Pronounce in A Sentence

    1

    A computerized voice will pronounce one of the words.

    2

    A lisp is a functional speech disorder that involves the inability to correctly pronounce one or more sibilant consonant sounds, usually s or z.

    3

    A rule requiring the presence of six judges to pronounce a decision prevents the division of the court into two or more benches; and while this secures a thorough consideration of every case, it also retards the despatch of business.

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    As an added bonus, these modern celebrity baby names are both easy to spell and pronounce.

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    As perpetual secretary it fell to him to pronounce historical *loges on deceased members; and for this duty his rapidity and facility of thought, his happy piquancy of style, and his extensive knowledge peculiarly adapted him.

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    At first this seemed not improbable; French armies marched south on Naples, and the pope sent Campeggio with full powers to pronounce the divorce in England.

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    Augustus, however, was now seventytwo, the Dalmatian outbreak had severely tried his nerve, and now for the second time in three years the fates seemed to pronounce clearly against a further prosecution of his long-cherished scheme of a Roman Germany reaching to the Elbe.

    8

    Boris Pasternak 's the military before they pronounce soviet citizens who.

    9

    But before Pierre--who at that moment imagined himself to be Napoleon in person and to have just effected the dangerous crossing of the Straits of Dover and captured London--could pronounce Pitt's sentence, he saw a well-built and handsome young officer entering his room.

    10

    But in both works these utterances are qualified in such a manner as to enable us to perceive the real bearings of his doctrine, and to pronounce at once that it differs widely from that commonly ascribed to him.

    11

    Clearly there will be some French words that are easier to pronounce than others.

    12

    Deacons may conduct any of the ordinary services in the church, but are not permitted to pronounce the absolution or consecrate the elements for the Eucharist.

    13

    Each snack bar has no more than eight ingredients, all of which you can not only pronounce, but visualize as a real food and not some mysterious chemical substance.

    14

    Even the London street dogs, as Sydney Smith said, joined with O'Connell in barking" God save the Queen."Oxford seems to have been craving for notoriety; but it may be doubted whether the jury who tried him did right to pronounce his acquittal on the ground of insanity.

    15

    Even the ship-money Johnson would not pronounce to have been an unconstitutional impost.

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    Expert naturalists accompanied the party, which did not emerge from the wilderness until the middle of the following March, bringing with it a collection which scientists pronounce of unusual value for students of natural history.

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    Filelfo hereupon broke out into open and violent animosity; and when Cosimo was exiled by the Albizzi party in 1433, he urged the signoria of Florence to pronounce upon him the sentence of death.

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    Finally, you should be able to pronounce every word on the ingredients list.

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    For example, an entire section is dedicated to helping the user pronounce French (complete with little tips and tricks) like a pro.

    20

    For no system of marks in a lexicon can tell one how to pronounce a word.

    21

    From it followed the right of the courts Christian to pronounce upon questions of legitimacy.

    22

    From the first she was not content to be drilled in single sounds, but was impatient to pronounce words and sentences.

    23

    Hard consonants were, and indeed still are, very difficult for her to pronounce in connection with one another in the same word; she often suppresses the one and changes the other, and sometimes she replaces both by an analogous sound with soft aspiration.

    24

    He also has a role in the upcoming film I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry.

    25

    He did not pronounce windy orations about things that did not concern or edify them.

    26

    He goes so far as to pronounce the latter to be Cretan importations, their fabric and forms being unlike anything Nilotic. If that be so, the period at which stone implements were beginning to be superseded by bronze in Crete must be dated before 4000 B.C. But it will be remembered that below all Evans's "Minoan" strata lies the immensely thick Neolithic deposit.

    27

    He was delighted that I could pronounce the words so well, and said that he had no difficulty in understanding me.

    28

    Her next role is opposite Nicolas Cage and Julianne Moore in the thriller, Next, as well as the upcoming Adam Sandler film, I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry.

    29

    However, people in the rural Mississippi town found Orpah difficult to pronounce and the baby was frequently called "Oprah."

    30

    I don't care a fig about whether you pronounce in favor of this or that book, film or record.

    31

    I knew that Laura Bridgman had shown the same intuitive desire to produce sounds, and had even learned to pronounce a few simple words, which she took great delight in using, and I did not doubt that Helen could accomplish as much as this.

    32

    I never buy a product containing a chemical name I can't pronounce or don't recognize.

    33

    If the statement in the life of Terence by Suetonius is correct and the reading sound, Caecilius's judgment was so esteemed that he was ordered to hear Terence's Andria (exhibited 166 B.C.) read and to pronounce an opinion upon it.

    34

    If you're using the name in a story, if it is too difficult to pronounce, readers will just stumble over it, which breaks the flow.

    35

    If, by the advice of the cardinals who have examined the documents, the pope pronounce his approval, the servant of God receives the title of "Venerable," but is not entitled to any manifestation of cultus.

