16 Verbs to Use for the Word elucidation

"This is a singular passage," Paul continued"so much so as to need elucidation.

Unavoidable circumstances still necessarily preclude the possibility, or the propriety rather, of attempting to give a more full and complete developement of the divisions and subdivisions of the systematic arrangement which is to be pursued, and which circumstances may require some elucidation.

The views of the French Government on the subjects which have been so long committed to negotiation have received no elucidation since the close of your late session.

The whole affair demanded a far more complicated elucidation, when he remembered the details of it allthe cry of terror, the amazing language, the grey face of horror when his nostrils first caught the new odor; that muffled sobbing in the darkness, andfor this, too, now came back to him dimlythe man's original aversion for this particular bit of country....

The latest generations of men will find new meanings in Shakespeare, new elucidations of their own human being; "new harmonies with the infinite structure of the Universe; concurrences with later ideas, affinities with the higher powers and senses of man."

Speech is the crown of oratorical action; it is this which gives the final elucidation, which justifies gesture.

This matter is of moment enough to justify somewhat formal elucidation.

Leaving Mr. Sharpe to draw up an affidavit of the facts disclosed, I hastened off to the jail, in order to obtain a thorough elucidation of all the mysteries.

We perceive elucidation here, draw an inference there.

Lest the wisdom of this oraculous "declaration" be lost to the public through the defects of its syntax,and lest more than one rhetorical critic seem hereby "in some danger" of "giving sanction to" nonsense,it may be well for Professor Fowler, in his next edition, to present some elucidation of this short but remarkable passage, which he values so highly!

And then she read to him the elucidation of the apparent paradox that there is a certain place in this world where the wind always blows from the south; and another explaining the statement that in certain cannibal islands the people eat themselves.

Simon's natural shrewdness, of which, in common with many other simple-minded persons, he possessed a considerable share, warned him there was something more here than appeared at first sightsome mystery of which time alone was likely to afford the elucidation.

As he walked along his thoughts revolved round the murder of Sir Horace Fewbanks, and the baffling perplexities which had surrounded its elucidation.

Resolved to leave no door open to cavil, I first of all attempted the elucidation of this remarkable example of lithick literature by the ordinary modes, but with no adequate return for my labour.

HE HAD AN OPPORTUNITY OF WATCHING A SEARCH CONDUCTED UPON SCIENTIFIC PRINCIPLES THEN IN THE MIDST OF HER WONDERING CAME THE ELUCIDATION OF THESE THINGS

Together these two papers constitute the most detailed and valuable elucidation of the doctrine that we possess.

16 Verbs to Use for the Word  elucidation