Sentence examples for particular adjective from inspiring English sources

Exact(6)

"I suppose… it's certainly nice for people to consider you attractive or… handsome or whatever the particular adjective is.

noun: a misanthrope who dislikes women in particular adjective: a quality or tendency to view women with contempt The word misogynist has appeared in 19 New York Times articles in the past year, including on Dec. 8 in "Beauty as Their Business" by Bee-Shyuan Chang: "Going out is always about networking," Ms. Macklowe said, explaining her decision to capitalize on her social life.

The concept strongly influenced which synonyms and antonyms were provided for a particular adjective.

We often found, however, that there were many disagreements occurring when clauses are in the form of verb to be and a particular adjective, for example; " A red rash is also visible on the bodies of the affected persons".

The MDBF comprises 12 adjectives (content, rested, restless, bad, worn-out, composed, tired, great, uneasy, energetic, relaxed, and unwell) for which the subjects had to indicate on a 5-point scale whether the particular adjective describes their actual feeling (1 = not at all; 5 = perfect).

Four basic tastes in Figure 1 are the baseline for dimensions in accordance with "imputed characteristic to a certain taste [ 5, 6]." Here, the closer the concept of a particular adjective is to a traditional taste, the closer that concept gets to the baseline.

Similar(54)

In particular, adjectives and nouns show more affinity to each other than in most European languages.

Several efforts have been made to describe cars by adjectives, however there is no particular work exploring adjectives describing yacht hulls which motivates this study.

Halverson, who is now an attorney in Minneapolis, added, "But the damned thing periodically went in".... Chris Gallagher, a New York investment banker who was the team's captain, attempted to dribble around a particular boilerplate Al Gore adjective: "I don't want to use that word.

It will know to look at that adjective or particular object rather than some [INAUDIBLE] actually analyze the semantics of [INAUDIBLE].

So it might be more a matter of identifying the particular kinds of unfavourable adjective that are most prone to subsequent reconsideration – "unlistenable" certainly springs to mind, perhaps because the gauntlet it throws down is so easy to pick up – and learning to keep an eye out for them.

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