pretext - use in sentences

Preposition: of

  • war: It is about attempting to use the pretext of war against Slobodan Milosevic to dominate the whole of the Balkans.

Converse of object

  • invent: Behold, he invents pretexts against me; he counts me as his enemy.
  • create: Reports of large Yugoslav troop movements around Kosova have created a further pretext for NATO to repeat its threat to launch military action.
  • find: He must have found some pretext for giving her an injection.
  • seek: The church in this village had been harassed by local authorities, who may have been seeking a pretext to arrest the church leaders.
  • provide: Often the van will have the name of a shop or utility company to provide some pretext for its being in the area.
  • become: These were genuine enough but became the pretext for excessive equity valuations, fueling a general economic boom.

Preposition: for

  • invasion: The harassment against Cuba could serve as a pretext for an invasion.
  • war: Weapons of mass destruction offered little more than a convenient pretext for a war conjured up to serve a multiplicity of ends.
  • intervention: On the contrary their aim is to perpetuate instability in the region and provide the pretext for further intervention in the future.
  • attack: If true its a much better pretext for an attack on Iraq than the tenuous link to the anthrax scare.
  • action: There may be another pretext for an action - the Iraqi weapons program.
  • aggression: The question is does the other side want to get to the same conclusion or are they looking for a pretext for aggression?

Adjective modifier

  • flimsy: Reliability Cancel meetings frequently on the flimsiest pretexts that you can.
  • plausible: It did not finish the job and, according to the FFH, gave no plausible pretext to justify interrupting the work.
  • false: Was taking the country to war on a false pretext not an error of judgment?
  • slight: Many people to whom the Colonel owed a grudge were, on the slightest pretext, incarcerated in the dungeon.
  • convenient: Weapons of mass destruction offered little more than a convenient pretext for a war conjured up to serve a multiplicity of ends.
  • mere: Perhaps the truth is that the film's brutal violence and misogynistic attitude are mere pretexts for its condemnation.

Modifies a noun

  • call: Agents can freely make pretext calls to criminal elements by using caller ID spoofing.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.