    36

    Impress your friends by imparting the 150-year history of Cointreau over drinks, and laugh at them when they pronounce it "coin-TRUE".

    37

    In attempting to pronounce on the evidence with regard to Herschel's theory, we must at once admit that the transmutation of a nebula into a star has never been seen.

    38

    In order to learn and practice the nasal sound, pinch the nose together with thumb and forefinger and pronounce the word.

    39

    In order to preserve popular favor and their direction of the Republic, the Girondins had not dared to pronounce against the sentence of death, but had demanded an appeal to the people which was rejected; morally weakened by this equivocal attitude they were still more so by foreign events.

    40

    In other words, a critic may deliberately pronounce that what stands in the text represents what the author wrote or might well have written, that it is doubtful whether it does, that it certainly does not, or, in the last event, that it may be replaced with certainty by something that does.

    41

    In the 17th century the characteristics which so clearly mark off Deuteronomy from the other four books of the Pentateuch were frankly recognized, but the most advanced critics of that age were inclined to pronounce it the earliest and most authentic of the five.

    42

    In the last name it has been plausibly suggested that we have the Pukhtun, as the eastern Afghans pronounce their name.

    43

    In the Lutheran church also the practice of private confession survived the Reformation, together with both the exhibitive (I forgive, &c.) and declaratory (I declare and pronounce) forms of absolution.

    44

    In the next generation they dexterously forced the venerable records of the early republic to pronounce in favour of the ascendancy of the senate, as established by Sulla.

    45

    Instead, Glaswegians are just giving in to the natural tendency in language not to pronounce the final consonant.

    46

    It is also easier to select poems with language that is easy to pronounce and recognize than using complex sonnets or poems that use Old English.

    47

    It is not the business of the court to pronounce upon the absolute truth or falsehood of any given opinion, but simply to say whether it is formally consistent with the legal doctrines of the Church of England.

    48

    It is, indeed, singularly difficult to pronounce a judicious opinion on the writings of Donne.

    49

    It was considered an act of blasphemy for a layman to pronounce the Tetragrammaton.

    50

    It was not the custom to pronounce absolution until after the penance assigned had been fulfilled.

    51

    It was then I discovered his name was Qui-Gon Jinn, although I wasn't entirely sure how to pronounce it until I saw the movie.

    52

    It would, I think, be hard to make her feel just how to pronounce DICTIONARY without her erring either toward DICTIONAYRY or DICTION'RY, and, of course the word is neither one nor the other.

    53

    La Bruyere dares not pronounce against such beliefs, "for there are perplexing facts affirmed by grave men who were eye-witnesses."

    54

    Learning French always begins with some simple French phrases and an attempt to pronounce them in a somewhat French-like manner.

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    Lisping is a speech disorder characterized by the inability to correctly pronounce the sounds of s or z, known as the sibilant consonants.

    56

    Locals, who have a vested interested in the CBS serial, will tell you that the show's sizzling vixens and hunky villains don't even pronounce their hometown the same.

    57

    Marsilius denies, not only to the pope, but to the bishops and clergy, any coercive jurisdiction or any right to pronounce on their own authority excommunications and interdicts, or in any way to impose the observation of the divine law.

    58

    No bird is more popular with natives than the mama (Acridotheres tristis), a member of the starling family, which lives contentedly in a cage, and can be taught to pronounce words, especially the name of the god Rama.

    59

    Occasionally, especially with those new to wine, people may find it difficult to properly pronounce certain names and Pinot Noir happens to be one of those names.

    60

    Of course, it probably had a pedigree longer than her arm and a name she'd never be able to pronounce.

    61

    On the appointed day a number of representatives appeared, and after some elaborate and fantastic ceremonials Rienzi, as dictator, issued an edict citing the emperor Louis the Bavarian and his rival Charles, afterwards the emperor Charles IV., and also the imperial electors and all others concerned in the dispute, to appear before him in order that he might pronounce judgment in the case.

    62

    On the death of Mary queen of Scots he was chosen to pronounce her eulogy.

    63

    On this account, the custom of both the French and English people of the country was for years before and for several years after 1870 to pronounce it Man-I-CO-ba, and even in some cases to spell it " Manitobah."

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    Only because you can't pronounce the words?

    65

    Other encyclicals, such as those on Christian marriage (Arcanum divinae sapientiae, 10th February 1880), on the Rosary (Supremi apostolatus oficii, 1st September 1883, and Superiore anno, 5th September 1898), and on Freemasonry (Humanism genus, 20th April 1884), dealt with subjects on which his predecessor had been accustomed to pronounce allocutions, and were on similar lines.

    66

    Other films that became fan favorites despite being panned by critics include The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry.

