underscoring 的 2 个定义
un·der·scored, un·der·scor·ing.
- to mark with a line or lines underneath; underline, as for emphasis.
- to stress; emphasize: The recent tragedy underscores the danger of disregarding safety rules.
- a line drawn beneath something written or printed.
- music for a film soundtrack; background for a film or stage production.
underscoring 近义词
underline, emphasize
更多underscoring例句
- The meta-analysis most of all underscores that there is no secret to happiness, no bliss-bringing epiphany.
- That it came and went largely unnoticed underscores just how irrelevant the Wildcats were this year.
- Be sure also to only use lowercase letters and hyphens to separate words rather than underscores.
- The line of questioning underscores how Republicans intend to keep the focus of Wednesday’s hearing on accusations that tech companies are biased against conservatives.
- These terrible roles tended to further underscore that she would always be best-known for wearing a dress.
- To underscore the “shame,” street sweepers followed along behind the prisoners, cleaning the street.
- To underscore the point: The Constitution strongly protects us against theocrats who would pass religious precepts into law.
- They underscore the extent to which our ideas of normality are tied closely to socioeconomic status.
- Of course, other elements had to be added in to underscore that concept, and it also became a mother-son movie.
- Why the "many frequent and free conversations respecting me and my conduct," which you have taken so much pains to underscore?
- Here we underscore c′ and c; and, as the whole thing now reads as e′a, we tack on e′a0 as the Conclusion, with a ¶.
- Our poets do not need to underscore words or to use heavy headlines and italics.
- Amendments can be read by placing cursor over words with a dashed underscore like this.
- We may pencil on the margin, or underscore, all the leading propositions, and the typical examples.