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It's almost always called a ranch, not an estate.
"Girls", as they are almost always called, have a clearly defined role in Kerouacean scripture.
The simplest ketone, CH3COCH3, whose IUPAC name is 2-propanone, is almost always called by its common name, acetone, which is derived from the fact that it was first prepared by heating the calcium salt of acetic acid.
Be that as it may, the spouse is almost always called a "secret weapon," a phrase worn to the nub, as I noted in a column late last year.
"Those early papers are a database that people have worked with ever since". Frederica Annis Lopez de Leo de Laguna, almost always called Freddy, was born on Oct. 3, 1906, in Ann Arbor, Mich.
And sometimes, readers see not-so-subtle signs of bias in them: Why is the American Enterprise Institute almost always called "conservative" in The Times, while the Brookings Institution seldom gets a label, although it has been described as a Democratic government in exile during Republican regimes?
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Nowadays we almost always call the phenomenon "climate change".
When a kid is sick at school, the nurse's office almost always calls Mom first.
Theater three initiatives almost always call for a new business model rather than incremental extensions.
Revkin: Mr. Bush almost always calls climate change an "issue" and not a "problem".
Pam almost always calls Iraq "this awful and unending war," as Homer called morning "rosy-fingered dawn".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com