The Collaborative International Dictionary
Enunciate \E*nun"ci*ate\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Enunciated; p. pr. & vb. n. Enunciating.] [L. enuntiatus, -ciatus, p. p. of enuntiare, -ciare. See Enounce.]
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To make a formal statement of; to announce; to proclaim; to declare, as a truth.
The terms in which he enunciates the great doctrines of the gospel.
--Coleridge. To make distinctly audible; to utter articulately; to pronounce; as, to enunciate a word distinctly.
Wiktionary
vb. (present participle of enunciate English)
Usage examples of "enunciating".
Let us now consider the rules followed in classification, and the difficulties which are encountered on the view that classification either gives some unknown plan of creation, or is simply a scheme for enunciating general propositions and of placing together the forms most like each other.
No major-sport player had ever even orbited in close enough to hear the elisions and apical lapses of a mid-Southern accent in her oddly flat but resonant voice that sounded like someone enunciating very carefully inside a soundproof enclosure.
The contralto was a young actress, determined to break into big time tri-d, who dutifully read through the material supplied, enunciating culinary words and displaying no curiosity as to the limitation of the audition.
Once, perched on a flowering log, scraping leeches off his calf, he heard a clear distinct voice enunciating out of the massed foliage at his back, firmly, oh-so-quietly.
The music faded into a husky female voice enunciating words in a monotonous beat, as if she were counting numbers and not speaking.
It was not the political philosophy of the United States that he was enunciating, but the principle of unlimited majority rule—.