"Dr. Livingstone I presume"
"Dr. Livingstone I presume"
Henry Stanley famously remarked, "Dr. Livingstone, I presume?" upon finding the Scottish missionary and explorer David Livingstone in the town of Ujiji, near Lake Tanganyika in present-day Tanzania. This encounter occurred in 1871, after Stanley had spent months searching for Livingstone, who had not been heard from for several years. The phrase has since become iconic, symbolizing the meeting of two notable figures in exploration history.
Dr.Livingstone, I presume?
Remark can be a verb (to remark) and a noun (a remark).
The future tense of the word "remark" is "will remark."
Goodness, what beautiful diamonds!
She made a snide remark about his outfit at the party.
An offhand remark is a remark that is spoken without thought. Similar to something blurted out.
Remark can be a verb (to remark) and a noun (a remark).
Remark as a noun - He made a rude remark about the food. What exactly did she mean by that last remark? His casual remark led to a major discovery Remark as a verb - The judges remarked on the poor standard of entries for the competition. She remarked how happy I was looking. 'It's much warmer than yesterday,' he remarked casually. *
The word for an insulting remark is "slur" or "jab."
Wonderful Remark was created in 1990-01.