Without qualification; used informally as (often pejorative) intensifiers.
Sinônimos
Examples for "perfect"
Examples for "perfect"
1Today is the perfect day, and topic, for a New Year resolution.
2Yes, and today had been the perfect example, she wanted to say.
3And beware, advertised ranges often are the maximum possible given perfect conditions.
4Group 4: Republic of Ireland v Cyprus: Well, a perfect weekend really.
5Today will offer perfect conditions, as the country takes to the roads.
1Evidently, no 'complete solution' to the 'Jewish problem' was yet in sight.
2Results: Ninety-four patients met study criteria and had complete outcome data available.
3Our aim is to complete this work early in the new year.
4A complete solution to identify and challenge children working at mastery level.
5An Israeli military source said the operation might take weeks to complete.
1The young captain looked stunned for a moment, staring right past Hoffman.
2Not a creature abroad; the tall gaunt houses staring in the moonlight.
3For a long moment she didn't answer, staring at the wall art.
4Jane was staring at her, waiting for an answer to her question.
5No; Jacqueline was staring at Pettifer's corpse, asking the question of him.
1However, a 'no refunds' policy for pure change of mind is acceptable.
2The air was pure and fresher; the mules and the travellers revived.
3In the case of the desert, it is conversion, pure and simple.
4The chief factor in the purchase of Alaska was almost pure sentiment.
5The ladies soon reappeared in spotless white; emblems of their pure minds.
1His paper was so far an utter blank save for his name.
2However, it is in their flower form that they reach utter perfection.
3This is such an important area and can lead to utter frustration.
4It was the surprise, of course, the utter transformation I'd just witnessed.
5The terrified soldier must utter words to get the torture to stop.
1Several security protocols were overlooked during this supposed gross abuse of power.
2Durham police decided he had a case to answer for gross misconduct.
3Rising apparel costs could also weigh on Sears' gross margins next year.
4Similar, limited areas of gross deprivation are identified within our major cities.
5The street value of the drugs trafficked far exceeds gross national product.
1It's an unusually stark and public example of a far bigger problem.
2I am also driven by the stark financial reality of the situation.
3The answer is not a punchline, it is a stark political reality.
4In time-honoured fashion, talk of promise has been undermined by stark reality.
5The Department of Health declined to respond directly to Baker's stark warning.
1Drink long; in this wine lurk the seeds of the life everlasting.
2He saw the shine of the everlasting stars in the deep blue.
3No; it was something in them, something inborn and subtle and everlasting.
4At Jesus' right hand, the righteous received the reward of everlasting life.
5Search the scriptures: for you think in them to have life everlasting.
1The consummate pleasure is not in the costly flavor, but in yourself.
2Quesnel followed her lead with the consummate skill of a natural charlatan.
3In Poetry -illustrious and consummate: In Friendship -noble and sincere.
4An apparently simple movement, but it was consummate in grace and display.
5SanDisk will require Toshiba's approval to consummate a deal with either party.
1He was looking past history and into the abyss of unadulterated truth.
2The journal paper is unadulterated by the spin of any press release.
3Simpson is 100 percent unadulterated sleaze, said a lawyer for Goldman's father.
4The unadulterated cow is a deal too strong to be drunk alone.
5With a half-maniacal cackle of unadulterated glee, McCaverty pushed the throttle forward.
1Only the National Government can in thoroughgoing fashion exercise the needed control.
2And therefore they made it their object to extol practical, thoroughgoing reforms.
3Partly, I think, by not being overly concerned with logic and thoroughgoing consistency.
4Yes, decidedly, he was no classicist in music; he was a thoroughgoing transcendentalist.
5For suddenness and thoroughgoing completeness the Gaston bubble-bursting was a record-breaker.
1Didn't have sodding clue what I was doing when I started there.
2Too sodding mean to pay out his one-and-six, that's what it is.
3The sodding off of the terrorist tossers is devoutly to be wished.
4Will we ever find out who killed Gertrud in season sodding two?
5Why, they'd be a bunch of sodding blockheads not to see that.
1I begin to suspect you of deep double-dyed surreptitious designs, Mr. Olmstead.
2It was Sackett-Murray, gambler, horse-thief, house-robber, deserter, biter, murderer, and double-dyed traitor.
3You see I rather dreaded your coming as that of a double-dyed Pritchard.
4If you're a double-dyed sinner, you can easily get yourself whitewashed over there.
5This colonel swore us both to double-dyed secrecy, over and above our 'status' oaths.
1The other canon shook his head in dismay at such arrant folly.
2I should think the less arrant gossip the children heard, the better.
3When you talk in that style I feel like an arrant hypocrite.
4His anger had the strange effect of making him an arrant coward.
5He was an arrant coward like the most of his downtrodden race.
6He says that they are arrant thieves, and so we find them.
7As it was, Malatesta Baglioni, the Commander-in-Chief, turned out an arrant scoundrel.
8Have I shown wisdom or made an arrant, egregious fool of myself?
9Lord, when I think of my sentiment wasted on the arrant hussy!
10Fifty and one as arrant knaves as ever lay on a hurdle!
11What an arrant old fool I was to propose coming up here!
12I'll blow away your most noble, you worthless scamp, you arrant rascal!
13The Missouri Indians were arrant cowards in the matter of war.
14What arrant nonsense the Stakes in the hedge used to talk with their
15The Indian is cruel as the grave, but he is an arrant coward.
16So may I thrive in the occupation of an arrant squire.
Arrant nas variantes da língua