It is difficult to put into words, but it is rather like the disappearance of a permanent unwelcome guest. |
|
I was one of two writers invited by the commission on culture and sport to help an ad hoc committee put into words a new code of practice. |
|
Babies and toddlers do pick up on stress in the home and often act out what they are unable to put into words. |
|
The first time you save a life is something you cannot put a price on or put into words. |
|
The textures emanating from that box are also hard to put into words, like a delayed thumb piano, perhaps? |
|
She can now put into words what has never before been heard by another human being. |
|
Its apparent solidity, in terms of the ability to explain it, comes from the number of questions that it does not even dare to put into words. |
|
Though every piece is different, they are all trying to get at certain things that are difficult to put into words. |
|
It is far beyond any ability I have, honourable senators, to put into words what he has meant to his family. |
|
Klein attempts in a very graphic way to put into words preverbal experiences by describing the ways bodily and sensory experiences are registered in the mind. |
|
If we have secret thoughts, thoughts which cannot be put into words, it is said that we are not transparent. |
|
I cannot put into words, written or spoken, what my heart lived then, and is still living now. |
|
These stones that we bring say something about our convictions, even if it is not always put into words. |
|
My survival no longer offers the time, but to see others expressing frustration they can barely put into words is helpful. |
|
It lends the photos a quality that I'm finding hard to put into words, other than that somehow, these places seem far more expressive in false colour than in reality. |
|
How can I put into words what I think of him other than bleep, bleep, bleep? |
|
A problem only becomes intelligible when it is put into words. |
|
With his statement that Africa does not need democracy but water pumps, Colonel Gaddafi has undoubtedly put into words what many of his fellow dictators think. |
|
Rather than exchanging photos of real-life situations, we must put into words and share the structure and the logic of our processes and pathways. |
|
The meaning escapes description: it cannot be put into words. |
|
|
It is not possible to put into words the terror that took place in the confusion of battle and the war on that day fifty-nine years ago both on Mount Butler and at Brigade Headquarters. |
|
That is why it is particularly important to help them put into words what they know and how they can go about carrying out a task or finding the answer to an exercise. |
|