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Discover Ludwig"a mare's nest" is correct and usable in written English
It is an idiom that describes something that has been revealed to be a fraud or mistake, which appears to be important or significant but is in fact nothing of the sort. For example, "The conspiracy theory turned out to be a mare's nest."
Exact(13)
Commas are a mare's nest.
And once again comes a mare's nest of questions - what's wrong with the Americans?
It has also cut the top marginal tax rate by 27 percentage points since 1983, to 57%, and scrapped a mare's nest of taxes on property, gifts, wealth and inheritance.
His likely successors have vanished, and in trying to find them and prevent Vatican City from being blasted into oblivion, Langdon and Vittoria find themselves in a mare's nest of hidden agendas and competing jurisdictions.
Here, amid a mare's nest of gleaming steel pipes and flaming yellow gas flares, engineers are aiming to put back under the ground what many nations have exerted all their might for the last century to get out: carbon.
The idea is to create cachet without the slog of building brands.In this section Tablets from on high No more Jack Welch lite Re-engineering A mare's nest Great wall builders Looks bleak The rise of no-name designers Coming to a plate near you Getting better The global Mexican ReprintsNaked Wines is not the only online company attempting this.
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This became a mare's-nest when Nyclass opposed the mayoral candidacy of Ms. Quinn at the exact moment people within the A.S.P.C.A. like Ms. Adams were trying to curry favor with her.
The foreman of a contentious criminal jury on a tawdry New York homicide case last year found the justice system a mare's-nest of incompetence and confusion, and his own experience more intense than he had bargained for; in the end, a certain common sense prevailed.
To oversimplify a musicological mare's-nest, Janacek's later version, used in both recordings, combines the orchestral music from the 1888 version (itself revised from the 1887 original) with new vocal parts.
It is therefore possible to interpret his fixation on Iran — he told me in a recent conversation that it is ruled by a "messianic apocalyptic cult" — as a way of avoiding the mare's nest of problems associated with the Middle East peace process, especially the escalating pressure from the Obama administration to curb Jewish settlement on the West Bank.
By way of completing the mare's nest that Wharton left behind, Ms. Mainwaring, a native Bostonian who has lived much of her life in London and Paris, inserted a short chapter, numbered IX, that attempts to soften with some transitional information the jolt when Wharton abruptly transposed the action, in Chapter VIII, to England.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com