Synoniemen & Anagrammen | Engels woord DEPLORE


DEPLORE

2

2

Aantal letters

7

Is palindroom

Nee

12
DE
DEP
EP
EPL
LO
LOR
OR
ORE
PL
PLO
RE

11

12

301
DE
DEE
DEL
DEO

Voorbeelden van het gebruik van DEPLORE in een zin

  • Against Quebec Act, Chatham says it would lose "hearts of all the Americans" and British Quebeckers would deplore loss of jury trials and habeas corpus.
  • 'OPEC countries', 'SALT talks' and 'HIV virus' are all technically redundant because the second word is already contained in the preceding abbreviation, but only the ultra-finicky would deplore them.
  • In the event, the film Fitna was broadcast as planned, but Wilders was denied entry to the UK, thus leading many commentators to deplore the action by the Home Secretary Jacqui Smith as appeasement.
  • Moreover, the names are apt to be used interchangeably for glacials, interglacials, stadial, interstadials, or oscillations, leading some scientists to deplore the lack of system.
  • They deplore Highway's unorthodox training methods (such as firing an AK-47 over his men's heads to familiarize them with the weapon's sound).
  • displayed anti-Semitic demographic charts to deplore the alleged destruction of Aryan families' farmland and claim that the Jews were eradicating traditional German peasantry.
  • The difficulties and discouragement of those early years, is still fresh and green in the memories of some who are still with us, but who, like him whose loss we now deplore, have lived to see the full dawn of a brighter day, and a truer knowledge of the land we live in.
  • Alcott used her story Eight Cousins to deplore Adams' use of slang, his cast of bootblacks and newsboys, and his stories of police courts and saloons.
  • They deplore their fates: "'What can I – what ought I to do?' cried she, shedding a torrent of tears"; they exit a room heroically: "She quitted the apartment with a flood of tears"; they express relief: "A friendly burst of tears relieved her beating heart”; they show gratitude: "Matilda's grateful heart overflowed; speech indeed was not lent her, but her tears, her expressive looks forcibly conveyed the language she could not utter"; it acts as an emotional outlet: "I must have vent for my feelings, or I shall be opprest to death.
  • The Black Crusade plays with the notion of the tale's reliability as a factual narrative, including fictional footnotes apparently inserted by the book's publishers, who deplore Basil's actions and despise his unheroic qualities.
  • Such serpentine stratagems were as normal to those who had to negotiate these shoals at the time as they are alien to the academic moralists who deplore them with the luxury of hindsight.
  • So deeply do we deplore the opprobrium which must be inseparably attached to these crimes that scarcely a man once his time is up can be prevailed to re-enlist in this corps.



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