Bishops obfuscate, cardinals equivocate and Church spokesmen prevaricate as the tide of media condemnation surges around them. |
|
To equivocate in the face of it would be an absolute abdication of intellectual responsibility. |
|
I am not one to equivocate the past so I will move on to current reading matter. |
|
Canadians are fundamentally suspicious of any party that appears to equivocate about rights. |
|
They furrow their concerned brows and squint gravely towards the cameras in their field camo but all you hear is hedge and evade and dodge and divert and equivocate. |
|
The way to do so is not to equivocate between democrats and autocrats, as Lula seems to think. |
|
He urged political leaders and officials alike not to delay or equivocate, or to set goals for a negotiation that are too modest. |
|
In conversation, he can maneuver around without giving a direct answer if he feels it is necessary to equivocate. |
|
Chafee is likely the only presidential candidate to endorse the metric system and equivocate on Isis. |
|
The firm now insists that price information must no longer come directly from traders, with an incentive to lie or at least equivocate, but from back-office staff instead. |
|
And if he asked what was wrong with her I wasn't going to equivocate because equivocation — any kind of uncertainty, a tremor in the voice, a tonal shift, playacting — is the surest lie detector. |
|
Mr. Speaker, I was not attempting to equivocate. |
|
Eight, we need not equivocate or appear ambiguous about the prior and continuing anti-terror and military presence we have in the Persian Gulf as we have also in Afghanistan. |
|
Mr. Speaker, this afternoon I listened to the President of the Treasury Board equivocate, the Minister of Veterans Affairs regurgitate and the Minister of National Defence obfuscate. |
|
When asked about her tax plan, the candidate didn't equivocate. |
|