Health researchers say living in such conditions can damage young people's health.
2
Don't say 'number.' Say 'amount.' Apparently, this was very important... to Dick.
3
Health officials say the public health risk has been assessed as low.
4
Industry sources say these slots have a market value of £50 million.
5
Police support groups, however, say the officers were only maintaining public order.
1
They found that whites today simply articulate racial prejudice in new ways.
2
None was able to articulate a clear platform to win significant support.
3
Being young, articulate and media-savvy has advantages in a grey political environment.
4
And you need to be able to articulate your motivations, she said.
5
This will become a much more articulate debate as time goes on.
1
I can't enunciate the words I need to say to the ship.
2
The usual method of approaching the question is to enunciate two absolutes:
3
We need to enunciate our agenda by asserting our right to self-determination.
4
I couldn't enunciate a reasonable, justifiable position, so I hid behind abstraction.
5
She is taught to enunciate clearly and to speak courteously and agreeably.
1
For, to enounce with fitting clearness a great but much-forgotten truth, To have an opinion, you must have an opinion.
2
The proposition above-mentioned does not enounce that three angles necessarily exist, but, upon condition that a triangle exists, three angles must necessarily exist-init.
3
Here we feel driven defiantly to enounce the truth: that the highest art, even in a narrow sense, comes only with a true poetic message.
4
But where will he find the knowledge which can enable him to enounce synthetical judgements in regard to things which transcend the region of experience?
5
I never before or since heard language enounced with such steam-engine haste.
1
Piro wondered if he had to soundout the words to read.
2
Might take a while to soundout, but it shouldn't be difficult.
3
There's a beauty in them even without a soundout of them.
4
I might send Master Stephen to Rome to soundout the Curia.
5
We haven't had a soundout of 'em for a half hour.
1
However, figuring out how to pronounce the word was your own problem.
2
Trump chose last week to pronounce on land reform in South Africa.
3
Picture those American gamers trying to pronounce the various South African names.
4
In our arguments, State would authoritatively pronounce what the international law was.
5
DO choose a name that is easy to understand, pronounce, and remember.
6
Not good enough to pronounce Welsh properly, you English twerp, thought Gwen.
7
Watson said most of his friends didn't know how to pronounce quinoa.
8
He made a few sounds but was unable to pronounce any words.
9
And the names of the people involved were very difficult to pronounce.
10
I didn't call a French company whose name I can't even pronounce.
11
I examine the data, as an expert, and pronounce a specialist's opinion.
12
The Lord Chief Baron arose to pronounce the sentence of the law.
13
Erema is popish and outlandish; one scarcely knows how to pronounce it.
14
Hastily Sandersen cut in before the other should pronounce a final judgment.
15
Of those who do know it, many struggle to pronounce its name.
16
The Chapter must try the case before it can pronounce a verdict.