We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
It is a vagueterm, the Greek equivalent of 'the Levant'.
2
Somebody is an exceedingly vagueterm, and generally means nobody.
3
Vincent, it is a vagueterm under such circumstances-
4
A vagueterm like "social activist" might not be far from the mark, either.
5
I dare say he named you as the English magician -or some such vagueterm.
6
What misunderstandings resulted from the vagueterm!
7
He prided himself on being a man of the world, and frequently applied the vagueterm to himself.
8
But that's a very vagueterm.
9
On several occasions he suffered what were supposed to be heart attacks, a vagueterm that covered almost everything.
10
Here "this" is a vagueterm, covering the memory-image and anything very like it, including its prototype.
11
The government defines these views vaguely, as ideas that are opposed to "British values" -an equally vagueterm.
12
But as use of the vagueterm "substantially" seems to indicate, Nielsen is hardly claiming certainty on the matter.
13
She meant to make him a good wife as she understood that vagueterm, and thus repay him for all his bounties.
14
According to several constitutional lawyers, "high crimes and misdemeanors" is a purposefully vagueterm and can be defined by members of Congress.
15
A port is a vagueterm, like many others in geography, and has been very often applied to places far less sheltered than this.
16
You officially become our client, and we provide consulting services in the area of government relations, a wonderfully vagueterm that covers just about anything.