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He said that the deal provided for devolution, the first meeting of the executive, and the IRA's appointment of an interlocutor to General John de Chastelain's international independent commission on decommissioning, all to take place on the same day.
The presence of an interlocutor, Erin (a name that, as every Erin I have known tells people, means "peace"), suggests that it's impossible to keep even these complaints about effaced interiority quiet and on the inside: what seemed like a silent shitstorm is in fact a litany of mounting injuries wailed into the phone or texted as they happen.
In schools in the late 1970s in my part of west London, disbelief of an interlocutor's words would be expressed by exclaiming "Jimmy Hill!", while simultaneously stroking an imaginary beard.
In contrast, higher-proficiency test takers may not be influenced by the absence of an interlocutor.
The use of computers has increased in speaking assessments; however, there are concerns about how the absence of an interlocutor affects performance on speaking tests.
The use of computers in speaking assessments is appealing; however, the absence of an interlocutor has resulted in concerns about the validity of using them as a replacement for interview tests.
Similar(50)
He had a beautiful voice, and he knew how to use it, and he had the rare, gratifying knack of making an interlocutor feel nearly as clever, as interesting, and as intellectually adventurous as he was himself.
Her chief selling point is that she will provide a forum in which the celebrity can offer his version of his story, to an audience of millions of people, before an interlocutor who is journalistically respectable but essentially sympathetic.
Atomism a theory which thrives in Hellenistic times as the physical theory of Epicureanism, and is thus an interlocutor of skepticism leads into difficult epistemological questions.
The last thing these photographs need, from the modern point of view, is an interlocutor, especially one who wants to tell moralizing anecdotes or characterize his subjects by race.
A shift of eye gaze away from the face of another person, usually an interlocutor, is termed 'gaze aversion' (Doherty-Sneddon et al., 2002; Glenberg, Schroeder & Robertson, 1998).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com