(1) A word or phrase that particular people use in particular situations,phrasing
(2) A word or phrase that particular people use in particular situations
(3) Phrasing
(1) His impeccable locution
(2) This reduces u2018constitutional rightu2019 to a fancy locution for u2018rights I think are importantu2019.
(3) Occasionally, we shall employ the locution , u2018land rent,u2019 which is technically redundant; we do so merely to provide recurring emphasis as a reminder of what is meant.
(4) This locution is recurrent in the accumulating commentary on Desiderio's paintings.
(5) A key insight of this volume is Vanhoozer's correlation of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, with locution , illocution, and perlocution, respectively.
(6) In particular, speech act theory is built on his discussion of locution , illocution, and perlocution.
(7) This depends on the interpreter's culturally specific understanding of the social significance of the locution .
(8) What I do remember about Eddie Rademeyer is a particular locution he favoured when a question of his was met with a blank stare by some poor uncomprehending pupil.
(9) Like the protagonists in the classic Hollywood films of Anthony Mann, Hawks or Ford, the leads of Collateral express themselves through their action as much as their locution .
(10) His impeccable locution
(11) Today, any state-sponsored eugenic ideology would surely face considerable opposition, but instead we have (to use the barbarous locution now common) u2018privatizedu2019 eugenic decisions.
(12) Perhaps u2018unavoidable circumstancesu2019 would be a better locution ?
(13) That locution is uttered as if it is some fatal sequence of human conduct.
(14) The central claim of the prosentential theory is that u2018x is trueu2019 functions as a prosentence-forming operator rather than a property-ascribing locution .
(15) Her locutions seem to have neither introductions nor conclusions but begin from a place of inquiry and intimacy.
(16) The boy's self-realization focused on the locutionary and literary power of the word.
(17) In one of the courtrooms here, the air is thick with quaint-sounding British courtroom locutions .
(18) The downside of using both locutions is redundancy; the upside is precision and clarity, though I realize that the trade-off here is controversial.
(19) What is chilling is that Mullen's masterfully deformed locutions sound more like clarifying paraphrases than like parodies.
(20) It is easy to paraphrase another author's ideas or incorporate his or her locutions without crediting the source.
(21) For these reasons, we try to help our students understand the pejorative implications of such stereotypical locutions and believe that what they say matters.
(22) One of my least favorite locutions in politics is the statement by an official or politician that someone's criticism of government policy is u2018unhelpful.u2019
(23) His earliest plays were political, ridiculing the wooden locutions of communist rhetoric.
(24) At any rate, my defense of Barber's diction, if it needs one, is that not being graced or burdened with the role of authorized biographer, he may have felt authorized to employ unofficial, slangy locutions .
(25) Thus the same locutionary action is interpreted as two quite different illocutionary actions.
(26) In this article we analyze the grammar of codes of ethics as a written locutionary act, and attempt to determine their implicit illocutionary and perlocutionary values.
(27) These locutions are determinedly descriptive.
(28) Even the most resistive of these locutions , however, do not explicitly embrace feminism or seek any larger political context.
(29) Austin distinguishes among three components in a total speech act: the locutionary act, the illocutionary act, and the perlocutionary act.
(30) For our paraphrastic procedure to be comprehensive, it must work with contexts containing explicitly comparative locutions .
expression
saying