paraphrase|paraphrases in English
noun
[par·a·phrase || 'pærəfreɪz]
different wording, phrasing that differs from the original
Use "paraphrase|paraphrases" in a sentence
1. Paraphrases, or free translations, of the Bible are not new.
2. Paraphrase the ancient Chinese prose in vernacular language.
3. Paraphrase the ancient Chinese prose in colloquialism language.
4. The teacher amplified the sense by a paraphrase.
5. A brutal summary and paraphrase of this follows.
6. Paraphrase this article in 250 words or less.
7. She gave us a paraphrase of that film.
8. Try to paraphrase the question before you answer it.
9. The paraphrase of the sonnet is easy to understand.
10. You may read the prose paraphrase of this poem.
11. 5 Paraphrase the ancient Chinese prose in colloquialism language.
12. If it is not a Minister, please will he paraphrase.
13. Longobardi provides Leibniz with accurate translations or paraphrases of the Analects passages cited above.
14. After frontal damage, the patient may just paraphrase the proverb.
15. To paraphrase Chavez, once social change begins, it cannot be reversed.
16. 30 After frontal damage, the patient may just paraphrase the proverb.
17. She gave us a quick paraphrase of what had been said.
18. Most of these are paraphrases of biblical texts, and like hymns they vary in theological emphasis and musical appropriateness.
19. 15. (a) How would you paraphrase the counsel of Hebrews 13:17?
20. Can we even identify, for paraphrase purposes, what the underlying meaning is?
21. That power is weakened when we paraphrase or alter the actual wording.
22. The article was paraphrase Tao Lan in Vernal February form the feminine view.
23. Paraphrase and summary of the arguments of other texts correspond to indirect speech.
24. To paraphrase an adage of Hungarian winegrowers: ‘A noble mold spells a good wine.’
25. In fact, the optimally relevant interpretation may be a summary rather than an exact paraphrase.