utter

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Synonyms for utter

Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

Synonyms for utter

The American Heritage® Roget's Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Synonyms for utter

put into circulation

complete

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Related Words

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
(112.) See Conant, Elucidation and Nonsense, supra note 108, at 196 ("[T]he aim for the Tractarian elucidation is to reveal (through the employment of mere nonsense) that what appears to be substantial nonsense is mere nonsense."); see also Cheung, supra note 13, at 200 (concluding that, according to Diamond and Conant, "the Tractatus is not trying to help anyone see any unsayable insights," but that "the aim of the Tractatus is merely to liberate nonsense utterers from nonsense, and that this is to be achieved by the non-frame sentences serving as elucidations").
Discourse is the material content of utterances exchanged in social contexts that are imbued with meaning by the intention of utterers and treated as meaningful by other participants.
One does not have to subscribe to post-modernism to state that words do not have meanings that are independent of their utterers. Even a first-year linguist would tell you people do not retrieve meaning from words; they attribute meanings to words.
Words as such are as vulgar as their utterers, and they invalidate the title of 'tribal leaders' that they ascribe to themselves.
(92) I think it is safe to say that for most Americans (landlords, perhaps, in particular), such utterances are comic and do not conduce to giving the utterers serious political influence.
to what extent the utterers shaped their contributions in light of strategic concerns in decidedly political ratification contests." (150)
Montague Lavy contends that those sounds whose acoustic profiles were produced by utterers in a given emotive state are also perceived as portraying that state.
Now, the Gricean notion is intended to elaborate on an ordinary one; we make ascriptions of what utterances and their utterers say, and have intuitions on the conditions under which they are correct.
Few appellate courts in the common law world presently espouse speakers' or utterers' intention theories of interpretation in either contractual, statutory, or constitutional contexts.
The term comes from the ACLU's frequent soulful professions that it detests Nazis, pornographers, and utterers of hate speech, but must defend them anyway, for the sake of principle.