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    P. Postgate, How to pronounce Latin (Appendix B, on " Recent Progress "), (1907).

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    Phonics - children learn how to pronounce or decode more difficult words in each successive year of school.

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    Pronouncing these numbers is not difficult either once you understand the basics, always remembering to pronounce lightly and using the nasal inflection when necessary.

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    Remember to chant loud enough for your own ears to hear the mantra, and try to pronounce each syllable clearly.

    71

    She may have begun her life as a little girl with a hard to pronounce name, but it's a name that most people in the world today know.

    72

    Soon afterwards the questions connected with the deposition of Bishop Colenso were referred to him, but, while regarding Colenso's opinions as heretical and his deposition as justifiable, he refused to pronounce upon the legal difficulties of the case.

    73

    Speaking generally, however, we must pronounce him unprogressive, since, on the whole, unreflective in regard to his ends.

    74

    Speech and language therapists diagnose stuttering by asking stutterers to read out loud, pronounce specific words, and talk.

    75

    Stewart, however, has joked that he changed his name because it was too difficult to pronounce Leibowitz and that it "sounded too Hollywood."

    76

    The accent should go on the second syllable, and the first syllable can be very difficult to pronounce because of the 'r'.

    77

    The authority of the church or minister to pronounce absolution is based on John xx.

    78

    The book contains much which attracted and also much which repelled Jewish feeling, and it appears that it was necessary to pronounce against its canonicity.

    79

    The clergy having thus another authority, and one moreover more canonical, to appeal to, the power of the archdeacons gradually declined; and, so far as the Roman Catholic Church is concerned, it received its death-blow from the council of Trent (1564), which withdrew all matrimonial and criminal causes from the competence of the archdeacons, forbade them to pronounce excommunications, and allowed them only to hold visitations in connexion with those of the bishop and with his consent.

    80

    The colonel respectfully informed His Majesty of Balashev's mission, whose name he could not pronounce.

    81

    The first lesson starts with learning to pronounce all of the letters of the alphabet.

    82

    The investigations will then naturally divide themselves into three parts, the first of which deals with those to our mind inevitable forms in which we are obliged to think about things, if we think at all (metaphysics), the second being devoted to the great region of facts, trying to apply the results of metaphysics to these, specially the two great regions of external and mental phenomena (cosmology and psychology), the third dealing with those standards of value from which we pronounce our aesthetical or ethical approval or disapproval.

    83

    The Jews quite early ceased to pronounce the Tetragrammaton, substituting (as the Books of Chronicles and the LXX translation already indicate) the word Lord ('Adonai).

    84

    The man exists purely to pronounce on things, usually to unintentionally comic effect.

    85

    The occasional visitor to the tomb is reminded by its inscriptions of the many virtues of the dead man while he yet lived, and is charged, if he be come with empty hands, at least to pronounce the funerary formula; it will indeed cost him nothing but the breath of his mouth !

    86

    The old justiciar Geoffrey Fitz-Peter, now on his death-bed, had also refused to pronounce sentence on the defaulters.

    87

    The only words she had learned to pronounce with any degree of distinctness previous to March, 1890, were PAPA, MAMMA, BABY, SISTER.

    88

    The pope immediately summoned Henry to appear at Rome in order to justify his private misconduct, and Henry replied by causing the partisan synod of Worms (1076) to pronounce Gregory's deposition.

    89

    The same mouth can pronounce a blessing or a curse.

    90

    These natural fragrances are made of a few simple ingredients rather than multiple ingredients with difficult to pronounce names.

    91

    These words are so close to being English cognates that they are easy to pronounce.

    92

    They were feared, too, as ministers of the taboo and were entitled to pronounce a kind of excommunication for offences against its rules.

    93

    To pronounce any absolute decision on these conflicting doctrines is foreign to our present purpose, which is to show that all of them count among their adherents men of high rank in science.

    94

    Tso never challenges the text of the master as being incorrect, yet he does not warp or modify his own narratives to make them square with it; and the astounding fact is, that when we compare the events with the summary of them, we must pronounce the latter misleading in the extreme.

    95

    Use words that are easy to understand, pronounce and memorize.

    96

    When choosing a baby name, it's a good idea to settle between common and rare for something unique but not impossible to pronounce.

    97

    When Christian scholars began to study the Old Testament in Hebrew, if they were ignorant of this general rule or regarded the substitution as a piece of Jewish superstition, reading what actually stood in the text, they would inevitably pronounce the name Jehovah.

    98

    When we consider its moral effects, whilst endeavouring to avoid exaggeration, we must yet pronounce its influence to have been profoundly detrimental.

    99

    While most of them are different, they are also memorable, easy to read and easy to pronounce.

    100

    With Sciarra Colonna, Nogaret surprised Boniface at Anagni, on the 7th of September 1303, as the latter was about to pronounce the sentence of excommunication against the king.