Use "emphatic" in a sentence

1. 19 Emphatic gestures.

2. Notice Peter’s emphatic but impulsive reaction.

3. He was very emphatic about that.

4. His response was immediate and emphatic.

5. He was most emphatic about me leaving.

6. He was pretty emphatic about me leaving.

7. His emphatic response: “This is the truth!”

8. Yesterday's emphatic victory was their fifth in succession.

9. I answered both questions with an emphatic "Yes".

10. He was most emphatic that I should go.

11. Bestest is a nonstandard emphatic form of best

12. Emphatic gestures are usually the kind that become mannerisms.

13. She was equally emphatic about the importance of discipline.

14. 7 Yesterday's emphatic victory was their fifth in succession.

15. Gestures fall into two general categories: descriptive and emphatic.

16. The minister has issued an emphatic rejection of the accusation.

17. Their reply was too emphatic for anyone to doubt them.

18. 6 She was equally emphatic about the importance of discipline.

19. He was emphatic that he could not work with her.

20. The rebels are emphatic that this is not a surrender.

21. Begad definition: an emphatic exclamation Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples

22. He is especially emphatic about the value of a precise routine.

23. Mr Brok’s report is most emphatic in demanding active cooperation with Parliament.

24. The closer the hurricane comes, the more emphatic the warnings must be.

25. Millions of believers around the globe would answer with an emphatic, “Yes!”

26. It was an emphatic win and a remarkable turnaround in his fortunes.

27. What about the differences in pronunciation between the casual and the emphatic styles?

28. It was an emphatic win and a remarkable turnaround in his fortunes. Sentencedict.com

29. Arse definition is - buttocks —often used in emphatic reference to a specific person

30. ’ Two Clitics can be reconstructed for Proto-Dravidian—namely, interrogative * -ā and emphatic * -ē

31. Boult, Guptill power NZ to emphatic ODI win Agencies Published March 21, 2021 - Updated 6 minutes ago DUNEDIN: Trent Boult and Martin Guptill powered New Zealand to an emphatic eight wicket win

32. The statement is emphatic in stating that there must be a quid pro quo.

33. And Dalton's emphatic right foot volley after 65 minutes put Argyle firmly in command.

34. An Assertion (uh-SUR-shun) is an emphatic declaration by a speaker or writer

35. Yet, Greene is emphatic that if there is any illegal dumping, it is negligible.

36. 25 The statement is emphatic in stating that there must be a quid pro quo.

37. 4 The discovery of atomic structure and the uncertainty principle put an emphatic end to that.

38. Bayern Munich sent out an emphatic and ominous message to their Champions League rivals with an

39. Poland reached the final of the championship yesterday with an emphatic 5-0 victory over Italy.

40. A century of confrontation and conflict can be a long time, but also an emphatic teacher.

41. In short, Anaphoric and cataphoric references are emphatic styles of sentence structure taught at C1 – C2 level

42. In some examples it was thought necessary to highlight important distinguishing features with arrows or emphatic shading.

43. In a number of passages there are emphatic statements that he had come to fulfil the scriptures.

44. But all the children I questioned afterwards were emphatic that they would like to repeat the experience.

45. Yakov Kreizberg launches the Sinfonia Concertante in emphatic style: a no-nonsense tempo, lashing sforzando accents, a powerful forward impetus

46. Will have Boogied Continuous (progressive) and emphatic tenses ⓘ This verb has multiple spellings of the present participle (listed above)

47. Will have Bishoped Continuous (progressive) and emphatic tenses ⓘ This verb has multiple spellings of the present participle (listed above)

48. Hypernyms ("Asseveration" is a kind of): declaration (a statement that is emphatic and explicit (spoken or written))

49. A more emphatic outline can be achieved by making a second cut round the outside of the first outline.

50. But Schubert’s great model is most strikingly recalled in the final Allegro, “full of Beethovenian rhythms and emphatic orchestral crescendi” (Einstein)

51. So in came James - and he recovered from a jittery start to stamp his authority on an emphatic Liverpool win.

52. The Backbeat refers to emphatic percussive accents on the so-called weak beats of the measure, typically played on the snare drum

53. These pronouns can take four different suffixes: the genitive -l or -le, the emphatic -ni, the comitative -noy and the contrastive -v.

54. The emphatic assertion of individual control over health exerted in some of these accounts can be looked at in a wider context.

55. Mrs Constable interposed with one single emphatic epithet, not Admittable to the ears of this generation; but Andrew resumed, and went on

56. The definition of Adonai is "Lord, LORD, or master." The word is what is called an emphatic plural or plural of majesty

57. My emphatic advice, therefore, is to make the first trial with easy Caponizers, especially the Langshan or Langshan cross, or with ordinary smaller breeds, never with

58. _Anu_ and of the goddess _Anunit_, and the element _ak_ is quite a common Afformative in Babylonian substantives, conveying a certain emphatic meaning to the word.

59. Here the word “creation,” says Benjamin Wilson in The Emphatic Diaglott, does not mean “the brute and inanimate creation” as some suggest but, rather, “all mankind.”

60. The solemn or emphatic declaration or statement of something: /I fear that you offer only unsupported Asseveration./ DERIVATIVES: as·sev·er·ate / əˈsevəˌrāt/ v.

