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The phrase "recorded remarks" is a correct and usable phrase in written English
You can use it when referring to a set of comments that have been documented in some way, either in audio or video format. For example: "The politician's recorded remarks about the election were very controversial."
Exact(23)
The president's campaign has seized on the comments from secretly recorded remarks as evidence of Mr. Romney's true feelings toward the less well off.
Yet in texts and recorded remarks by Matisse at the time, while he often suggested acceptance of a superior being, he pointedly skirted the question of Christian faith.
It's not at all surprising that the Presidential candidate of a party that so idolizes Reagan would deploy loaded terms like "victim" and "personal responsibility," as Mitt Romney did in secretly recorded remarks at a fundraiser this spring.
Those, said Mr. Rose, are at odds with Mr. Mulligan's own tape recorded remarks about the incident to the Glendale Police Department, as described in a police protective league news release that included a link to the recording.
E-mail address GO SIGN UP Share Tweet It's not at all surprising that the Presidential candidate of a party that so idolizes Reagan would deploy loaded terms like "victim" and "personal responsibility," as Mitt Romney did in secretly recorded remarks at a fundraiser this spring.
The new language, which Mr. Romney has never before used on the campaign trail, is an attempt to take the sting out of secretly recorded remarks that he made at a fund-raiser in May, about how 47 percent of Americans see themselves as "victims" dependent on government help.
Similar(37)
Many party leaders have disavowed Mr. Romney's secretly recorded remark – about Americans so dependent on government they would not vote for him – as divisive and a factor in his defeat by President Obama.
It was a private event, but a rogue attendee recorded his remarks.
Her concise unpredictability is affectionately recorded, her remarks tilting between irritation and graceful leniency.
Ashe Schow, a reporter for the Washington Examiner, recorded the remarks, which was useful, since Ellmers said, after Schow's first story, that they were "taken completely out of context".
Someone secretly recorded the remarks and they have since become public.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com