反驳英语怎么说
"You shouldn't say such things," Peter retorted.
"I am sure grandfather knows," Heidi retorted, jumping up.
She refutes any suggestion that she behaved unprofessionally.
She came back at the speaker with some sharp questions.
"Oh yes, Tinker Bell will tell you," Wendy retorted scornfully.
In a TV interview she hit back at her critics.
Because consumers are invited to make up their own minds, implicit conclusions reduce the risk of resentment, distrust, and counterargumentation.
"Brimstone and gall," the voice retorted, "say that again, and I'll cast anchor in you."
"I am sorry," said the Owl, "to have to contradict the Crow, my famous friend and colleague."
I explained to my student that I actually thought he was rather more confused than I was and I argued back.
Peter felt that she was calling him names, and at a venture he retorted hotly, "So are you!"
I tried to argue but he countered that the plans were not yet finished.
"I can't read and Peter can't do it either," Heidi retorted.
Nobody disputed that Davey was clever.
I should be the last to reject such a loud statement.
All evening her husband contradicted everything she said.
Smith counters that if you factor in the hidden cost of government corn subsidies, environment degradation, and decreased human health and animal welfare, grass-fed is the more cost-effective model.
The most radical statement of individualism is choosing your own reality, and to some in the Tea Party, the very fact that experts believe something is sufficient to disprove it.
He hadn't done any more than Young had been able to do, so he couldn't disprove the dominant theory.
If there was ever a product to disprove the axiom "If you build it, they will come," it's the Segway.
He "s determined to disprove his existence when he heads into the woods, and starts to interview witnesses."
But remember... it was a lie to begin with... so, why do people spend so much energy trying to disprove it?
His earlier work in Germany, attempting to disprove the theory of spontaneous generation, led him to discover that yeast is involved in fermentation.
No one has done more to disprove Hall's stereotype than Toni Falbo, a professor of educational psychology and sociology at the University of Texas at Austin.