Exemplos de uso de She argues em Inglês e suas traduções para o Português
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Colloquial
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Official
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Medicine
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Financial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Official/political
In her first book she argues.
She argues that"what is named does not exist.
There are spaces andplaces with that energy, she argues.
She argues just for the sake of arguing. .
It's really important to communicate andto do so to everyone," she argues.
She argues just for the sake of arguing. .
It should also be possible to do this for mental and neurological disorders," she argues.
She argues that her price is $10, which annoys Holden.
The presence of Whitman in Spanish American poetry, she argues, would be a good topic for a book.
She argues that when we learna new word for an emotion.
I will tell her you peek when she argues with your father then you hide and cry.
She argues that the phages would be good allies in this ongoing battle.
They know we were on Flight 815 because Goodwin knew we were on Flight 815", she argues.
However, she argues that it is necessary to facilitate access to unique products.
We can not impose this kind of judgment on literature,as occurred with Hilda Hilst's book in the 1990s," she argues.
She argues that the more aggressive you are, the more you start to understand peace.
This comes at certain times, and by the time I'm ready to go to work,it should subside!” she argues in a trembling voice.
She argues, however, that the loaded Android boxes could potentially run into trouble.
Returning to Fraser's perspectives on justice, she argues that equity requires both recognition and redistribution.
She argues that the ultimate controls for breath are thoughts and feelings", p.
Her aim is to educate women to be useful wives and mothers, because, she argues, it is through these roles that they can most effectively contribute to society.
She argues her point with Oscar but he does not agree and the two fall out.
Wollstonecraft is best known for"A Vindication of the Rights of Woman"(1792), in which she argues that women are not naturally inferior to men, but appear to be only because they lack education.
She argues that children in schools are encouraged to bully children who don't share their faith.
But she argues that as we all start to accumulate more data, more of us are going to lose this control.
She argues that women who succumb to sensibility are"blown about by every momentary gust of feeling";
She argues that focusing on the WTO is fully compatible with seeking other regional and bilateral trade deals.
Rights, she argues, should be conferred because they are reasonable and just, regardless of their basis in tradition.
She argues with her Father and squabbles constantly with her younger siblings, Rabi and Apo, who love to play tricks on her.