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The phrase "addressed car" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to refer to a car that has been addressed in some way, but without additional context, it is unclear how to use it.
Example: "The addressed car was parked outside, but I couldn't find the owner."
Alternatives: "designated car" or "assigned vehicle".
Exact(1)
By day, "Chris" addressed car workers through a bullhorn on an upturned milk crate while by night "Christopher" wore a dinner jacket to address the Oxford Union or dine with the warden of All Souls.
Similar(57)
We test our model's generalization ability, its transfer ability to address car property classification issue and various image feature extractors' impact on our model.
The acoustically unfortunate space may, in fact, incite you to have several Greenteanis, if only to distract yourself from the deafening din, which forces dinnertime conversation to be conducted in a tone generally reserved for addressing cars that cut you off when you're crossing the street.
If the standards don't address cars that Americans actually drive, all the fuss about CAFE standards is strictly decaf.
The subject of the ROADEF'2005 challenge addressed a car sequencing problem proposed by the car manufacturer RENAULT, more complex than the academic problem generally addressed in the literature.
The Wakulla County Fire Rescue addressed the car seat safety issue this morning in a follow-up Facebook post after the photos went viral.
It lists their age, marital status, address, car registration, mobile phones, visits in the country and overseas, people they meet, their career before arriving in South Africa and their personal habits.
The two executives addressed driverless cars, which Google has been working on and which Mr. Page said had been an interest of his since graduate school.
"Just give him the hand: 'Yes, thank you for sharing.' " He was addressing the car alongside us as its driver yelled soundlessly.
The men spent a lot of time together, researching obscure product claims like the average height of a Swede, which became a way to address the car's roominess.
As she tries to switch lanes in traffic, she quietly addresses another car, in the film's first line of dialogue: "Are you going to let me in?" Watching this on TV, Gerwig could cope with the driving sequence, but when the scene changed — a party, a hookup — all she could see was acting.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com