View example sentences and word forms for Paraphrased.

Paraphrased

Paraphrased | Paraphrasing | Paraphrases

Paraphrased meaning

simple past and past participle of paraphrase

Example sentences (20)

The article said the papers had paraphrased or quoted nearly 20 authors without proper attribution.

An earlier version of this article paraphrased incorrectly a senior Hamas official’s comments about a possible hostage exchange.

As paraphrased in the NLT, “Remember those in prison, as if you were there yourself.

For Hermann Hauser, all this comes down to three questions, as paraphrased in an article for Forbes: ‘Do we control the critical technology in our own country?

Pemberton also paraphrased ABS CEO Christopher J. Wiernicki to observe that, “Operational efficiency is your best fuel right now” – a mantra that shapes SEACOR’s approach to decarbonisation.

While it is not definitively known when Gates said this, or if the quote is paraphrased from other words from him, the Internet has been linked to the concept of a тАЬtown squareтАЭ quite often.

In one campaign video, Markey also paraphrased a famous JFK quote, saying, "We asked what we could do for our country.

I’ve paraphrased them too.

Here, I will be talking about recommendations 3–8, with the IEC’s recommendations paraphrased and followed by my own commentary.

I find the content of these responses are usually paraphrased directly from Fox and Friends, Hannity and Judge Jeanine.

Some of Haspel’s champions have used the exact language of the popular version of the Nuremberg defense, while others have paraphrased it.

The denuclearization offer, as paraphrased by Chung Eui-yong, the chief of South Korea’s National Security Office, mirrors that basic North Korean offer, which has been on the table for years.

To paraphrased Hamlet – there is something rotten in the state of education and it is draining many members of the teaching profession, including me.

Americans tend to apply quotations when signifying doubt of veracity (sarcastically or seriously), to imply another meaning to a word or to imply a cynical take on a paraphrased quotation, without punctuation at all.

Cato, De agricultura, CLVI, CLVII; the passages are paraphrased by Pliny the Elder.

During these years, occasionally a paraphrased translation from the Arabic, which itself had been translated from Greek and Syriac, might make its way to the West for scholarly study.

Eknath Easwaran has paraphrased the term as "the coiled power," a force which ordinarily rests at the base of the spine, described as being "coiled there like a serpent".

Following are his five axioms, somewhat paraphrased to make the English easier to read.

He shows that the Stoics frequently paraphrased the account given by Xenophon.

He was the first to print a paraphrased edition of Ptolemy's Tetrabiblos in Basel, 1554.