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Communicated in words.
expressed
uttered
verbalized
spoken
expressed
uttered
verbalized
1
He had
expressed
a strong commitment to Europe and the euro area.
2
The United States and Europe - major donors - both
expressed
concern.
3
Parents have
expressed
their frustration as a similar problem occurred last year.
4
So far, 12 major companies are have
expressed
an interest, Bateman said.
5
They
expressed
less interest in mass transit, new roads and new technology.
1
Four small words, yet the sea itself trembled when he
uttered
them.
2
Warm words were needed and it was important Mr Javid
uttered
some.
3
The Dominican
uttered
a loud cry; the guards started back in awe.
4
Our relationship had changed irreversibly from the moment I'd
uttered
the words.
5
It doesn't matter if President Abraham Lincoln's assassin actually
uttered
these words.
1
We have
verbalized
our beliefs, and have depotentialed them of vital significance.
2
But if I
verbalized
that connection, Phyllis would terminate this conversation immediately.
3
The captain hadn't
verbalized
a threat, but killing hung in the air.
4
It was the beings from the Ring who first perfectly
verbalized
the concept:
5
It's a modern extension of the
verbalized
pause, built by TV laugh tracks.
1
It was all
verbalised
,
and that's how we passed our stories.
2
It never became a
verbalised
idea.
3
It's just personal taste, not a
verbalised
mandate. Facebook Twitter Pinterest Drawn to the unusual … Donald Glover in Atlanta.
4
That rule, again while never
verbalised
,
was instinctively understood by all and probably the easiest bit of the bus scenario to process.
5
These wags can get away with comments and assessments which, if
verbalised
by the teacher, would be deemed insensitive and politically incorrect.
verbalise by
verbalise idea
verbalise mandate