accentuate
IPA: æksˈɛntʃueɪt
verb
- (transitive) To pronounce with an accent or vocal stress.
- (transitive) To bring out distinctly; to make more noticeable or prominent; to emphasize.
- (transitive) To mark with a written accent.
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Examples of "accentuate" in Sentences
- Sweetheart necklines accentuate the bosom.
- The effect is accentuated by the early morning mist.
- The Park's nightingales accentuate the romantic plots.
- The caprice contains syncopated accentuated fortissimo.
- "kind of accentuate the positive work the authority is doing."
- Is the word accentuate a good word to tell in morning assembly?
- This will always be handy and already help accentuate the area.
- These necklines accentuate the shoulders and neck of the wearer.
- They not provide elegance but accentuate the beauty of the room.
- Rather, they accentuate the natural form of the chin and cheeks.
- In Mariology, the question of scriptural basis is more accentuated.
- Many of these are intended to accentuate the emotions of the characters.
- Those on the left side accentuate anger, hate, jealousy, and selfishness.
- This situation accentuated the differences in the interior of the community.
- But for the most part I actually "accentuate" my brows with a bit of Bobby Brown light brown eyebrow shadow.
- My recommendation is that women identify and embrace those attributes that make them beautiful, and then learn to accentuate them.
- And at night especially that cold air wants to drain and kind of accentuate it with these Santa Ana offshore winds and compressed heated and that's what we've got.
- You kind of accentuate the positives on either side as opposed to a Brewers broadcast when you're putting everything - even the other team's success - into a Brewers perspective.
- Hmmmm, but Palin isn't black, doesn't have Oprah's megamillions to image make her and doesn't have Oprah's influence on the media to contain her negatives and accentuate her positives.
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