Sentence examples for would expound from inspiring English sources

Exact(9)

What we would do is throw him the names of directors, living or dead, and he would expound his opinions.

Millions of Americans knew her as "the Nut Lady" from her periodic guest appearances on the "Tonight Show," where she would expound on the metaphysics of the nut.

Rosa's answer would expound upon what little her niece had learned in her history textbooks at school – that all Parks did was simply sit down on the bus.

After making his entrance — sometimes on his black gelding, Storm, but always wearing a high-waisted safari suit he designed himself — Mr. Banerjee would expound on everything from Rudolf Steiner's biodynamic farming theories to the fall of Atlantis to his youth on Carnaby Street in London, where he made a fortune before retreating to Darjeeling to grow tea.

Team Engineering to the Rescue continually limited the extent to which they would expound upon an idea throughout the curriculum design process because they inherently knew they themselves, and eventually others, would need to take up the propositions embedded within their curriculum and create an integrated learning environment highlighted by engineering design.

He also helped maintain the bronze artifacts at the Church of the Holy Sepulcher and recorded, in his head, a rich history of Jerusalem that he would expound upon from his small shop or over long lunches with friends and admirers.

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Similar(51)

How would you expound on the aggression of sea anemones, the Battle of Plassey, Boko Haram?

He would not expound on his reasons for leaving Notre Dame -- he called it a personal decision and said he was grateful for his two seasons there.

This view, a response to the perceived threat of anarchy posed by sectarian differences, was diametrically opposed to the doctrine that he would later expound in Two Treatises of Government (1689).

Whatever its implications for Frederick's foreign policy, the opera's treatment of Hernán Cortés's conquest of Mexico, and specifically of the early 16th-century title character, takes an enlightened-for-its-time approach by portraying the Aztec emperor, Montezuma, as the kind of "noble savage" that Rousseau would later expound on; the Spaniards are the requisite bad guys.

Ondrejka wouldn't expound on what exactly those bugs were, but this is good news for international users itching to see what all the commotion is about.

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