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Throws out
Answer for the clue "Throws out ", 8 letters:
suggests
Alternative clues for the word suggests
- Proposes
- Hints at
- Gives an impression of American mounting horse on street in the centre of Fresno
- Puts forward
- Proposes time in New York being entertained by Madness singer
- Crazy set - singer comes out and proposes!
- Drops a hint
- Offers advice or recommends
- Solicitor general appears on show promoting union with counsels
Usage examples of suggests.
In the first place, this argument, like most of the arguments produced when one suggests changing anything, is a long-winded way of saying that what is must be.
All the evidence we have suggests that the sudden emotional changes which totalitarianism demands of its followers are psychologically impossible.
And after all, the history of the last ten years suggests that Hitler has a pretty shrewd idea of his own interests.
Orwell suggests that this paper has a Fascist tendency, and names two of its contributors, Hugh Ross Williamson and the Duke of Bedford, to prove his case.
Such knowledge suggests arrogance in the sender, or, indeed, it offers us a hint of brotherhood.
The pattern of discovery that followed suggests a northwest direction.
The murder of his immediate superior Robert Jamka suggests that as a possibility.
But my mail suggests that large numbers of Americans take the tabloids very seriously indeed.
The word suggests the communication not of thoughts but of feelings, emotions.
As the Lourdes experience suggests, you may have to go through ten thousand to a million cases before you find one truly startling recovery.
No one suggests that property taxes be used to provide for the military budget, or for agriculture subsidies, or for cleaning up toxic wastes.
China and New York clearly suggests that we are missing a big part of their history.
Even its vegetation was overwhelmingly spared, and yet the scale of conflagration elsewhere suggests that devastation was global.
The fossil evidence, if taken literally, suggests that some members of the species reached Java at about the same time as, or even slightly before, they left Africa.
Closer analysis of key subsections, however, suggests a consanguinity of fifty percent, blurred by substantial deep-somatic engineering.