61. Propertius begins IV 7, a poem that alludes throughout to the dream of Achilles in Iliad XXIII 62-107, with the simple and emphatic declaration: sunt Aliquid manes

62. Paulette Randall's production is well-cast but over-emphatic, with the result that it underlines all the play's negative qualities: its Bickeringly stereotyped dialogue, and its failures in

63. While all these words mean "familiar through frequent or regular repetition," Accustomed is less emphatic than wonted or habitual in suggesting fixed habit or invariable custom.

64. In everyday British speech Codswallop is an emphatic way of saying that something is nonsense: The aim of Carrefour Backstage was to persuade us all that the chain was a thoroughly French enterprise

65. The Butanes Soul Revue released One Night in 1998 to emphatic press and international radio airplay.People, Living Blues, Blues Access and In The Basement all published positive reviews and the recording hit number one at SURF 107.1 FM in Wilmington, NC

66. ‘First Joey, his voice a mutant-goat Bleat, succumbed to lymphoma in 2001.’ ‘His voice is a harsh, nasal, confused, emphatic Bleat, clamping down on certain words and rolling tricky internal rhymes around in his mouth until they come out all broken.’

67. ‘First Joey, his voice a mutant-goat Bleat, succumbed to lymphoma in 2001.’ ‘His voice is a harsh, nasal, confused, emphatic Bleat, clamping down on certain words and rolling tricky internal rhymes around in his mouth until they come out all broken.’

68. Animalises, rattling, fistfight.We archaean overmuch, uncannily, and decriminalizeed stores that sell tuxedo t shirts superable quizs.But for the underestimate there is a "when" or an "if" not to fag triumphal.We were emphatic chukker-brown crazy t shirt company and outlawed with petulantly game;

69. MĀNĒN compound introductory particle for clauses expressing admonition let it not be that … , let it be in vain that … / mirad que no … se haga tal cosa, advertiendo, … mirad bien y advertid (M) This serves as a more emphatic introductory particle than simple MĀ with the Admonitive.

70. ‘The Awards Dinner Culminated a weekend of activities.’ ‘The leg-spinner did so in emphatic fashion with the middle dismissal in a stretch of three wickets in four balls which Culminated the England innings.’ ‘The camp was Culminated on August 28 with a wonderful graduation exercise, attended by …

71. ‘The Awards Dinner Culminated a weekend of activities.’ ‘The leg-spinner did so in emphatic fashion with the middle dismissal in a stretch of three wickets in four balls which Culminated the England innings.’ ‘The camp was Culminated on August 28 with a wonderful graduation exercise, attended by …

72. Accented: 1 adj bearing a stress or accent Synonyms: stressed emphasised , emphasized , emphatic spoken with emphasis masculine (music or poetry) ending on an Accented beat or syllable Antonyms: unstressed not bearing a stress or accent feminine (music or poetry) ending on an unAccented beat or syllable light , unAccented , weak (used of

73. Restoration period, or Charles II furniture (Carolean), brought the English furniture tradition back into line with European design movements and reestablished the connection between furniture and architecture in an emphatic, often extreme manner, after the years of Puritan austerity in the 1600's and represents the beginning of the English

74. We also use “Cockeyed” to describe anything unrealistic, eccentric or flamboyantly unconventional, from artistic expression (“Her Cockeyed melodies, emphatic beats and creative vocal arrangements are unusual but catchy,” NPR, 1/4/2011) to building code violations (“In that Cockeyed shack, with a roof so low that I could stand up only on one side,” 2010).

75. The last place in such a poetic list is emphatic 22 like the first; the middle two are slurred over and are mentioned as less important “then second are Hoplêtes and Argades.” He also connects them with the four sons of Ion implying a popular and accepted tradition which could not be seriously violated in a drama acted before the people.

76. Acquisition (n.) late 14c., "act of obtaining," from Old French acquisicion "purchase, acquirement" (13c., Modern French acquisition) or directly from Latin acquisitionem (nominative acquisitio), noun of action from past-participle stem of Acquirere "get in addition, accumulate," from ad "to," here perhaps emphatic (see ad-), + quaerere "to seek to obtain" (see query (v.)).

77. "to get or gain, obtain," mid-15c., acqueren, from Old French aquerre "acquire, gain, earn, procure" (12c., Modern French acquérir), from Vulgar Latin *acquaerere, corresponding to Latin Acquirere / adquirere "to get in addition to, accumulate, gain," from ad "to," here perhaps emphatic (see ad-), + quaerere "to seek to obtain" (see query (v.)).

78. "an emphatic assertion," 1550s, from Latin Asseverationem (nominative asseveratio) "vehement assertion, protestation," noun of action from past-participle stem of asseverare / adseverare "affirm, insist on," from ad "to" (see ad-) + severus "serious, grave, strict, austere," which is probably from PIE root *segh- "to have, hold," on the notion of "steadfastness, toughness."

79. The Conclusive victory was narrow, but Celtic's command of the championship utterly emphatic.: Yet yesterday, under closer scrutiny, the triumph did not appear quite so Conclusive.: The Wehrmacht's rapid and Conclusive victory over the French convinced Hitler and not a few of his generals that he was a military genius.: Guyon achieves what he has sworn at the outset of the poem, but his