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Discover LudwigThe phrase "about interlude" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to refer to a discussion or mention of an interlude, but it lacks clarity and context.
Example: "The conversation shifted about interlude, but it was unclear what was meant."
Alternatives: "regarding the interlude" or "concerning the interlude".
Exact(1)
When he yearned to confer with his father about Interlude, he went looking for passages about the company; when his son was born, last year, he searched for what his father had written when his first child was born.
Similar(59)
Falciani was cavalier about this interlude, telling me, "It's tough for my family, you know, but I'm kind of Superman — for me, it's O.K".
Reading about that interlude, it's hard not to think this was where Manning belonged, with the kind of cyber-nerds and gender activists who feel most at home in the penumbra of a college campus.
But the Bible divulges little about the interlude between Jesus' death and resurrection.
It seemed like a sequence from a Broadway show about her life, an interlude about her pop influences.
Simmons' boredom with, even disdain for, conventional standup about current events, politics and other "important" topics is evident before he makes it explicit, with an orchestral interlude about the discovery of a grey pubic hair and a monologue about irritating coworkers delivered with more gravity than the stories, apparently true, of the abuse he suffered as a child.
But now we get to the defects, which is what I forgot about the little interlude.
A clown, according to Mr. Hoyle, can luxuriate in his own vulgarity, as in an extended interlude about Italian and French jesters.
For one thing, no one could possibly believe Cohen paid a woman not to talk about a sexual interlude that did not happen.
There are points at which the plot wanders – particularly in an interlude about a restaurant pianist, when the narrative shifts, jarringly and unnecessarily, into third person.
"Red Dust" is tart and funny, yet brutal and elegant, with a startlingly contemporary documentary interlude about the formation of rubber — and brooding, lingering close-ups of Gable and Astor at their most ardent.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com