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.
6
Such were the professor's words, words of fate enounced to destroy me.
7
Comparisons of techniques are presented and final committee recommendation are enounced.
8
Another equal period elapsed ere the German enounced, relevant of nothing:
9
Pronunciation is the mode of enouncing certain words and syllables.
10
Every one felt the idea to be here enounced that was to dominate the sermon.
11
The judgements enounced by pure reason must be necessary, or they must not be enounced at all.
12
Again I paused; then bunglingly enounced-
13
We toiled and sweated and enounced our mutual and sincere conviction that God's grudge still held against us.
14
Two years later Thaddeus Stevens, as radical leader in Congress, enounced the same doctrine in no more trenchant terms.
15
Mr Sadler, at setting out, abuses Mr Malthus for enouncing his theory in terms taken from the exact sciences.
16
The actual judgement, which enounces the assertion of the rule in the subsumed case, is the conclusion (conclusio).