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speaks English

Synonyms speaks synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as speaks?

speaks English » English

quietly

Examples speaks examples

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Simple sentences

One speaks English, and the other speaks Japanese.
She speaks English very well.
He who knows does not speak, he who speaks does not know.
He speaks poor French.
He speaks too fast.
Although she grew up in Japan, she still speaks fluent English.
I'd like to hire someone who speaks French.
Tom speaks French like a native.
Tom always speaks French.
No one speaks with me.
Tom often speaks a little too loudly.
Tom, who speaks French and English, works as a tour guide.
She speaks English better than any of her classmates.
I know an American girl who speaks Japanese very well.
Lisa speaks not only English but also French.
No one speaks this language anymore.
Everybody speaks well of him.
Mariko speaks English excellently.
Mike speaks good Japanese.
Brent is an American, but he speaks Japanese as if it were his mother tongue.
Tom speaks more slowly than Bill.
How fast Tom speaks!
Tom speaks Spanish, and Betty speaks Spanish, too.
Tony speaks English well.
He speaks German, not to mention English.
In addition to English, he speaks German.
Everybody speaks very highly of Ando.
Mr Wright speaks Japanese as if it were his mother tongue.
Mr Brown speaks Japanese very well.

Movie subtitles

And I believe that the current President of the Church, Thomas Monson, speaks directly to God!
The coke head speaks.
He speaks highly of you.
And, here's the thing, she has a placard inside her house that speaks out against Evan.
Doctor Regnard shows another picture, which speaks for itself.
Speaks your sister the truth?
Whoever speaks to her will be punished.
Enobarbus speaks.
And speaks well.
Who speaks?
She speaks German and French and everything.
Then the American part of me speaks up and spoils everything.
The court order speaks for itself.
Your handwriting speaks against you.
She speaks Arabic and French.
But she looks and speaks Arabic.
Here's the servant who speaks French.
He's General Fleury's agent and speaks for Parisian arabophiles.
You see, he is obsessed, the demon speaks through him!
This policeman is played by Monte Montague, an American, who speaks here with a British accent.
Why, she speaks French just like a native, don't you, Lily?
There speaks a fit friend for King James if ever I heard one.
But no one speaks ill of me now.
He took a Russian name but speaks Italian.
Because it speaks too well of me.
And at home he never speaks.
He speaks only of you.
Mm-hm. Your father speaks of you.
And to move to Paris where nobody speaks her language.
Then he speaks French?
Nobody speaks!
He speaks german quite well.
The Captian speaks only greek, italian, russian and turkish, Monsieur.
Professor Berdorff often speaks of you.
Ask him if he speaks English.
This the Dauphin speaks.
And he speaks proper French, he does!

News and current affairs

In fact, they have more in common than meets the eye, for each speaks of a rupture with the past while incarnating a form of continuity.
That is why the UK's Financial Services Authority, and even the Confederation of British Industry, which speaks largely for non-financial firms concerned about access to credit, has begun to call for a truce between the authorities and financial markets.
The essential economic reality confronting the ECB today is that the American economy is falling headlong into a serious slump - Bernanke's surprise cut speaks volumes to this.
The Prime Minister often speaks about pension reform, but has failed to offer any new proposals.
There are three explanations for the ECB's position, none of which speaks well for the institution and its regulatory and supervisory conduct.
Indeed, it is a question that also speaks to the increasingly worrisome outlook for the global economy.
The Union's common foreign and security policy may not yet mean that Europe speaks to the world with one voice, but it is taking shape and has already healed some of the wounds inflicted by disagreements over the war in Iraq.
And that answer speaks to the disturbing realities of modern-day central banking (or, to be more exact, central banking in the post-bubble world of debt overhangs and sovereign-debt concerns).
Much, therefore, speaks for starting with a combination of the first and second options.
No one speaks seriously any more of the danger of disintegration.
It speaks of prosecuting Milosevic for corruption or the murder of a few Serb political opponents, but not for mass atrocities committed against other ethnic groups.
The analysis presented by Gita Gopinath, which establishes a connection between the price pass-through to prices from exchange-rate changes and the currency in which trade is invoiced, speaks plainly to this issue.
Economic prosperity speaks for itself.
When it comes to global governance, communicable diseases, climate change, or threats to biodiversity, these countries' importance speaks for itself.
China-bashing in the US speaks to a corrosive shift in the American psyche.
But in that effort, India must contend with its neighbor, China, which speaks with a louder voice and carries a larger stick.
What better advocate is there than one who speaks with conviction gained from personal experience?
The president travels widely, speaks frequently, and mobilizes political support with his anti-American and anti-Western rhetoric.
Just as Spain (not Germany) remains the benchmark in European football, so Europe speaks broken English at best.
The appointment of George Mitchell, who opposes Israel's West Bank settlements, and Mitchell's decision to open an office in Jerusalem, speaks volumes about what the new Israeli government should expect from the Obama administration.

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