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"Securities laws permit some level of puffery so long as it's not about a specific fact," says G. Jack Chin G. Jack Chin, a law professor at the University of Cincinnati.
It's not because of his gaze or the language he used, but because of a specific fact that you happen to know.
But examining the reaction to Thug's apparel choices underscores a specific fact: that a man who transgresses the arbitrary rules of what "masculine clothing" can be still spurs controversy in 2016.
Instead, he uses "TK" -- a traditional journalistic shorthand for to come -- as a placeholder for missing or incomplete information, as a note to check later a specific fact that he's written through.
To be explicit, a statement had to be clearly written in plain language, leaving nothing implied about a specific fact or suggestion.
The most common reason for using a specific fact sheet was that the GP saw more patients with the right condition (59%), while 23% perceived the herb to be effective, 15% believed that the evidence for this herb is strong, and 35% indicated other reasons for using the herbal medicine fact sheets.
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I turn next to the discussion of a specific social fact, the "fact of globalization" and interpret it not as a uniform and aggregative process but as a problematic situation that is experienced in different and even contradictory ways at different locations and from a variety of perspectives, and is differently assessed with respect to different normative ideals of democracy.
The lie is not a claim about specific facts; the lunacy is a deliberate challenge to the whole larger idea of sanity.
Both modern believers and modern atheists, Armstrong contends, have come to understand religion primarily as a set of propositions to be assented to, or a catalog of specific facts about the nature of God, the world and human life.
In New York, possession of any weapon with an intent to use the weapon unlawfully against another is a crime, a misdemeanor or a felony depending on the specific facts of the case and the background of the person charged.
The 4th Amendment right against unreasonable searches has been clearly defined by the Courts for years: The only legal justification for a stop is when an officer has reasonable suspicion, based on specific facts -- not a hunch -- that the individual stopped has either just committed a crime or is about to.
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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