Sentences with phrase «vague allusions»

"Vague allusions" refers to references or hints that are not clear or specific. It means mentioning something indirectly without providing detailed information or explanation. Full definition
Worse still, beyond vague allusions to Labour's supposed «centre ground», it offered no hint of what a substantive alternative to the current leadership might actually entail.
Not helping matters is that the central family is a bore, with lots of vague allusions to backstory but precious few specifics to latch on to.
But, pressing the issue, Colbert brought the conversation back to the complaints against him, leaving the Ed Sullivan Theater in uncomfortable silence as the fidgeting Franco alternated between stating that Tuesday's allegations were «not accurate» and making vague allusions to needing to «change [his] perspective where it's off.»
But beyond a vague allusion to «getting things right on broader matters of culture,» he offers not a clue about what that something more might be, by what means we might know it, or how it would cure the defects he sees in natural rights reasoning.
He nodded firmly every time Brown made even the vaguest allusion to world affairs, in full international summit mode.
The war going on in the film's background is wiped of any details, save for some vague allusions to the SS.
Perhaps the worst part of this document is what it omits: there is one vague allusion to teacher tenure and no mention of seniority or any policy recommendations about how to get bad teachers out of the classroom, though these are major problems that must be dealt with.
To answer Attorney Carsen's reference to vague allusions of common law; the method by which the clause would be declared Unconstitutional would vary depending on whether this were to be taken before a Federal Tribunal or a state Tribunal.
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