Suggestions(5)
Exact(13)
My ability to kill a conversation aside, this was slightly shocking because I graduated one year after the £15k-ers, in 2009.
The biggest names in film tend to trade on their most obvious, most readily identifiable characteristic: Julia Roberts' smile, Dwayne Johnson's muscles, Jennifer Lawrence's ability to kill a man at 100 paces with a bow and arrow.
It is a complex journey filled with tensions: Lyutov is a Jewish intellectual amid antisemitic men of action; unable to help a wounded comrade who begs to be shot ("The Death of Dolgushov"), he later begs fate "for the simplest of abilities - the ability to kill a man" ("After the Battle").
It's hard to be sure which party "hardworking" has officially given its backing to, but on current performance it is the lexical equivalent of Barbra Streisand, who has been perceived as the black widow of the Democratic party, for the way her endorsements seem to have a kiss-of-death ability to kill a candidate.
Their deadly talents supposedly include the ability to kill a goat via psychokinesis--by staring at the beast they can make its heart stop with thought alone.
Aluminium phosphide (AlP) is a widely used fumigant due to its ability to kill a broad spectrum of stored-grain insect pests and its easy penetration into the commodity while leaving minimal residues.
Similar(47)
Scientists call it sudden oak death syndrome, and they are alarmed by its rapid spread and its ability to kill an ever increasing number and variety of trees.
Lawyers for the Obama administration, arguing for their ability to kill an American citizen without trial in Yemen, contended that the protection of US citizenship was effectively removed by a key congressional act that blessed a global war against al-Qaida.
One bacterium, from a grassy field in Maine, produced a compound with powerful abilities to kill a variety of other bacterial species, including many human pathogens.
It just doesn't feature a hero, who — aside from some pretty generic traits like an eye for the ladies, an ability to kill and an appreciation for expensive cars and a good meal — really feels like the Bond we have come to know over the last five decades.
Pseudodoxia Epidemica, published in 1641, is a cabinet of pseudoscientific curiosities: from the plausibility of griffins and unicorns, through the basilisk's famed ability to kill at a distance, to the common belief that a badger's legs are shorter on one side.
More suggestions(4)
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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