posed

IPA: pˈoʊzd

adjective

  • (obsolete) Firm; determined; fixed.
  • (often in combinations) Holding a certain pose
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Examples of "posed" in Sentences

  • The place where I most often hear a false dilemma posed is on radio talk shows.
  • She also spoke about the threat to Britain posed by terrorists trained in Somalia.
  • The question you posed is whether "a higher tax rate on beer would impact consumption."
  • Most people know that O'Neill lasts for years so the answer to that question posed is "Yes, duh."
  • Darwin posed a rhetorical question about the distinctiveness of species — which he then answered.
  • The question posed is not whether you agree with the article but rather is its theme contradicted by scientific findings?
  • Still, bureaucracies, even if they know they can't change, have to pretend they really want to, even if they don't, and so, with the question about Klein posed so clearly, they fired Klein and hired Jautz, who has been running CNN's sister station, Headline News.
  • Her account of the current situation regarding sexual reassignment surgery in Iran is posed from a complex stance in which this procedure is not uniquely Islamic or even religious, but rather stems from a larger history of medical sciences and constructions of homosexuality and gender “confusion” as pathology.

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synonyms for posed
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