Sentence examples for sometimes more ambiguous from inspiring English sources

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"Ghetto fabulous" is defined here as "pertaining to or favoring an ostentatious style of dress associated with the hip-hop subculture," though its use now is broader and sometimes more ambiguous.

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Sometimes the threats are more ambiguous and simply state that we will "be receiving some remedial 'medication' in the coming months" (um, why'd you warn me?).

Interestingly, however, the post-scandal reaction of many ordinary Chinese was far more ambiguous, and sometimes sympathetic.

With an intensity of vision rarely found in English fiction, he looked at the impact of developments such as the car, air travel, mass media, celebrity culture, and the rise of computers, drawing out a more ambiguous, and sometimes more sinister, side to phenomena generally hailed by a self-congratulatory culture as the expressions of inevitable human progress.

But great battles — political or military — sometimes cloak small skirmishes that end with more ambiguous results, and so it was in Berlin.

A childlike innocence ran through "Madame Plaza," tangling with more ambiguous adult realities; the cushions (sometimes arranged as forts or used in roughhousing) suggested a sequestered (or ostracized) female world, though one acutely attuned to male desire.

While empirical research has shown that learners often gain knowledge after instruction but sometimes forget what they learned (Fig. 1), the empirical literature on teachers' belief retention is much more ambiguous (see Jones and Carter 2007, Sickel and Friedrichsen 2013).

The rest was more ambiguous.

Sometimes more.

Mr. Obama's standing elsewhere seemed more ambiguous.

Academic writing has a more ambiguous mission.

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