Verbally Sentence Examples

verbally
  • Surely he didn't intend to be verbally invisible the entire visit.

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  • Invitations can be issued verbally, over the telephone, or even via email.

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  • Already in 1087 and 1088 he had appealed to Baldwin of Flanders, verbally and by letter,' for troops; and Baldwin had answered the appeal.

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  • The only time I have heard him swearing or be verbally abusive has been in the presence of his mother.

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  • The youngest will be verbally aggressive if I suggest anything regarding getting some gainful employment, and will blame me for all his misfortunes.

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  • I also survived lunch without being verbally skewered like an unworthy politician for saying something crass.

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  • Most people visiting a high street optician are asked to indicate verbally which lens gives the sharpest image.

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  • He has started initiating interactions and asking for things, both verbally and using pecs.

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  • For more severely visually impaired pupils, the teacher should verbally describe everything he/she is doing.

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  • You don't have to verbally express your interest at all if you don't feel comfortable doing so.

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  • Verbally I was accused of being a communist agitator.

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  • These defendants verbally threatened their victims and used racial epithets while chasing them through the streets of a Chicago, Illinois suburb.

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  • This has been stolen, leaving the heiress to the throne unable to communicate verbally.

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  • Communication is more than simply talking to one another verbally; good communication is able to keep relationships positive, open, and full of trust.

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  • The questions are read to the patient by a trained mental health professional and the patient answers them verbally.

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  • You can either fill out the questionnaire on your own or have an administrator verbally ask the questions and jot down the responses for you.

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  • Bullying is defined as intentionally hurting another person, whether physically or verbally, with aggressive behavior for the purpose of gaining power over another person or group.

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  • During the Middle Ages, lovers verbally shared sentimental poems with each other.

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  • However, most couples still shared sentimental poetry and prose on Valentine's Day verbally.

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  • Level three has two questions and verbally measures children's understanding that sex is permanent over time despite changes in appearance, desires, or activities.

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  • Girls are treated more gently and approached more verbally than boys.

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  • Doctors use the Glasgow Coma Scale to evaluate the extent of brain damage based on observing a person's ability to open his or her eyes, respond verbally, and respond to stimulation by moving (motor response).

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  • Autistic individuals typically are limited in their ability to communicate nonverbally and verbally.

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  • Antisocial children interrupt people, dominate other children, and either verbally or physically attack them.

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  • The child is abused; abusive parents are more likely to neglect their children and less likely to communicate with them verbally.

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  • The child who is in an abusive family may pretend to be a mother who loves and cuddles her child rather than one who verbally or physically abuses her child.

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  • An abused or wounded child might not communicate the experience verbally but may be able to use an anatomically correct doll to show what happened.

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  • Give the child permission to yell, cry, or otherwise express any pain or discomfort verbally.

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  • Children who are unable to communicate effectively may have problems interacting verbally with their peers.

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  • Antisocial behavior is that which is verbally or physically harmful to other people, animals, or property, including behavior that severely violates social expectations for a given environment.

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  • Unfortunately, even modern websites mainly show the lead steps, and try to describe the follow's role verbally.

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  • In this stage, students can take the analysis from the dialectic stage and communicate it verbally, through written expression, and perhaps through the arts.

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  • Giving children words to spell verbally helps them commit the words to their long-term memory.

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  • A microphone and speakers aren't required, but if you don't have them, will not be able to interact verbally with your date.

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  • You don't want to overdo it, because all words can lose their impact when said too much, but don't wait for birthdays or other special occasions to verbally remind your darling that they are your darling.

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  • If by 'open up' you literally meant he would verbally tell you what he wanted; then you are correct, he failed to literally speak about his level of interest.

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  • She was in a prior relationship with an abusive, physically and verbally, man.

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  • Knowing something about nonverbal communication will sharpen your perception that someone may have emotion or attraction not expressed verbally.

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  • Writing down how you feel in a love letter may be more memorable in addition to being more effective than telling them verbally.

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  • A communicative relationship will often work out more easily than one where a couple is less inclined to verbally share their feelings.

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  • He just doesn’t see the need for verbally expressing the depth of his feelings and, truth be told, is actually quite scared of needing someone too much.

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  • For example, you can give a person who seems to doodle a lot a piece of paper to sketch on while you ask her the questions verbally or read the questions to a spatial learner while on a long walk.

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  • Taking this step means you are less likely to forget something and it will take less time for the attorney to read through what you have written than if you try to explain everything verbally.

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  • Each man has sixty seconds to sell himself, verbally and visually, to the ladies.

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  • He charged that Tamra was verbally abusive and had cheated on him.

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  • However, the front page of your site should both visually and verbally give a good feeling of your company's brand and feeling.

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  • Unsure whether to move away from him or verbally fend him off, she did neither.

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  • Jule's throat tightened as he listened to the two of them spar verbally.

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  • It's like he needed her to be his punching bag, at least verbally if not physically.

