rhetorically in Vietnamese

@rhetorically
* phó từ
- (thuộc) giáo sư tu từ học
- trong cách sử dụng hoa Mỹ, cường điệu, khoa trương (lời nói, văn )
- (thuộc) tu từ học; (thuộc) thuật hùng biệ

Sentence patterns related to "rhetorically"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "rhetorically" from the English - Vietnamese Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "rhetorically", or refer to the context using the word "rhetorically" in the English - Vietnamese Dictionary.

1. 7 Rhetorically, his speech was excellent.

2. 8 How does this introduction function rhetorically?

3. 18 Humphrey paced the rug behind his desk and demanded rhetorically.

4. 9 Rhetorically, Mr Murdoch hit all the right notes.

5. 3 People talk, rhetorically, of waging war on diseases.

6. 1 'Do you think I'm stupid?' she asked rhetorically.

7. Suddenly, the narrator speaks in his most rhetorically elevated mode.

8. Rhetorically, he still presents himself as a supporter of bipartisanship.

9. 2 Suddenly, the narrator speaks in his most rhetorically elevated mode.

10. 29 Suddenly, the narrator speaks in his most rhetorically elevated mode.

11. 15 "You want to know what courage is?" he asked rhetorically.

12. 5 Rhetorically, he still presents himself as a supporter of bipartisanship.

13. Ornately, rhetorically, eloquently, Bombastically standby power supply sal Atticum Zlo mi je

14. 14 "Do these kids know how lucky they are?" Jackson asked rhetorically.

15. 10 He addressed the crowd very rhetorically, shouting and waving his arms.

16. 4 This chapter examines what it means rhetorically to express an opinion.

17. 12 Sir Leon asked rhetorically whether these changes could continue and be sustained.

18. 6 It has been rhetorically espoused by politicians and sceptically analysed by academics.

19. Homophonic hypertexts are of a function of puns and rhetorically featured with humor, novelty and brevity.

20. 13 As an important semantic relation, antonymy is often rhetorically used in the practice of language.

21. 11 Now the government is committed rhetorically – and, increasingly, in practice – to rebuilding the social safety net.

22. 20 The problem with that idea, though, is that the administration is boxed in, politically and rhetorically.

23. 17 These poems particularized about the South with not enough precision, and generalized a little too rhetorically.

24. His dusty and impoverished desert nation, after all, is under attack from all sides, rhetorically and literally.

25. 19 Homophonic hypertexts are of a function of puns and rhetorically featured with humor,[www.Sentencedict.com] novelty and brevity.

26. 16 His dusty and impoverished desert nation, after all, is under attack from all sides, rhetorically and literally.

27. 7 Rhetorically, Paul brought up two wrongs that the Ten Commandments directly addressed: Do not steal, and do not commit adultery.

28. Share Buybacks are symbolic of the lingering focus on shareholder primacy that’s “rhetorically” been set aside so many times, according to Kanzer

29. IGN's main criticism was for the in-game speech used in campaigns; it rhetorically asked "why can't they just find a Frenchman to do a French accent?"

Chỉ trích chính về đoạn cắt cảnh là bài phát biểu trong trò chơi được sử dụng trong các chiến dịch; được hỏi một cách hoa mĩ "tại sao họ không thể tìm một người Pháp để làm một giọng Pháp".

30. The word "Aporia" originally came from Greek which, in philosophy, meant a philosophical puzzle or state of being in puzzle, and a rhetorically useful expression of doubt

31. While Authenticity begins with Custer and the questions about his legend s reliability (when tourists and saloon patrons are being rhetorically targeted), it moves through issues of creativity and nonfiction, ghostwriting and grade inflation, padded resumes and online dating.

32. By our initial observations on the lexical Antonymity of the words zulm / “adl in contemporary Islamicate languages, namely: if construed as possessing political significations, is this Antonymity (lexically or rhetorically) a novel response to a crisis unique to Islamic civilization in the modern period, or is it

33. Similarly, "Arcate rotte di grandi ponti di ferro" (in "36 pagine") is a more rhetorically condensed expression than "binari di grandi ponti incurvati" (in the article): the curved quality of the bridges shifts from a noun ("Arcate") to a more explanatory noun plus adjective ("ponti incurvati").

34. Derrida has recently become more and more preoccupied with what has come to be termed "possible-impossible Aporias" - aporia was originally a Greek term meaning a philosophical puzzle or state of puzzlement and in rhetoric a rhetorically useful expression of doubt, but it has come to mean something more like an impasse or paradox.