Sentence examples for plainly refer from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

2014 also taught us, as originally reported by c't magazine, that CSEC hijacks computers around the world to build botnets of zombified computers that they can then use to attack targets—as part of a strategy they plainly refer to as a "target the world" tactic.

Similar(59)

Reading from notes rather than from a teleprompter, Mr. DiFrancesco spoke plainly, referred several times to his late parents, who immigrated from Italy, and mocked his receding hairline.

Mr. Obama did not mention his rival in his speech to about 5,000 troops, but, plainly referring to Republicans including Mr. Romney, he did say that the soldiers should ignore political talk of major cuts ahead in military spending.

The poem's title, Gilmour admits, is "an unfortunate and perhaps tasteless form of words," but he nevertheless argues that the word " 'white' here plainly refers to civilization and character more than to the color of men's skins".

The finding of the court below that the phrase was a 'term of art' with a well-understood meaning, merely because it was used several times in §§ 242 and 244 when plainly referring only to rulings on deportability, cannot be substantiated.

And an LLC is a business entity, not an "individual" who is part of "a group of persons related by blood or marriage". Thus, the ordinary, nontechnical meaning of the term "individual," as employed in the relevant portions of the Act, plainly refers to a human being a person and not a company such as the LLC.

And the material plainly refers to the horror of tarring and feathering, an American practice dating to the Revolution.

She doesn't want to talk about it, except that she plainly does, referring often to the necessity, for an MP who is also a mother, of having your children near your work rather than your constituency ("The idea of having my children in Basingstoke, which is an hour and a half from here…"), of living in a "three-generation household".

In the later work of Picasso and Braque, it is again possible to construe their pictorial code as referring plainly to the objective world in the case of Braque, to still life chosen with an appreciation of household things and, with Picasso, to emotive yet enigmatic human subjects as well.

But, plainly, the 'I' in (12) does refer to me when this sentence is uttered by me after all, it is a claim about me.

Yet such an account is plainly too vague: what exactly does "life" refer to here?

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