English to Malay Dictionary punctuate

punctuate

mewarnai
definition
verb
the country's history has been punctuated by coups
occur at intervals throughout (a continuing event or a place).
Journalists at the press conference questioned the feasibility of this project, and The Beijing News punctuates the headline of its article with a question mark.
insert punctuation marks in (text).
example
Rice-Oxley will not only be an authorial presence on stage though, as the accompanying music is a recording of her singing Latin phrases to 'punctuate' the English text.
Attempts at singing 'punctuate' the record, and though Mos Def's technique is unconventional and amateurish, his efforts still manage to remain somewhat charming.
they should be shown how to set out and 'punctuate' direct speech
Three dozen illustrations 'punctuate' Stokes's reissued text of 1934.
She cleaned his clothes when they were dirty; she worshipped him when he didn't believe he was anything; she edited his writing when he forgot to 'punctuate' .
Detail shots featuring blow-ups of these reflections 'punctuate' the transcript like posters in a man-hunt for the missing photographer.
And the politically correct asides that 'punctuate' the text - theology is outdated, Roman battle descriptions are offensive - are irksome.
Sunken courtyards, which will be colonised, 'punctuate' the building and create pleasantly lit corridors, giving natural light to most practice and teaching rooms.
They fumble with sheets of paper and index cards, and mumble and 'punctuate' every five words with ‘um’.
style manuals tell you how to 'punctuate'
At Nili's bedside, she reads her latest novel, extracts of which 'punctuate' the text.
As long as the unipolar moment lasts, then, unconventional attacks like that on the Cole or on the Khobar Towers or the ambush of the Rangers in Mogadishu will continue to 'punctuate' the headlines.
Commands and injunctions, as I suggested, 'punctuate' the text from the outset.
I have to pick through and revise the text, space it, and 'punctuate' it, to make it readable and suitable for use.
Similar scenes 'punctuate' a text marked by an assiduous application to the school of Ernest Hemingway, no bad model for any writer, though a notoriously difficult one to imitate.
It has not escaped my notice that the older authors like to 'punctuate' with a semicolon where the illocutionary force changes; but that is hardly enough to indicate that we are not dealing with coordination.
George's first-person text is 'punctuated' by the wit and wisdom of his friend and confidant Derek Taylor, whose astute observations put the musings of the ex-Beatle into context.
The many short chapters are often 'punctuated' with pregnant little epigrams that underline the plot.
‘They just want to see me happy,’ they can write about their parents, extended family and community acquaintances, 'punctuating' their e-mail with a smiley-face.
For example, Proust, especially from Sodom and Gomorrah on, does some awfully odd things in marking and 'punctuating' his dialogues, so that sometimes it isn't at all clear who's speaking.
Finally, the book is also 'punctuated' with a series of illuminating photographs, charts, and tables.
I bet he had no idea when he sent in his badly spelled and badly 'punctuated' letter that he would be ordered to cut off his hands and bleed over the keyboard.
The familiar ring of ricocheting bullets 'punctuates' the game's menus.
Scalia was characteristically intense, frequently shifting to the edge of his seat and 'punctuating' his thoughts with brisk gesticulations.
Journalists at the press conference questioned the feasibility of this project, and The Beijing News 'punctuates' the headline of its article with a question mark.
Martyn Hunter, playing Ben, provided most of the rare comic moments - gleefully crashing on to the stage riding a stolen bicycle, and forever 'punctuating' his speech with a sudden, wicked laugh.
The same what the hell attitude returns on ‘Out-Side,’ a song where lyrics about dogs and trains 'are punctuated with' cheap sound effects.’
The text is liberally 'punctuated' with useful graphs tables and illustrations that help to summarize data and convey key concepts.
Actually, he's sweet and funny, 'punctuating' his conversation with eerily accurate impressions of Woody Allen, Colin Farrell and Malcolm McDowell - with whom he shares a slightly dangerous, edge-of-madness charm.
From behind me I could hear the occasional sticky hiss of the spray-starch can, the steamy exhale of the iron, and my mother's voice, 'punctuating' the plot with her snide remarks.
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