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Discover LudwigThe phrase "air popular" is not correct and does not make sense in written English.
It seems to be an incorrect combination of words and lacks a clear meaning or context for usage.
Example: "The air popular among the youth is often influenced by social media trends."
Alternatives: "widely favored" or "commonly liked".
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Radio Free Europe says its Kyrgyz television affiliate station has also been threatened with having its license revoked if it continues to air popular political-analysis programs.
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After-dinner drinks, like the traditional Turkish Raki (made from grapes, figs and plums) can be had at Küba, an open-air bar popular with Turkey's upper crust.
Dickinson said the canned air was popular with people living in polluted parts of the world, particularly China and India, as well as with tourists to Australia.
She'd heard that some of these presenters, who usually played video games on air, were popular enough that they were able to earn a living from their broadcasts.
One such myth, that lung cancer tumors spread when exposed to air, remains popular and could stop some Americans from agreeing to potentially lifesaving surgery, according to a study published this week in The Annals of Internal Medicine.
Realising the spectator value of what was happening, he made a deal with them, concerning the next game he was planning to play on air – the popular arena battle title, Dota 2. "If my team wins, we'll keep going," he said, live on air.
But he did sing about the borough, specifically about Brooklyn Heights, in "Tangled Up in Blue," on his 1975 album "Blood on the Tracks": I lived with them on Montague Street In a basement down the stairs There was music in the cafes at night And revolution in the air A popular Brooklyn blog, Brownstoner, asked its readers in 2005 whether Mr. Dylan had ever lived in Brooklyn.
However, Japan's aviation market, one of the most regulated in the region in terms of restrictions on access to the number of airport gates and airline ownership, is in the process of embracing the low-cost model of air travel popular in other regions.
Targeted at 13 to 18-year-olds, the ads will air during popular teen shows like Skins.
"Down from the skies" is the establishment, "seeds" are the young people, and "whisper through the air" is popular culture and the arts.
Senators Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe (Maine), Judd Gregg (New Hampshire), George LeMieux (Florida), and Scott Brown (Massachusetts) all represent states where clean air is popular and kowtowing to Big Oil is not.
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