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It's a shrewd point.
Drew Nieporent, a restaurateur interviewed in the New York Times, makes a shrewd point.
It's a shrewd point, though at the rate things went in 2004, it's hard to imagine how Mr. Bush could have become a winner in New York.
RORY STEWART, a former diplomat, soldier, old Afghan hand, coalition administrator in Iraq and now British member of parliament, made a shrewd point about foreign-policy "strategies" in a Guardian interview this month.
Not the least part of that shift lies in our willing embrace of popular culture; and David Farr makes a shrewd point when he suggests that The Birthday Party both unconsciously absorbed and has directly influenced that culture.
Making a shrewd point about the word's usage in media, he adds: "Obviously since it first appeared, you'd never get 'chav' in the hard news.
Similar(52)
This is a shrewd good point to be making now.
Verizon officials assert that this is largely a shrewd talking point aimed at wooing public support for the workers.
De Palma is a passionate admirer of Hitchcock and makes the shrewd point that, despite the ubiquity of Hitchcock worship, the number of directors who seek to make films like him is very small.
One can think of two objections to the shrewd point.
It's not the only shrewd point made by the setting.
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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