Accentuating
in sentence
17 examples of Accentuating in a sentence
Stella wears these nice open blouses
accentuating
her real talents, but I wish she would have been a bit more open with her performance.
The music is wonderfully simple,
accentuating
the tone and mood from scene to scene, but never becoming intrusive.
Excellent lines, barbed, insulting; great scene,
accentuating
the fact that despite his background, Bond is a timeless, transcendent character.
For chrissakes, they even had the guy walk away to a narrated ending, a lone spotlight (a-la Mr. Bean),
accentuating
the 'island unto himself' theme.
Pollock's character, Eli, is a rote "Ladies' Man" while Julie Brown plays 'Zoe' thus
accentuating
her quirkiness.
And, when it is met, the process will most likely be partial and uneven,
accentuating
differences and posing tricky coordination issues at the national, regional, and global levels.
A rising dollar, and an investment flight to the US, is
accentuating
these countries’ self-generated problems.
It also risks exposing the IMF to even heavier political pressure,
accentuating
legitimate questions about the uniformity of its treatment of member countries.
Germany is accused of monetarist dogmatism and of being responsible for
accentuating
the economic asymmetry between it and its eurozone neighbors.
In that case, Europe could suddenly become a very different mirror for emerging countries, revealing, if not accentuating, their own structural weaknesses.
Under Xi, however, China seems to be
accentuating
the positive.
Moreover, this trend is
accentuating
the challenges associated with weak productivity growth.
It would have been easy, and perhapsmore marketable, for Munk to draw a caricature, overly
accentuating
Sachs’snegative qualities at the expense of his great gifts.
Xi’s approach is alienating other countries, in the process jeopardizing their appetite for Chinese-made goods, scaring away investors, and
accentuating
China’s image problem.
Policymakers’ obsession with budget discipline is
accentuating
and prolonging cyclical downturns, and preventing a broad-based and sustained recovery in many economies.
'It is very true in detail, but all the same the principle of to-day is Freedom.''Yes, but I bring forward another principle which embraces the principle of freedom,' said Karenin,
accentuating
the word 'embraces,' and putting his pince-nez on again to re-read the part where this was said.
'Tell him to unharness; and no one is to be admitted,' he said in answer to the hall-porter's inquiry,
accentuating
with a certain pleasure the word admitted.
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