Nghĩa của từ euphemistic bằng Tiếng Việt

@euphemistic /,ju:fi'mistik/ (euphemistical) /,ju:fi'mistikəl/
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Đặt câu có từ "euphemistic"

Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "euphemistic", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Anh - Việt. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ euphemistic, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ euphemistic trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Anh - Việt

1. Euphemistic motion, ever - changing flower fan.

2. Peepee is a common euphemistic term.

3. A few days ago, and friends to Euphemistic concern.

4. Cohabit (archaic) company (obsolete) Copulate; couple; engage in sex; exchange flesh (euphemistic) get physical; have intimate relations; have marital relations (euphemistic) have sex; have sexual relations; intercourse; make

5. Simon's euphemistic descriptions of wartime crimes have been heavily criticized.

6. Bejesus (uncountable) (euphemistic) Used for emphasis, similar to crap, shit or wits

7. All is euphemistic denial of the one fact of both.

8. What does follicly-Challenged mean? (humorously politically correct, euphemistic, of a person) Bald

9. The leader sends character infuriation no longer, make a speech however " euphemistic " .

10. 'We're letting you go' is a euphemistic way of saying 'You're fired.'

11. Every mile they rode their Crotches felt worse saddlepain.· (slang, euphemistic) Either the male

12. A representative of the romantic school , Li Qingzhao wrote euphemistic and graceful poems.

13. Modest words, taboo words and circuitous words were the usual expression way of euphemistic rhetoric.

14. Therefore, it has many rhetoric functions: being humorous, sarcastic and euphemistic, mediating conflict and enlightening imagination.

15. ("Bejesus," a mild euphemistic oath, is here used as an intensifying noun.) [Idioms Free Dictionary] E.g

16. "Chuffing" is not a swear word: it is a euphemistic replacement for one

17. " Chuffing " is not a swear word: it is a euphemistic replacement for one

18. Euphemistic Expressions are a frequently used pragmatic strategy of politeness language in the international business negotiation.

19. A few media may be compared when interview euphemistic, the question that raise is not quite acerb .

20. The exclamation “By Cracky!” is also a euphemistic oath, a milder version of “By Christ!” Green’s Dictionary of Slang (Vol

21. Yet other occupations that upgraded themselves in the past enjoy euphemistic names that are no longer questioned.

22. In classical mythology, Cora—or Kore—was a euphemistic name of Persephone, goddess of fertility and the underworld

23. In the past, reasons for changing clubs have been couched in euphemistic terms, such as the need for a fresh challenge.

24. Women pay much more attention to the accuracy of their speech. And their speech is more graceful, more implicative and euphemistic.

25. The author certainly doesn't shy from wordplay ("Aggressed," sick burn), which leads me to believe that euphemistic speaking is a possibility

26. The beauty of images and the author's emotional experience inosculate into varieties of implicit and euphemistic artistic conception which rounds about nine ileums.

27. Slang a euphemistic word for hell informal (intensifier) to run like Blazes; what the Blazes are you doing? go to Blazes! slang go to hell!

28. Anthills of the Savannah, Achebe's first major novel since Things Fall Apart appeared thirty years ago, unfolds against a similarly euphemistic backdrop of civil peace

29. Yet, there is no talk of an all-out war or even a euphemistic Operation New Dawn to tackle the most pressing issue for ordinary Americans – their economic security.

30. Loot and South Asia India, April 1 -- Watchman apparently is a euphemistic city-bred term often used to describe a lowly Chowkidar 's job, which no skilled or literate person wants to do, but as a last resort.

31. ("Bejesus," a mild euphemistic oath, is here used as an intensifying noun.) Don't sneak up on me like that—you scared the Bejesus out of me! The sound of the fire alarm scared the Bejesus out of us this morning.

32. (dated, euphemistic) damnable, damned 1912, Howard Benjamin Grose, Missions: an international Baptist magazine, Volume 3: I'm the Blankety-Blankety-blank-blank worst man in all this Blankety-Blankety-blank-blank country […] 1915, Stanley William Coxon, And that reminds me: […] a megaphone demanded to know who the, what the, how the, why the Blankety

33. Brassiere (n.) "form-fitting undergarment to support a woman's breasts," by 1902, a euphemistic borrowing in the garment trade, from French brassière "child's chemise; shoulder strap" (17c.), from Old French braciere "arm guard" (14c.), from bras "an arm," from Latin bracchium "an arm," from Greek brakhion "an arm" (see brachio-).The French word was used 18c