one hundred per cent of the American people".

In 2005, as a dean of the Georgia Institute of Technology, she attended the meeting at which then–Harvard University President Lawrence Summers presented his instantly notorious remarks about the causes of women's underrepresentation in the upper reaches of academic science.

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