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  • He pulled the towel from his face and stared down at her, but she didn't give him time to verbally attack her again.

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  • He didn't respond verbally but his hands caressed her back - as though that would solve anything.

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  • Army orders were issued at 5 a.m., but still the urgency of the situation was so little understood that had they been verbally adhered to the force of the II.

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  • The great dogmas are not, literally and verbally, in the Bible.

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  • But this is just what the despatch does not state verbally and precisely, and accordingly Grouchy, like Ney on the 16th and 17th, misread it.

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  • The Latin Renaissance in Italy aimed at recovering and verbally imitating the ancient literature; the Greek Renaissance in Germany sought inspiration from the creative originality of Greek literature with a view to producing an original literature in the German language.

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  • Especially important are the Excerpta ex Theodoto, the author of which is certainly Clement, which are verbally extracted from Gnostic writings, and have almost the value of original sources.

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  • As Aristotle puts it, the syllogism is directed " not to the outer, but to the inner discourse," or as we should say, not to the expression but to the thought, not to the proposition but to the judgment, and to the inference not verbally but mentally.

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  • It is a notable feature of the new movement, that except verbally, in a certain licence of nominalist expression, due to the swing of the pendulum away from the realist doctrine of universals, there is little that we can characterize as Empiricism.

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  • The two passages are to a large extent verbally identical, but while Deut.

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  • The Confessio Bohemica was presented to Maximilian, who verbally expressed his approval, but would not consent to this being made public, and also refused his consent to the inclusion of the Confessio among the charters of the kingdom.

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  • As for the story of the orang-utan cabin boy, this may even be verbally true, it being borne in mind that in the Malay languages the term orang-utan, " man of the forest," was originally used for inland forest natives and other rude men, rather than for the miyas apes to which it has come to be generally applied by Europeans.

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  • He might feel fear or express it verbally, but it would never be in his eyes.

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  • He waited for the Guardian to arrive, entertained by the idea that Jessi denied him verbally while yielding to him physically.

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  • She smiles at her secretary; she never reciprocates a greeting or farewell verbally except with clients.

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  • Today it got out of control - he started verbally abusing me, repetitively using unpleasant swearwords toward me.

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  • In this he went beyond Cyril and the Alexandrine school generally, who, although they expressed the unity of the two natures in Christ so as almost to nullify their duality, yet took care verbally to guard themselves against the accusation of in any way circumscribing or modifying his real and true humanity.

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  • They may express faith in the Eucharist through manner, gesture, or reverential silence rather than verbally.

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  • This problem basically revolves around the fact that your toddler hasn't mastered the art of constructing a sentence verbally in a smooth and connected manner.

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  • Examine your contract closely to determine the facts communicated to you verbally are actually on paper.

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  • Your wedding vows will be a way for you and your partner to proclaim your love verbally.

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  • Some alcoholics are abusive to spouses, including emotionally, verbally, and physically, while others keep to themselves and avoid intimacy.

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  • Schelske drinks too much and as a result can be verbally abusive.

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  • Apparently he only had a little over a week left on his probation for his 2007 arrest when he verbally assaulted a tow truck driver with racial and homophobic slurs.

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  • Stewart's character, Melinda, is a rape survivor who verbally shuts down after being attacked.

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  • A person who has signed an advance directive can also indicate that they have changed their wishes verbally.

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  • To comprehend the meaning of your partner's facial expression, simply ask him or her to express reactions verbally.

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  • He is not physically abusive but can sometimes be verbally abusive.

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  • People communicate both verbally and non-verbally.

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  • Being verbally romantic or sweet can be difficult for some.

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  • Fine, but I'm not going to let him verbally abuse you.

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  • For his prefaces and marginal notes he used Luther's Bible freely, even to paraphrasing or verbally translating long passages from it.

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  • This has generally been regarded as Plato's own work; but the certainty of this conclusion will be doubted by those who observe (I) the elaborate preparations made in the dialogue for a recital of the EpwrcKOS which shall be verbally exact, and (2) the closeness of the criticism made upon it.

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  • Verbally this is done; is it done substantially?

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  • This formal and regulated " penitence " was extended from apostasy to other grave - or, as they were subsequently called, " deadly " - sins; while for minor offences all Christians were called upon to express contrition by fasting and abstinence from ordinarily permitted pleasures, as well as verbally in public and private devotions.

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  • But the appeal to the verbally inspired Bible was stronger than that to a church hopelessly divided; the Bible, and not the consent of the universal church, became the touchstone of the reformed orthodoxy; in the nomenclature of the time, " evangelical " arose in contradistinction to " Catholic," while, in popular parlance, the " protest " of the Reformers against the " corruptions of Rome " led to the invention of the term " Protestant," which, though nowhere assumed in the official titles of the older reformed churches, was early used as a generic term to include them all.

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  • Beginning with the battle of Borodino, from which time his disagreement with those about him began, he alone said that the battle of Borodino was a victory, and repeated this both verbally and in his dispatches and reports up to the time of his death.

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