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Asked on April 21, 2021 in Grammar.
This is a modification of the idiom
going on the
offensive, where it means
taking the offensive.
It means that the Russians’ PR team is pre-emptively attacking (which is this case means communicating their position with media outlets) to force any opposing viewpoint into a defensive posture, which the quote you provided clearly as being “left scrambling to debunk the rumors and fear-mongering. “Yes,
the world has a war.”
- 646491 views
- 40 answers
- 238581 votes
-
Asked on April 20, 2021 in Grammar.
This is a modification of the idiom
going on the
offensive, where it means
taking the offensive.
It means that the Russians’ PR team is pre-emptively attacking (which is this case means communicating their position with media outlets) to force any opposing viewpoint into a defensive posture, which the quote you provided clearly as being “left scrambling to debunk the rumors and fear-mongering. “Yes,
the world has a war.”
- 646491 views
- 40 answers
- 238581 votes
-
Asked on April 20, 2021 in Grammar.
This is a modification of the idiom
going on the
offensive, where it means
taking the offensive.
It means that the Russians’ PR team is pre-emptively attacking (which is this case means communicating their position with media outlets) to force any opposing viewpoint into a defensive posture, which the quote you provided clearly as being “left scrambling to debunk the rumors and fear-mongering. “Yes,
the world has a war.”
- 646491 views
- 40 answers
- 238581 votes
-
Asked on April 19, 2021 in Grammar.
This is a modification of the idiom
going on the
offensive, where it means
taking the offensive.
It means that the Russians’ PR team is pre-emptively attacking (which is this case means communicating their position with media outlets) to force any opposing viewpoint into a defensive posture, which the quote you provided clearly as being “left scrambling to debunk the rumors and fear-mongering. “Yes,
the world has a war.”
- 646491 views
- 40 answers
- 238581 votes
-
Asked on April 18, 2021 in Grammar.
This is a modification of the idiom
going on the
offensive, where it means
taking the offensive.
It means that the Russians’ PR team is pre-emptively attacking (which is this case means communicating their position with media outlets) to force any opposing viewpoint into a defensive posture, which the quote you provided clearly as being “left scrambling to debunk the rumors and fear-mongering. “Yes,
the world has a war.”
- 646491 views
- 40 answers
- 238581 votes
-
Asked on April 17, 2021 in Grammar.
This is a modification of the idiom
going on the
offensive, where it means
taking the offensive.
It means that the Russians’ PR team is pre-emptively attacking (which is this case means communicating their position with media outlets) to force any opposing viewpoint into a defensive posture, which the quote you provided clearly as being “left scrambling to debunk the rumors and fear-mongering. “Yes,
the world has a war.”
- 646491 views
- 40 answers
- 238581 votes
-
Asked on April 17, 2021 in Grammar.
This is a modification of the idiom
going on the
offensive, where it means
taking the offensive.
It means that the Russians’ PR team is pre-emptively attacking (which is this case means communicating their position with media outlets) to force any opposing viewpoint into a defensive posture, which the quote you provided clearly as being “left scrambling to debunk the rumors and fear-mongering. “Yes,
the world has a war.”
- 646491 views
- 40 answers
- 238581 votes
-
Asked on April 17, 2021 in Grammar.
This is a modification of the idiom
going on the
offensive, where it means
taking the offensive.
It means that the Russians’ PR team is pre-emptively attacking (which is this case means communicating their position with media outlets) to force any opposing viewpoint into a defensive posture, which the quote you provided clearly as being “left scrambling to debunk the rumors and fear-mongering. “Yes,
the world has a war.”
- 646491 views
- 40 answers
- 238581 votes
-
Asked on April 15, 2021 in Grammar.
This is a modification of the idiom
going on the
offensive, where it means
taking the offensive.
It means that the Russians’ PR team is pre-emptively attacking (which is this case means communicating their position with media outlets) to force any opposing viewpoint into a defensive posture, which the quote you provided clearly as being “left scrambling to debunk the rumors and fear-mongering. “Yes,
the world has a war.”
- 646491 views
- 40 answers
- 238581 votes