Uttered in a sentence as an adjective

Man this discussion would have been so much better had the phrase "You clearly don't understand" not been uttered.

It truly is not TED worthy, and this is from someone who fully believes every word that man uttered. TED is about sharing knowledge.

RG said something publicly that's probably been uttered a million times between friends bantering. I've heard things that are a thousand times worse.

Never was a scientific article or concept uttered. It was all "well, let's try him on seroquel and olanzapine, let's also throw Paxil in there."

To put it in another way, your words could might as well have been uttered by some roman, just before the fall of the Roman Empire. They also had a long history of "living through" troubled times.

Going to justfab website, nowhere on the front page or in the catalog does the word "subscription" become uttered. Not even in the linked checkout images is it mentioned.

Its interesting to see how that assumptions, uttered by Sony, is now taken as fact. More than the DRM implications, the playing out of the PR game here is interesting.

Don't worry, the government will never let the crash happen My bet would be these words were uttered right before every crash in history...

The best moral principal, I can think of, which opposes the current state of affairs, is the one uttered by Martin Sheen's character in the movie Wallstreet: "Create, instead of living off the buying and selling of others." Wallstreet 2 was a piece of ****.

I take that and other similar things he has uttered in the past to mean that he puts pragmatism over perfectionism. He wraps it in a self-deprecating tone of humor, which may come out as ignorant but is in fact just him being humble.

The warlord uttered an exclamation of disbelief. Surely an accounting package is trivial next to the complexity of an operating system, he said.

You're welcome to suggest that there is some better use of my time, but there is nothing more chilling to freedom of thought and expression than someone saying "That thought is too rude, too lame, to annoying, cuts too close," or whatever else and therefore cannot be uttered. It's like "Let he is without sin cast the first stone."

During the interview, the man uttered a phrase that stopped my heart: "So, tell me about your electrical engineering experience." As it turned out, the career services woman understood my basic PC building skills as electrical engineering skills.

Ability to execute is something that almost everybody who has ever seriously uttered the phrase "idea guy" lacks.

It has become evidently clear that 9 out 10 times that the word "fragmentation" is uttered on HN or any comment board regarding Android, it is by people who have never developed a line of Android code and whose knowledge of the platform is what they picked up on advocacy sites. Dalvik isn't fragmented at all.

\nRepeat over and over until I was sufficiently convinced that no one had ever uttered the previous sequence of sounds I had just made, become exhausted from an entirely too powerful imagination, and fall asleep. I'm pretty sure this 'thought experiment' is about as intellectual as I was at bedtime when I was 7.

> I can't shake the feeling that one cannot take anything uttered from Elon Musk's mouth at face value when it concerns his baby ... There's no need for that -- Musk has the car's logs, which describe the miles driven, the speeds, and the battery's state of charge.

But not everything that is said here needs to be treated like it was uttered as part of a debate. Sometimes opinions are just opinions, sometimes anecdotes are enlightening, and sometimes generalizations, metaphors, analogies and other abstractions come into play.

Maybe the silver lining here is that it puts the final nail in the coffin for "many eyes make all bugs shallow" - which was always total BS from the day it was uttered. There's so much code out there, much of it highly specialized and even project-specific, that there are very few eyes looking at any particular piece of code, and not all eyes are connected to the greatest of brains.

The pithy, monosyllabic answer uttered in response changed your life forever: "Vim." At first you were frustrated a lot, and far less productive. Your browser history was essentially a full index to the online Vim documentation; your Nano and Pico-using friends thought you were insane; your Emacs using friends begged you to change your mind; you paid actual money for a laminated copy of a Vim cheat sheet for easy reference.

For example, back in the late 70s, Ellen Langer and her colleagues found that people were just as likely to give way at a photo-copier if a queue-jumper uttered the nonsensical excuse "because I need to make copies" as when he uttered "because I'm in a rush." Compare this to situations in the UK where if a shopkeeper returns nearly all your change, but keeps a penny, the customer will often wail until they get it, and make a fuss about it.

We prefer not to consider closely the shockingly vapid and primitive comments uttered by athletes in postcontest interviews or to consider what impoverishments in ones mental life would allow people actually to think the way great athletes seem to think. Note the wayup close and personal" profiles of professional athletes strain so hard to find evidence of a rounded human life outside interests and activities, values beyond the sport.

Uttered definitions

adjective

communicated in words; "frequently uttered sentiments"

See also: expressed verbalized verbalised